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Charlotte Sweet

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Charlotte Sweet
The Love of Ludlow Ladd
Charlotte Sweet Album Cover Art
MusicGerald Jay Markoe
LyricsMichael Colby
BasisSequel to Ludlow Ladd (musical by Colby & Markoe)
PremiereAugust 12, 1982 (1982-08-12): Westside Arts Center/Cheryl Crawford Theatre
Productions1982: Chernuchin Theatre/A.T.A., Off-Off-Broadway
1982: Cheryl Crawford Theatre, Off-Broadway

Charlotte Sweet is an all-sung, all-rhymed original musical with a libretto by Michael Colby and music by Gerald Jay Markoe.

The musical is a sequel to Ludlow Ladd, a comic Christmas musical that Colby and Markoe created Off-off Broadway for The Lyric Theater of New York in 1979.[1]

Synopsis

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Set in Victorian England, Charlotte Sweet spotlights Charlotte, a girl with one of the highest and most beautiful soprano voices in the world. Because of her father's debts, she is forced to leave Ludlow Ladd, her Liverpool sweetheart, and join Barnaby Bugaboo's “Circus of Voices”: a troupe of freak voices including low-voiced Katinka Bugaboo, fast-voiced Harry Host, bubble-voiced Cecily Macintosh, and Skitzy Scofield (with dual personalities and voices).

Becoming the troupe's biggest sensation, Charlotte is mercilessly exploited by Barnaby until she has a vocal breakdown. Thereupon, Barnaby and his wife Katinka addict Charlotte to helium balloons in order to maintain her high notes. Only Ludlow Ladd can rescue her.[2]

Musical numbers

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Production history

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Off-Off Broadway

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Charlotte Sweet began as an Off-Off-Broadway showcase, playing 20 performances (April 13 - May 1, 1982) at the Chernuchin Theatre/American Theatre of Actors.[3]

Off-Broadway

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Receiving enthusiastic reviews, it was optioned by Power Productions/Stan Raiff, moving Off-Broadway on August 12, 1982 to the Westside Arts Center/Cheryl Crawford Theatre. It played 102 performances and eight previews, closing November 7, 1982.[4]

Other productions

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Charlotte Sweet has enjoyed various regional productions, including at the New American Theater in Rockford, IL, in repertory with Ludlow Ladd.[5]

Cast and crew

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With direction by Edward Stone and choreography by Dennis Dennehy, the musical featured Mara Beckerman, Alan Brasington, Merle Louise, Michael McCormick, Polly Pen, Christopher Seppe, Sondra Wheeler, and Nicholas Wyman. Merle Louise and Nicholas Wyman respectively took over for Virginia Seidel and Michael Dantuono, who were in the showcase. Scenery was designed by Holmes Easley, costumes by Michele Reisch, and lighting by Jason Kantrowitz, with musical direction by Jan Rosenberg.[6]

Recording

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The original production cast recording was released by John Hammond Records in 1983, reissued by DRG Records, and is now available on Jay Records. The cast album features original cast members as well as Jeff Keller, Lynn Eldredge, and Timothy Landfield (who succeeded Brasington, Wheeler, and Wyman).[7]

Critical response

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John Corry of The New York Times wrote that "Charlotte Sweet mixes the adorable and the strange, and it is delectable."[8] The New York Post called it “a heartwarming echo of the music hall in turn-of-the-century England”.[9] It was championed by artist Al Hirschfeld[10] and Leonard Cohen who said he "loved the show".[11]

Charlotte Sweet was nominated for three Drama Desk Awards, including "Outstanding Actress in a Musical", "Outstanding Music", and "Outstanding Lyrics".[12]

Background

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The musical was developed via a series of flukes. Juilliard-trained composer Gerald Jay Markoe was seeking a lyricist when he contacted veteran Broadway producer and agent, Charles Abramson, whose name was the first one listed under "Agents" in the Yellow Pages. Abramson recommended Michael Colby.[13]

Colby and Markoe's first collaboration, a musical version of Jean Anouilh's Time Remembered (Léocadia), was given a staged reading, starring Maria Karnilova, at The Lyric Theatre of New York (Off-Off Broadway). Neal Newman, the company's artistic director, asked Colby and Markoe (both Jewish) to write a Christmas show for the company. The result was Ludlow Ladd, an all-sung, all-rhymed musical whose Dickensian plot unfolds through original Christmas carols. In the cast was a soprano recommended by Neal Newman: Mara Beckerman, whose unusually high voice impressed the writers. Colby and Markoe had such fun on that show, they decided to write a sequel spotlighting Mara Beckerman's high voice, and revolving around other holidays: St. Valentine's Day and New Year's Eve. A final Colby/Markoe musical in this trilogy, Happy Haunting, revolves around Halloween.[14]

As Colby and Markoe developed the first musical with Christmas carols, they based Charlotte Sweet around British music-hall turns (on the recommendation of comedian Elizabeth Wolynski, who also happened to be a photographer for Ludlow Ladd). Ultimately, Charlotte Sweet encompassed three forms of theatre most popular in Victorian England: melodrama, Gilbert & Sullivan style operetta, and music hall.[15]

The musical had several other influences. One was Sergei Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf. The musical's personalities are defined by their vocal types, just as animals were defined by musical instruments in Prokofiev's piece. Colby was also strongly inspired by the all-rhymed musical sequences of lyricists John LaTouche (The Golden Apple), E.Y. Harburg (The Wizard of Oz), and especially Lorenz Hart. Colby was researcher for the biography written by Hart's sister-in-law Dorothy Hart: Thou Swell, Thou Witty: The Life and Lyrics of Lorenz Hart.[16] A final influence was the Fractured Fairy Tales cartoons of Jay Ward.[17]

Awards and nominations

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Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result
1983 Drama Desk Awards Outstanding Actress in a Musical Mara Beckerman Nominated
Outstanding Lyrics Michael Colby Nominated
Outstanding Music Gerald Jay Markoe Nominated

References

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  1. ^ "Events Today". The New York Times. New York, NY. 1979-12-18. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  2. ^ "The Story of Charlotte Sweet". Charlotte Sweet (Liner notes). New York, NY: John Hammond Records. 1983. W2X-#8680.
  3. ^ Traubner, Richard (1983). "Charlotte Sweet: A Genial Genealogy". Charlotte Sweet (Liner notes). New York, NY: John Hammond Records. W2X-#8680.
  4. ^ "Charlotte Sweet". Guide to Musical Theatre. April 30, 2005. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  5. ^ "Ludlow Ladd". ProPlay. August 23, 2015. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  6. ^ Corry, John (1982-05-03). "MUSICAL: 'CHARLOTTE SWEET'". The New York Times. New York, NY. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  7. ^ "Charlotte Sweet Original Cast Recording". Jay Records. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  8. ^ Corry, John (1982-05-03). "MUSICAL: 'CHARLOTTE SWEET'". The New York Times. New York, NY. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  9. ^ Hammond, John. "The Season in New York". The New York Post. New York, NY. Archived from the original on 2016-04-01. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  10. ^ "Auditioning with Nina & a New Drawing". Al Hirschfeld Foundation. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  11. ^ "The Story of Charlotte Sweet". Charlotte Sweet (Liner notes). New York, NY: John Hammond Records. 1983. W2X-#8680.
  12. ^ "Charlotte Sweet Production History". Broadway World. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  13. ^ Colby, Michael (May 24, 2017). "Chapter 24: It Could Only Happen in the Theatre". The Algonquin Kid: Adventures Growing Up at New York's Legendary Hotel. Orlando, FL: BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1593937928.
  14. ^ Willis, John (May 4, 1983). Theatre World, Vol. 38 (1981-1982). New York, NY: Crown. ISBN 978-0517549452.
  15. ^ Gänzl, Kurt (May 23, 2016). "Michael Colby's "Charlotte Sweet" Or: When Musicals Were Fun". Operetta Research Center. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  16. ^ Hart, Dorothy (1976). Thou swell, thou witty: The life and lyrics of Lorenz Hart. New York, NY: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0060117764.
  17. ^ Willis, John (May 4, 1984). Theatre World, Vol. 39 (1982-1983). New York, NY: Crown. ISBN 978-0517549452.