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Grand Hotel (musical)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Musical by Robert Wright, George Forrest, Maury Yeston
Grand Hotel
Original Broadway Logo
MusicRobert Wright
George Forrest
Maury Yeston
LyricsRobert Wright
George Forrest
Maury Yeston
BookLuther Davis
Basis1929Vicki Baum novel and play,Menschen im Hotel(People in a Hotel) andfilm
Productions1989Broadway
1992West End
2005 West End Revival
2016Sydney

Grand Hotel is amusical in two acts with a book byLuther Davis, music and lyrics byRobert Wright andGeorge Forrest, and additional music and lyrics byMaury Yeston.[1]

Based onVicki Baum's1929 novel, its eponymous spin-off play,Menschen im Hotel (People in a Hotel), and the subsequent1932 MGM feature film, the musical focuses on events taking place over the course of a weekend in an elegant hotel in 1928Berlin and the intersecting stories of the eccentric guests of the hotel, including a fadingprima ballerina; a fatally illJewishbookkeeper, who wants to spend his final days living in luxury; a young, handsome, but destitute Baron; a cynical doctor; an honest businessman gone bad, and a typist dreaming ofHollywood success.

The show's 1989 Broadway production garnered 12 Tony Award nominations, winning five, including best direction and choreography forTommy Tune. Big-name cast replacements, includingCyd Charisse andZina Bethune, helped the show become the first American musical since 1985'sBig River to top 1,000 performances on Broadway.

Background

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Menschen im Hotel marked the beginning of the career of popular Austrian novelist Baum in 1929 and she dramatized her novel for the Berlin stage later in the same year. After the play became a hit, its English-language adaptation enjoyed success in New York in the early 1930s and was made into the blockbuster 1932Academy Award-winning film,Grand Hotel, starringGreta Garbo,John Barrymore andJoan Crawford.[2]

At the Grand

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Davis, Wright, and Forrest first adapted Baum's story in 1958 under the titleAt the Grand, changing the setting from 1928 Berlin to contemporaryRome and transforming the ballerina into anopera singer closely resemblingMaria Callas to accommodateJoan Diener, who was scheduled to star under the direction of her husbandAlbert Marre. All of them had collaborated on the earlier musicalKismet and anticipated another success, but Davis' book strayed too far from the story familiar to fans of the film. WhenPaul Muni agreed to portray Kringelein, the role was changed and expanded, with the character becoming a lowly hotel employee whose stay in a hotel suite is kept secret from the management. Flaemmchen became a dancingsoubrette, Preysing and his dramatic storyline were eliminated completely, and two deportedAmericangangsters were added for comic relief.

At the Grand opened to mixed reviews and good business inLos Angeles andSan Francisco, but when it became apparent to the creators that Muni was ill and would not be able to sustain a Broadway run, producer Edwin Lester decided to cancel theBroadway opening scheduled for September 25, 1958, and everyone moved on to other projects.

Grand Hotel

[edit]

Three decades later, Davis, Wright, and Forrest decided to dust off their original material and give the show another try, returning the show to its original setting in 1928 Berlin. This time it was placed in the hands of director-choreographerTommy Tune, who envisioned it as a two-hour, non-stop production comprising dialogue scenes, musical numbers, and dance routines overlapping and at times competing with each other, thereby capturing the mood of a bustling hotel where something is happening at all times. Seven songs fromAt the Grand were incorporated into what was now calledGrand Hotel, although two were dropped during theBoston tryout.

During the Boston run in 1989, Wright and Forrest acquiesced when Tune requestedMaury Yeston, with whom he had worked inNine, be brought in to contribute fresh material. Yeston wrote seven new songs in the first week, including "Love Can't Happen", "I Want to Go to Hollywood", "At The Grand Hotel", "Bonjour Amour", "Roses at the Station" and "Grand Parade" (the new opening number), as well as additional lyrics for some of the Wright and Forrest songs.[3] At Tune's request,Peter Stone came in as uncredited play doctor, though the book remained entirely the work of Davis. Yeston received billing for Additional Music and Lyrics and was nominated for two Drama Desk Awards for his work. Ballroom choreography was byPierre Dulaine andYvonne Marceau, who played The Gigolo and The Countess in the show, and as a favor to Tune,Thommie Walsh choreographed a brief dance section in "I Want to Go to Hollywood".

Synopsis

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The roaring '20s are still in high gear, and Berlin is the center of high life. Guests come and go at the opulent Grand Hotel, as cynical Doctor Otternschlag, who still suffers fromWorld War I wounds, injects his morphine. Assistantconcierge Erik, busy at the front desk, waits to hear of his son's birth; his wife is having a difficult labor. Baron Felix Von Gaigern, young, good-looking, and destitute, uses his charisma to help him secure a room in the overbooked hotel while stiffing a tough gangster who pretends to be a chauffeur. Aging Russianprima ballerina Elizaveta Grushinskaya arrives with her entourage who tries to persuade her that she still can and must dance. Her confidante and dresser, Raffaela knows that they would have to come up with a lot of money if the dancer failed to show up for her contracted engagements. Raffaela has feelings for Elizaveta.

Jewish bookkeeper Otto Kringelein, who is fatally ill, wants to spend his life's savings to live his final days at the hotel in the lap of luxury. The Baron helps him secure a room. Meanwhile, Hermann Preysing, the general manager of a failing textile mill, hears that the merger with aBoston company is off, spelling financial ruin; he does not want to lie to his stockholders but gives in to the pressure. He plans to go to Boston to try to revive the merger and presses his temporary secretary, Flaemmchen, to accompany him and "take care of him". She dreams of Hollywood stardom and fears she might be pregnant, but flirts with the Baron. She also agrees to a dance, at the Baron's suggestion, with the surprised and delighted Otto. Elizaveta suffers through another unsuccessful dance performance and rushes back to the hotel. She bursts into her room to find the Baron as he is about to steal her diamond necklace to pay back the gangster, but he pretends to be her biggest fan. The two fall in love with each other and spend the night. He agrees to go with her to Vienna so that she can fulfill her dancing engagements, and they will get married; they plan to meet at the train station.

Two African-American entertainers, the Jimmys, sing at the bar and dance with Flaemmchen. Erik tries to get off work so that he can join his wife at the hospital, but the unpleasant hotel manager, Rohna, refuses to give him any time off. The Baron has persuaded Otto to invest in the stock market, and Otto has made a killing in the market overnight. But Otto is not feeling well, and the Baron helps him to his room, resisting the temptation to steal his wallet. Otto rewards the Baron with some cash. The gangster confronts the Baron and directs him to steal Preysing's wallet; he gives the Baron a gun. Preysing has cornered Flaemmchen in their adjoining rooms and pressures her for sex. The Baron, who was in Preysing's room trying to steal his wallet, hears Flaemmchen's cries next door and walks into her room to defend her while still holding Preysing's wallet. After a struggle, Preysing kills the Baron with the gangster's gun. Preysing is arrested. Raffaela struggles with how to tell Grushinskaya that her lover is dead and ultimately decides not to, leaving Grushinskaya ecstatic to see him at the train station when she leaves.

Otto offers to take Flaemmchen to Paris; he has plenty of money now so that they can enjoy the good life for as much time as he has left, and she realizes that she is fond of him. Erik has a son and finds out that his wife came through the labor just fine. Doctor Otternschlag observes: "Grand Hotel, Berlin. Always the same – people come, people go – One life ends while another begins – one heart breaks while another beats faster – one man goes to jail while another goes to Paris – always the same. ... I'll stay – one more day."

Roles and original cast

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  • The Doorman – Charles Mandracchia
  • Colonel-Doctor Otternschlag -Grievously wounded by gas and shrapnel in WWI; a cynical, ruined manJohn Wylie
  • The Countess -Ballroom DancerYvonne Marceau
  • The Gigolo -Ballroom DancerPierre Dulaine
  • Rohna -Hotel General Manager; amartinet – Rex D. Hays
  • Erik -Intelligent young assistant concierge, ambitious, about to start a familyBob Stillman
  • The Bellboys - Georg Strunk, Kurt Kronenberg, Hans Bittner, Willibald (Captain) –Ken Jennings, Keith Crowningshield, Gerrit de Beer, J. J. Jepson
  • The Telephone Operators - Hildegarde Bratts, Sigfriede Holzhiem, Wolffe Bratts – Jennifer Lee Andrews, Suzanne Henderson, Lynnette Perry
  • The Two Jimmys -Black American Entertainers – David Jackson and Danny Strayhorn
  • Chauffeur -A gangster posing as a chauffeur – Ben George
  • Zinnowitz -An attorney in Berlin – Hal Robinson
  • Sandor -Hungarian Theatre impresario – Mitchell Jason
  • Witt -Company Manager of Grushinskaya's ballet troupe – Michel Moinot
  • Madame Peepee -Lavatory Attendant – Kathi Moss
  • Hermann Preysing -General Director of a large textile mill; a solid burgherTim Jerome
  • Flaemmchen (née Frieda Flamm) -A pretty young typist who has theatrical ambitionsJane Krakowski
  • Otto Kringelein -Not old, but mortally ill; a bookkeeper from a small townMichael Jeter
  • Baron Felix Von Gaigern -Young, athletic, charming, optimistic, brokeDavid Carroll
  • Raffaela -Confidante, Secretary, and sometimes dresser to Elizaveta GrushinskayaKaren Akers
  • Elizaveta Grushinskaya -The still-beautiful, world-famous, about-to-retire Prima BallerinaLiliane Montevecchi
  • Scullery Workers: Gunther Gustafsson, Werner Holst, Franz Kohl, Ernst Schmidt –Walter Willison, David Elledge, William Ryall, Henry Grossman
  • Hotel Courtesan – Suzanne Henderson
  • Trudie -A Maid – Jennifer Lee Andrews
  • Detective – William Ryall

Cast

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CharacterBroadway
(1989)
U.S. National Tour
(1990)
West End
(1992)
West End
(2004)
Southwark Playhouse
(2015)
Encores!
(2018)
Baron Felix Von GaigernDavid CarrollBrent BarrettJulian OvendenScott GarnhamJames Snyder
Otto KringeleinMichael JeterMark BakerBarry JamesDaniel EvansGeorge RaeBrandon Uranowitz
Elizaveta GrushinskayaLiliane MontevecchiMary Elizabeth MastrantonioChristine GrimandiIrina Dvorovenko
FlaemmchenJane KrakowskiDeLee LivelyLynnette PerryHelen BakerVictoria SerraHeléne Yorke
General Director PreysingTimothy JeromeK.C. WilsonMartyn EllisJacob ChapmanJohn Dossett
Raffaela OttanioKaren AkersDebbie de CourdreauxGillian BevanValerie CutkoNatascia Diaz
Colonel Doctor OtternschlagJohn WylieAnthony FranciosaBarry FosterGary RaymondPhilip RhamWilliam Ryall
Erik LitnauerBob StillmanDirk LumbardKieran McIlroyDavid LucasJonathan StewartJohn Clay III
The Two JimmysDavid Jackson
Danny Strayhorn
Nathan Gibson
David Andrew White
David Jackson
David Andrew White
Joseph Nobel
Paul Hazel
James T. Lane
Daniel Yearwood

Notable replacements

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Broadway: (1989–92)[4]

Song list

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  • "The Grand Parade"Y - Colonel-Doctor Otternschlag, Company
  • "Some Have, Some Have Not"WF - Scullery Workers, Bellboys
  • "As It Should Be"WF - Baron Felix von Gaigern
  • "At the Grand Hotel"Y/"Table With a View"WF - Otto Kringelein
  • "Maybe My Baby Loves Me"WF - Two Jimmys, Flaemmchen
  • "Fire and Ice"WF - Elizaveta Grushinskaya, Company
  • "Twenty-Two Years"Y/"Villa on a Hill"WF - Raffaela
  • "I Want to Go to Hollywood"Y - Flaemmchen
  • "Everybody's Doing It"Y - Zinnowitz
  • "As It Should Be" (Reprise) - Baron Felix von Gaigern
  • "The Crooked Path"WF - Hermann Preysing
  • "Who Couldn't Dance With You?"WF - Flaemmchen, Otto Kringelein
  • "Merger Is On"WF - Zinnowitz, Shareholders
  • "Gru's Bedroom"WF - Elizaveta Grushinskaya, Company
  • "Love Can't Happen"Y - Baron Felix von Gaigern, Elizaveta Grushinskaya
  • "What You Need"WF - Raffaela
  • "Bonjour Amour"Y - Elizaveta Grushinskaya
  • "H-A-P-P-Y"WF - Two Jimmys, Company
  • "We'll Take a Glass Together"WF - Baron Felix von Gaigern, Otto Kringelein, Company
  • "I Waltz Alone"WF - Colonel-Doctor Otternschlag
  • "H-A-P-P-Y" (Reprise) - Company
  • "Roses at the Station"Y - Baron Felix von Gaigern
  • "How Can I Tell Her?"WF - Raffaela
  • "The Grand Parade"/"Some Have, Some Have Not" (Reprise) - Erik, Operators, Company
  • "The Grand Waltz"WF - Company
^WF Song by Robert Wright and George Forrest
^Y Song by Maury Yeston

Productions

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After thirty-one previews,Grand Hotel opened on November 12, 1989, at theMartin Beck Theatre, and later transferred to theGeorge Gershwin Theatre to complete its total run of 1,017 performances. The show is played without an intermission.[citation needed] The original cast includedLiliane Montevecchi as Elizaveta,David Carroll as the Baron,Michael Jeter as Otto,Jane Krakowski as Flaemmchen,Tim Jerome as Preysing,John Wylie as Otternschlag, andBob Stillman as Erik. Replacements later in the run includedZina Bethune andCyd Charisse (in her Broadway debut at age 70) as Elizaveta,Rex Smith,Brent Barrett,John Schneider, andWalter Willison as the Baron, andChip Zien andAustin Pendleton as Kringelein. The production captured 12 Tony nominations, winning five awards, including best direction and choreography forTommy Tune. Theoriginal cast recording was released nearly two years after the show premiered. By the time the recording was made, Carroll was seriously ill withAIDS and died from a pulmonary embolism in the recording studio as he was about to record his vocal tracks.Brent Barrett, his understudy, who had appeared as the Baron in the national tour, sang the role for the cast album, released byRCA Victor.[5] The cast album features a bonus track of Carroll's performance during a 1991 cabaret fundraiser forEquity Fights AIDS, singing the Baron's song, "Love Can't Happen".[citation needed]

The production was reproduced by the same team in Berlin, Germany, in 1991, in German, at theTheater des Westens, withLeslie Caron as Grushinskaya.[6]

The firstWest End production opened on July 6, 1992, at theDominion Theatre, where it ran for slightly less than four months.[citation needed] In 2004,Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio starred as Elizaveta in a small-scale production directed byMichael Grandage at theDonmar Warehouse, garnering anOlivier Award for Best Musical Revival.[citation needed] A further production opened on July 31, 2015, at London'sSouthwark Playhouse, running for five weeks.[citation needed]

Grand Hotel: The 25th Anniversary Reunion Concert at the nightclub 54 Below in New York City on May 24, 2015, was written and directed by Walter Willison.[7] Willison starred alongside fellow Broadway cast members Montevecchi, Barrett, Jerome, as well asKaren Akers,Ben George,Ken Jennings,Hal Robinson andChip Zien. Dance consultant wasYvonne Marceau.[8] The show was produced byEncores!, directed by Josh Rhodes, in New York City from March 21–25, 2018.[citation needed]Grand Hotel: A 30th Anniversary Celebration in Concert at the nightclub The Yellow Pavilion (aka The Green Fig), presented by The Green Room 42, in New York City on November 11, 2019, was again written and directed by Willison, as a benefit for theActors Fund of America, and dedicated to Montevecchi.[9] Willison starred alongside Akers, Jerome, Jennings, Schneider,Jill Powell,Judy Kaye andSachi Parker. The associate director and choreographer (in the style of Tommy Tune) was Joanna Rush, and dance consultant was again Marceau.[10]

Awards and nominations

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Original Broadway production

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
1990Tony AwardBest MusicalNominated
Best Book of a MusicalLuther DavisNominated
Best Original ScoreRobert Wright,George Forrest andMaury YestonNominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a MusicalDavid CarrollNominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a MusicalLiliane MontevecchiNominated
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a MusicalMichael JeterWon
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a MusicalJane KrakowskiNominated
Best Direction of a MusicalTommy TuneWon
Best ChoreographyWon
Best Scenic DesignTony WaltonNominated
Best Costume DesignSanto LoquastoWon
Best Lighting DesignJules FisherWon
Drama Desk AwardOutstanding MusicalNominated
Outstanding Actor in a MusicalDavid CarrollNominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a MusicalMichael JeterWon
Outstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalJane KrakowskiNominated
Outstanding Director of a MusicalTommy TuneWon
Outstanding ChoreographyWon
Outstanding OrchestrationsPeter MatzNominated
Outstanding LyricsRobert Wright,George Forrest andMaury YestonNominated
Outstanding MusicNominated
Outstanding Set DesignTony WaltonNominated
Outstanding Costume DesignSanto LoquastoWon
Outstanding Lighting DesignJules FisherWon

Original London production

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
1993Laurence Olivier AwardBest New MusicalNominated
Best Theatre ChoreographerTommy TuneNominated

London Revival production

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
2005Laurence Olivier AwardBest Musical RevivalWon

Notes

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  1. ^Gänzl, Kurt (2001)."Grand Hotel".The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Second Edition. Vol. II.Schirmer Books. p. 807.
  2. ^Information from the StageAgent.com website[permanent dead link]
  3. ^Kalfatovic, Mary."Maury Yeston",Contemporary Musicians (ed. Luann Brennan), Vol. 22, Gale Group (1998)
  4. ^Grand Hotel: Replacements, IBDB, accessed September 12, 2023
  5. ^Culwell-Block, Logan."9 Original Cast Albums Featuring Replacement Performers",Playbill, November 17, 2022
  6. ^Kuhlbrodt, Detlef.Und so also ist Amerika,Die Tageszeitung, January 29, 1991
  7. ^Gans, Andrew."Original Cast Members Will Reunite forGrand Hotel: The 25th Anniversary Concert",Playbill, April 2, 2015
  8. ^Cohen, Alix."BWW Reviews: With Its Delicious 25th Anniversary Tribute toGrand Hotel, '54 Below Sings' Raises the Bar on Cabaret Concert Revues", BroadwayWorld, May 26, 2015
  9. ^Gans, Andrew."Karen Akers, Ken Jennings, Walter Willison, More Are Part ofGrand Hotel Reunion Concert",Playbill, November 11, 2019
  10. ^Fassler, Ron."A Grand Hotel Reunion at The Green Fig in Yotel Hotel" Theaterpuzzazz.com, November 14, 2019

References

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Musicals byMaury Yeston
National
Other
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