The 2006-2007 Season
September 1-3:
(06-G-66-72992, 8/29/06) 35: “Pins and Needles”. We begin our
2005-2006 Season with a Labor Day Weekend recognition of working people
with the hit Broadway show staged by the International Ladies Garment
Workers Union.
September 8-10:
(06-G-66-72993, 9/5/06) 36: The Summer’s New Paper and Plastic. The season’s new
books, records and videos.
September
15-17: (06-G-66-72994, 9/12/06) 37: Food Glorious Food. Good eats from
Broadway.
September
22-24: (06-G-66-72995, 9/19/06) 38: Margaret Whiting and Dick Haymes
Sing Jerome Kern.
September
22-October 1: (06-G-66-72996, 9/26/06) 39: “Forty-five Minutes from
Broadway”. A new recording of
the 1906 show by George M. Cohan.
October 6-8: (06-G-66-24121, 10/3/06)
40: “The Music Man”. Robert Preston charms Barbara Cook in
Meredith Willson’s musical set in River City
October 13-15: (06-G-66-24122,
10/10/06) 41: Politics and Poker. The Broadway spin on
next month’s election.
October 20-22: (06-G-66-24123,
10/17/06) 42: The New Season Preview. What’s planned for
Broadway in the 2006-2007 season.
October 27-29: (06-G-66-24124,
10/24/06) 43: The Great Ziegfeld. The producer who made
Broadway expensive.
November 3-5: (06-G-66-24125,
10/31/06) 44: Jo Stafford and Johnny Mercer. Swinging down
Broadway with two of the best.
November 10-12: (06-G-66-24126,
11/7/06) 45: DeSylva, Brown, and Henderson. A triple
threat on Broadway in the 1920s.
November 17-19: (06-G-66-24127, 11/
14/06) 46: Second Act Trouble. Even the best Broadway
composers had flop shows.
November 24-26: (06-G-66-24128,
11/21/06) 47: Memories. The tricks your mind can play.
December 1-3: (06-G-66-24129,
11/28/06) 48: The Fall’s New Paper and Plastic. The
season’s new books, records and videos.
December 8-10: (06-G-66-24130,
12/05/06) 49: Capitol Women. By this we don’t mean members
of Congress, but singers recorded on Capitol Records.
December 15-17: (06-G-66-24131,
12/12/06) 50: West Side Story. The classic that
turns 50 in 2007.
December 22-24: (06-G-66-24132,
12/19/06) 51: “Holiday Inn” and “White Christmas”. Irving
Berlin’s two movies and the current stage version of a holiday favorite.
December 29-31: (06-G-66-24133,
12/26/06) 52: Frank and Ella and Rodgers and Hart. Have a
swinging New Year’s.
January 5-7: (07-G66-35857,
1/2/07) 1: “Follies”. This year is the hundredth
anniversary of the first Ziegfeld Follies, which began the
Glorification of the American Girl in 1907. We’ll celebrate the
centennial with Stephen Sondheim’s tribute.
January 12-14: (07-G66-35858, 1/9/07) 2: The Lives and
Works of Adolph Green and Betty Comden. Betty Comden died
last month, and we’ll remember her and the late Adolph Green with some
of the hundreds of songs they wrote for Broadway and Hollywood.
January 19-21: (07-G66-35859, 1/16/07) 3:
“Oklahoma!”. This year, Oklahoma is celebrating its
centennial— it became a state in 1907. This week we recognize the
event with the legendary Broadway show of the same name.
January 26-28: (07-G66-35860, 1/23/07) 4: Susannah McCorkle and
Mel Tormé and Broadway. Great singers, great songs.
February 2-4: (07-G66-35861, 1/30/07) 5: Overtures!. Songs
without words.
February 9-11: (07-G66-35862, 2/6/07) 6: “Du Barry Was a
Lady”. There wasn’t a cast album of Cole Porter’s “Du
Barry Was a Lady”, so this week Broadway Revisited cobbles together a
variety of sources to assemble the good score.
February 16-18: (07-G66-35863, 2/13/07) 7: Stereotypes. The
theater depends on stereotypes, sometimes using them, sometimes working
against them. This week Broadway Revisited offers several case
studies.
February 23-25: (07-G66-35864, 2/20/07) 8: The Winter’s New Paper
and Plastic. The season’s new books, records and videos.
March 2-4: (07-G66-49708, 2/27/07) 9: Revues. Broadway shows
with song, dance, and comedy— but no plots.
March 9-11: (07-G66-49709, 3/06/07)
10: Cole Porter in Paris. Along with homes and London and
New York, Cole Porter had a place in Paris, the setting for several of
his shows. Today we sample four of them: “Paris”, “Fifty Million
Frenchmen”, “Can Can”, and “Silk Stockings”.
March 16-18: (07-G66-49710, 3/13/07)
11: The Funny Papers. This week we’ll sample several show
based on comic strips. From the newspapers to Broadway this week,
on Broadway Revisited.
March 23-25: (07-G66-49711, 3/20/07)
12: The Words and Music of Frank Loesser. “Guys and
Dolls” was just one of the shows and film scores of Frank Loesser, and
this week Broadway Revisited will examine his life and words and
music. The songs and shows of Frank Loesser, this week on
Broadway Revisited.
March 30-April 1: (07-G66-49712,
3/27/07) 13: “Girl Crazy”. All the songs from the
1930 hit by George and Ira Gershwin.
April 6-8: (07-, 4/03/07) 14:
Unexpected Standards. Did you know that As Time Goes By and How
High the Moon entered the American musical scene on Broadway?
They did, along with Body and Soul and many other permanent
standards. This week Broadway Revisited salutes an hour’s worth
of these evergreens.
April 13-15: (07-, 4/10/07) 15: Mabel
Mercer and Bobby Short sing Porter, Coward, and Gershwin.
For decades, Mabel Mercer and Bobby Short kept good songs current in
New York cabarets. This week we’ll hear them sing several, many
of them not often heard now.
April 20-22: (07-, 4/17/07) 16: Hoagy
Carmichael— Songwriter. This week Broadway Revisited
celebrates the life and music of Hoagy Carmichael, including the score
of his only Broadway show.
April 27-29: (07-, 4/24/07) 17: “On
the Town”. Leonard Bernstein’s first Broadway show.
May 4-6: (07-, 05/01/07) 18: Broadway
on Decca. The pioneer of original cast records is still
recording the new shows.
May 11-13: (07-, 05/08/07) 19:
Economics 101. An MBA in an hour, with lessons from Broadway.
May 18-20: (07-, 05/15/07) 20: Dinah
Shore and Buddy Clark. Fine singers who gained fame not on
Broadway or the movies, but on radio.
May 25-27: (07-, 05/22/07) 21: Spring
New Paper and Plastic. The season’s new books, records,
and videos.
June 1-3: (07-, 05/29/07) 22: “Call Me Madam”.
Irving Berlin’s 1950 hit, Call Me Madam, is one of those rare shows in
which every song is a good one. This week on Broadway Revisited
we’ll hear the original cast, starring Ethel Merman and Paul
Lukas.
June 8-10: (07-, 06/05/07) 23: Preview
of This Year’s Tony Awards. Hear songs from all the nominees on
this week’s review of the Broadway season. A Tony Awards Preview,
on Broadway Revisited.
June 15-17: (07-, 06/12/07) 24: A
Broadway Marriage Manual. That venerable song from the Ziegfeld
Follies defines the theme for this week’s Broadway Revisited, in which
we recognize the marriage month with some duets by happy couples.
A Broadway marriage manual this week on Broadway Revisited.
June 22-24: (07-, 06/19/07) 25: Three
by Gilbert & Sullivan. This week Broadway Revisited visits
Gilbert & Sullivan, the immediate precursors of the Broadway
musical. Hear selections from Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance,
and The Mikado this week on Broadway Revisited.
A Broadway Summer of Shows for
July and August.
There are many
shows with good songs, but only a select few have fine complete
scores.
This summer we revisit several of the best.
June 29-July 1: (07-, 06/26/07) 26:
“Porgy and Bess” in Jazz. Porgy and Bess is an opera, but when
the arias become songs, it could also be a Broadway musical. We
explore the thought with Louis Armstrong and others this week when
Broadway Revisited presents Porgy and Bess in jazz.
July 6-8: (07-, 07/03/07) 27: “Sherry”
and “Merrily We Roll Long”. Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We
Roll Along is one of two musicals based on plays by Moss Hart and
George S. Kaufman we’ll visit this week. Along with Merrily,
we’ll hear selections from Sherry, based on The Man Who Came to
Dinner. Kaufman and Hart on Broadway Revisited.
July 13-14: (07-, 07/10/07) 28: “Show
Boat”. This is radio, so you can’t see the Show Boat, but
this week on Broadway Revisited you can hear quite a bit of the classic
score by Oscar Hammerstein and Jerome Kern, from Make Believe to Ol’
Man River. Life upon the floating stage this week, with Broadway
Revisited and Show Boat.
July 20-22: (07-, 07/17/07) 29: “The
Pajama Game” and “Damn Yankees”. That song is from Damn
Yankees, one of the two hit shows of Jerry Ross and Richard
Adler. We’ll sample that this week on Broadway Revisited, along
with their The Pajama Game, when we revisit the shows of Adler and Ross.
July 27-29: (07-, 07/24/07) 30:
“Finian’s Rainbow”. Ella Logan was one of the stars of the
1947 Broadway hit Finian’s Rainbow, and we’ll hear her and the original
cast along with Frank Sinatra and others from a movie version.
Finian’s Rainbow this week on Broadway
Revisited.
August 3-5: (07-, 07/31/07) 31:
“Brigadoon”. This week, Broadway Revisited is devoted to
Lerner and Loewe’s 1947 hit, Brigadoon, with a rare recording starring
Shirley Jones and Jack Cassidy. Brigadoon, on Broadway Revisited.
August 10-12: (07-, 08/07/07)
32: Adam and Eve and “The Apple Tree”. The Book of
Genesis has often been revised, and this week Broadway Revisited
presents Mark Twain’s version. We’ll blend readings from Twain’s
Diaries of Adam and Eve with songs from the Jerry Bock and Sheldon
Harnick musical version. The Apple Tree, this week on Broadway
Revisited.
August 17-19: (07-, 08/14/07)
33: “Bells Are Ringing”. This week’s Broadway Revisited
is devoted to the career of the actress Judy Holliday, with songs
including some from Bells Are Ringing, the Broadway hit for which she
won a Tony. Judy Holliday is the subject this week on Broadway
Revisited.
August 24-26: (07-, 08/21/07)
34: “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes”. “Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes” is the feature on this week’s Broadway Revisited, with songs
from the musical, and Carol Channing reading from “Lorelei’s Diary”,
bracketed with a review of Channing’s career.
August 31-September 2: (07-,
08/28/07) 35: “Lady in the Dark”. On Broadway Revisited
this week, we’ll hear a recording of the full score of Ira Gershwin and
Kurt Weill’s 1941 hit about psychoanalysis, Lady in the Dark, and we’ll
have bonus tracks from the original cast’s Danny Kaye. Lady in
the Dark on Broadway Revisited.
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