The Tap Dance Kid
The Tap Dance Kid | |
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Music | Henry Krieger |
Lyrics | Robert Lorick |
Book | Charles Blackwell |
Basis | Louise Fitzhugh novel Nobody's Family is Going to Change |
Productions | 1983 Broadway 2022 New York City Center Encores! |
The Tap Dance Kid is a musical based on the novel Nobody's Family is Going to Change by Louise Fitzhugh. It was written by Charles Blackwell with music by Henry Krieger and lyrics by Robert Lorick.
Synopsis
[edit]Act I
[edit]William Sheridan, a successful attorney, lives on Roosevelt Island with his wife Ginnie and their two children: 14-year-old Emma, an outspoken, independent-minded, and overweight girl who wants to be a lawyer more than anything, and 10-year-old Willie, whom William wants to follow in his footsteps. However all Willie wants is to be a tap dancer. The show opens on a typical morning with Ginnie preparing breakfast and preparing for the day and Emma and Willie arguing ("Another Day"). Later that day, Emma returns home from school, angry at her parents and the world for underestimating and mistreating her ("Four Strikes Against Me"). Ginnie's brother Dipsey Bates arrives for Willie's tap lesson. The kids urge him to tell stories about the old days when Ginnie, Dipsey and their late father Daddy Bates performed as a vaudeville trio ("Class Act"). The number ends as William returns home from work. Finding his study in disarray. He coolly greets Dipsey, for whom he has little use as a 33-year-old dancer. Dipsey exits, leaving William to examine the children's report cards. He pays scant attention to Emma's exceptional grades, but he is so disappointed by Willie's poor grades that he grounds him and forbids him from dancing.
Three weeks later, Willie still has not been allowed to dance. He goes to the playground where he is taunted for dancing by Winslow, a local teenage bully. Emma arrives and defends Willie against Winslow, but she still admonishes him for dancing. Emma and Willie fight and complain about their parents before Emma leaves ("They Never Hear What I Say"). Willie expresses to Emma what dancing means to him ("Dancing is Everything"). Willie runs away to Manhattan in search of Dipsey ("Crosstown").
Dipsey is rehearsing his dancers for an industrial show for a shoe buyers' convention. The performance has been designed to showcase Dipsey's dancing and choreographic talents with which he hopes to impress the producers of an out-of-town Broadway tryout ("Fabulous Feet"). Willie arrives during the rehearsal and is uncontrollably drawn into the number, dancing with his uncle. The dancers are so amazed by Willie that they stop dancing and just let him perform. Excited by his nephew's potential, Dipsey rushes the boy home to tell his parents the good news. Dipsey's assistant Carole is left to continue the rehearsal. After the rehearsal, she reflects on her emotions for Dipsey ("I Could Get Used to Him").
Dipsey brings Willie back home and excitedly tells Ginnie and William of Willie's raw talent. William interrupts, furious because Willie ran away and risked his life by going alone to New York City. Sensing his authority slipping away due to Ginnie and Emma's protests, William lashes out and forbids Willie from tap dancing and seeing Dipsey. Willie, heartbroken, runs out onto the terrace, and Dipsey follows him and comforts him, telling him he'll have to dance inside of himself ("Man in the Moon").
Act II
[edit]Willie has not danced for weeks and is miserable. During another breakfast in the Sheridan household, an argument ensues, and William storms out. Emma accuses her mother of not asserting herself nor caring enough about her children. Ginnie accuses Emma of being exactly like her father. They fight ("Like Him"). Dipsey and Carole, now dating and living together, wait in their loft to find out if Dipsey booked the out-of-town tryout in Buffalo, New York. Dipsey has just given up hope when the phone rings telling him he got the job. Dipsey and Carole celebrate, with Dipsey finally succeeding in life ("My Luck Is Changing").
Willie has gone to the playground to be alone, and Emma comes looking for him. This time instead of arguing, they connect and dream about a day they are understood by their parents ("Someday").
Ginnie comes to Dipsey's loft, confused and upset, not knowing how to cheer up Willie. Dipsey tries to convince her to let Willie try out for a role in his new Buffalo show. Ginnie, knowing what the consequences might be, refuses. Echoing Emma's earlier sentiments, Dipsey accuses Ginnie of caring only about keeping her husband happy. Ginnie explains to Dipsey that William was not always like this, and that there is still good inside of him ("I Remember How It Was"). She goes to Willie's bedroom and warily tells him about his audition the next day for Dipsey's show. Willie is overjoyed. Ginnie tucks him in for the night and sings to her son until he falls asleep ("Lullabye").
Willie dreams a wonderful dream starring his grandfather, wherein the following day, Willie auditions for the show. The bug of finally being on a stage propels Willie into a fantasy in which he is surrounded by all of Willie's idols, the great dancers Fred Astaire, Bojangles, Gene Kelly, The Nicholas Brothers, Dipsey and Daddy Bates. They dance with him in his dream ("Dance If It Makes You Happy").
Willie auditions the next day and receives the part. Without celebration, Ginnie takes him and Emma to Dipsey and Carole's house to wait for William and prepare for his reaction to the news. William arrives, and when Ginnie tells him the news, he is outraged. The family is speechless and nervously cowers in front of William before Emma stands up to him. Her speech, coupling the courtroom savvy of a seasoned professional with the vulnerability of a hurt child, is a powerful indictment against William for alienation of affection and loss of aid to dependent children. Ginnie tells William that things cannot continue this way. She demands that she should be just as in charge of the family as he is. William explodes and in a frightening display, pours out his deep-rooted anguish and self-hatred to the family ("William's Song").
Later, alone in front of Dipsey's building, William waits, not knowing what will happen. Emma joins him, and she and her father finally reach an understanding. Willie arrives and tells William that he is not taking the part in the show but still longs to be a dancer. Ginnie appears, followed by Dipsey, and they both make peace with William. They all compromise a little, but they will still remain together as a family ("Class Act [Finale]").
Musical numbers
[edit]Original Broadway Production
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National Tour
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Note: Most productions following the National Tour, including the Encores! production, follow the same tracklist as the National Tour production.
Notable principal casts
[edit]Character | Broadway | US National Tour | NYCC Encores! |
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1983 | 1985 | 2022 | |
Willie Sheridan | Alfonso Ribeiro | Dulé Hill | Alexander Bello |
Dipsey Bates | Hinton Battle | Trevor Jackson | |
Emma Sheridan | Martine Allard | Shahadi Wright Joseph | |
Ginnie Sheridan | Hattie Winston | Monica Pege | Adrienne Walker |
William Sheridan | Samuel E. Wright | Ben Harney | Joshua Henry |
Carole | Jackie Lowe | Theresa Hayes | Tracee Beazer |
Daddy Bates | Alan Weeks | Harold Nicholas | Dewitt Fleming Jr. |
Winslow | Michael Blevins | Mark Santoro | Chance K. Smith |
Notable replacements
[edit]- Broadway (1983–1985)
- Willie: Savion Glover, Dulé Hill
- Ginnie: Suzzanne Douglas
- US National Tour (1985–1986)
- William: Chuck Cooper
Productions
[edit]The musical opened on Broadway on December 21, 1983, at the Broadhurst Theatre and ran until March 11, 1984. On March 27, 1984, it resumed performances at the Minskoff Theatre, closing on August 11, 1985, for a total run of 669 performances. Directed by Vivian Matalon with musical staging and dances by Danny Daniels, it featured Hinton Battle, Samuel E. Wright, Hattie Winston, Martine Allard, and Alfonso Ribeiro as Willie. In 1984 Ribeiro's 10-year-old understudy, Savion Glover, took over the title role.[1]
The reviews were mixed. Frank Rich, in his review for The New York Times praised the choreography and many actors' performances but saw the plot as "earnest [but] plodding" and the music forgettable.[2]
A production directed by Jerry Zaks with choreography by Danny Daniels ran at the Pantages Theatre, Los Angeles, California, in September 1985 as part of a tour.[3] This production also ran in Miami Beach, Florida in April 1986[4] and Chicago, Illinois in May 1986.[5]
As part of its "Encores!" program, New York City Center mounted a production running February 2-6, 2022. Lydia Diamond wrote the concert adaptation. Kenny Leon directed, with choreography by Jared Grimes.
Awards and nominations
[edit]Original Broadway production
[edit]Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
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1984 | Tony Award | Best Musical | Nominated | |
Best Book of a Musical | Charles Blackwell | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical | Hinton Battle | Won | ||
Samuel E. Wright | Nominated | |||
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical | Martine Allard | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Vivian Matalon | Nominated | ||
Best Choreography | Danny Daniels | Won | ||
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Hinton Battle | Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ Cullen, Frank (2006). Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America, vol. 1 (1 ed.). New York, NY: Routledge. p. 443. ISBN 978-0415938532.
- ^ Rich, Frank. "A Boy And His Dreams In 'Tap Dance Kid'". The New York Times. December 22, 1983. Retrieved November 24, 2006. (Subscription required)
- ^ Sullivan, Dan. "Stage Review:Tapping Out A Dance Story At The Pantages" Los Angeles Times, September 24, 1985
- ^ Zink, Jack. "'Tap Dance Kid' A Kick From Start To Finish" SunSentinel.com, April 11, 1986
- ^ Voedisch, Lynn. "'Tap Dance Kid' shuffles too much" Chicago Sun-Times, (article synopsis), May 15, 1986