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Passion (musical)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Musical by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine
Passion
0
Original Broadway windowcard
MusicStephen Sondheim
LyricsStephen Sondheim
BookJames Lapine
BasisPassione d'Amore
byRuggero Maccari
Ettore Scola
Fosca
byIginio Ugo Tarchetti
Productions1994Broadway
1996West End
AwardsTony Award for Best Musical
Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical
Tony Award for Best Original Score

Passion is a one-actmusical, with music and lyrics byStephen Sondheim and a book byJames Lapine. The story is adapted fromEttore Scola's 1981 filmPassione d'Amore, and its source material,Iginio Ugo Tarchetti's 1869 novelFosca. Central themes include love, sex, obsession, illness, passion, beauty, power and manipulation.Passion is notable as one of the few projects that Sondheim himself conceived, along withSweeney Todd andRoad Show.

Set inRisorgimento-era Italy, the plot concerns a young soldier and the changes in him brought about by the obsessive love of Fosca, his Colonel's homely, ailing cousin.

Background and history

[edit]

The story originally came from a 19th-century novel byIginio Ugo Tarchetti, an experimental Italian writer prominently associated with theScapigliatura movement. His bookFosca was a fictionalized recounting of an affair he had had with an epileptic woman when he was a soldier.[1]

Sondheim first came up with the idea of writing a musical when he saw the film in 1983:

As Fosca started to speak and the camera cut back to her, I had my epiphany. I realized that the story was not about how she is going to fall in love with him, but about how he is going to fall in love with her . . . at the same time thinking, "They're never going to convince me of that, they're never going to pull that off," all the while knowing they would, thatScola wouldn't have taken on such a ripely melodramatic story unless he was convinced that he could make it plausible. By the end of the movie, the unwritten songs in my head were brimming and I was certain of two things. First, I wanted to make it into a musical, the problem being that it couldn't be a musical, not even in my nontraditional style, because the characters were so outsized. Second, I wantedJames Lapine to write it; he was a romantic, he had a feel for different centuries and different cultures, and he was enthusiastically attracted to weirdness.[2]

As it turned out, Lapine was already exploring the idea of adaptingMuscle, a memoir by Sam Fussell, for the musical stage. Together, they came up with the idea of a pair of double-billing one acts. Lapine wrote a couple of scenes and Sondheim had just started working on the opening number when he began to feel that his musical style was unsuitable forMuscle. The piece was more contemporary and in his opinion required a score reflecting pop sensibilities. He called Lapine and suggested that he find another songwriter, perhapsWilliam Finn, and include it as a companion piece. Meanwhile, they continued to work onPassion and as the piece grew, they found that it was enough for an entire evening of theatre.Muscle was eventually shelved.[3]

Productions

[edit]

Original Broadway production

[edit]

After 52 previews,Passion opened onBroadway at thePlymouth Theatre on May 9, 1994, and closed on January 7, 1995. Directed byJames Lapine, the show starredJere Shea as Giorgio,Donna Murphy as Fosca, andMarin Mazzie as Clara. Scenic design was byAdrianne Lobel, costume design byJane Greenwood, lighting design by Beverly Emmons, orchestrations byJonathan Tunick, and music direction by Paul Gemignani. This production was filmed shortly after closing and televised on thePublic Broadcasting Service seriesAmerican Playhouse on September 8, 1996. (It was released on DVD in 2003 by Image Entertainment.) The musical ran a total of 280 performances, making it the shortest-running musical ever to win theTony Award for Best Musical.

The role of Fosca was originally offered toPatti LuPone, but she turned it down to star inSunset Boulevard in theWest End. LuPone was then famously fired fromSunset Boulevard in favor ofGlenn Close, who took the show to Broadway.

On October 20, 2004, there was a tenth-anniversary concert at theAmbassador Theatre. It starredMarin Mazzie,Michael Cerveris,John McMartin andDonna Murphy.[4]

Original London production

[edit]

The show opened in theWest End, with significant musical and script revisions, at theQueen's Theatre in 1996. Directed byJeremy Sams, the cast featuredMichael Ball as Giorgio, Helen Hobson as Clara, andMaria Friedman as Fosca. The production ran for 232 performances. A recording was later made of the show performed in concert, with nearly all of the original London cast recreating their roles and preserving the musical changes from the earlier production.

2010 London revival

[edit]

A production at theDonmar Warehouse in London, as part of Sondheim's 80th birthday celebrations, opened on September 10, 2010, in previews, with the official opening September 21, running through November 27. It was directed byJamie Lloyd, who was the Donmar associate director at the time, and the cast included Argentine actressElena Roger,Scarlett Strallen, andDavid Thaxton.[5][6] This production won theEvening Standard Awards, Best Musical Award.[7] Thaxton won theOlivier Award forBest Actor in a Musical.[8]

2011 premiere in Germany

[edit]

Passion received its German-language premiere (translated by Roman Hinze) on January 28, 2011, at theDresden State Operetta. Directed byHolger Hauer, the lead roles were filled by Marcus Günzel (Giorgio), Maike Switzer (Clara) and Vasiliki Roussi (Fosca). The choir and orchestra of the Dresden State Operetta performed under the musical direction of Peter Christian Feigel. A special feature of this production was its orchestral arrangement for a symphonic orchestra, including a great string ensemble, harpsichord and harp, with no electronic instruments being used and modifications to the musical score being made in cooperation with the composer.Passion ran at the Dresden State Operetta in the 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons. The work was performed for the CD label “bobbymusic” from August 22 to 25, 2012 using the same performers. It is the first recording in German, and the first recording of the entire work with all of the musical numbers and spoken texts. Since December 2, 2013 the double CD has been on sale at the Dresden State Operetta (www.staatsoperette-dresden.de) as well as online (www.soundofmusic-shop.de orwww.bobbymusic.deArchived 2014-01-23 at theWayback Machine).

2013 Off-Broadway revival

[edit]

The show was mounted by theEast Village-basedClassic Stage Company, starringJudy Kuhn as Fosca,Melissa Errico as Clara and Ryan Silverman as Giorgio. Known primarily for their stagings of classical plays,Passion was the first musical that the company had ever produced.[9] The production was helmed byJohn Doyle and took a minimalist approach to the piece. Unlike other Doyle productions of Sondheim works, there were no instruments onstage. The run was extended through April 2013, and a two-disc cast recording was released on July 2 fromPS Classics.Rebecca Luker, who played the role of Clara in theKennedy Center's 2002 Sondheim Celebration production, replaced the ill Errico on this recording.[10][11]

2016 Scandinavian premiere in Sweden

[edit]

Passion received its Swedish-language premiere (translated by Ulricha Johnson) on September 17, 2016, at theKulturhuset Spira. Directed byVictoria Brattström, the lead roles were portrayed by Kalle Malmberg (Giorgio), Mari Lerberg Fossum (Clara) andAnnica Edstam (Fosca). The Jönköping Sinfonietta performed under the musical direction of Johan Siberg who also wrote the musical arrangements. The production had a second run atNorrlandsOperan in 2017.[12]

Other productions

[edit]

The musical made its regional premiere atNew Line Theatre inSt. Louis in 1996, and was later part of the Sondheim Celebration at theKennedy Center, running from July 19 to August 23, 2002, directed by Eric Schaeffer.Judy Kuhn andMichael Cerveris played Fosca and Giorgio, withRebecca Luker as Clara.[13]

The work was presented by theMinnesota Opera in 2004, staged byTim Albery and starringPatricia Racette as Fosca,William Burden as Giorgio, and Evelyn Pollock as Clara.[14]

In 2004 the show was performed in the Netherlands, and a Dutch-language recording was released—one of the few translations of a Sondheim score. This production had Vera Mann as Fosca, Stanley Burleson as Giorgio, andPia Douwes as Clara.[15][16]

A semi-staged concert, starring Patti LuPone as Fosca,Michael Cerveris as Giorgio andAudra McDonald as Clara, was held atLincoln Center in New York for three performances, March 30 – April 1, 2005. Directed byLonny Price, this production was broadcast on thePBS television showLive from Lincoln Center on March 31, 2005. It won thePrimetime Emmy Award forOutstanding Special Class Program.[17] The score in this production preserved the musical revisions from the London version. This same cast had performed at theRavinia Festival, Highland Park,Illinois, on August 22–23, 2003.

The show was done atChicago Shakespeare Theater from October 2, 2007, to November 11, 2007, starringAna Gasteyer as Fosca, Adam Brazier as Giorgio, and Kathy Voytko as Clara.[18]

The work was presented byLife Like Company at theArts Centre Melbourne from November 5 to 8, 2014, starring Theresa Borg as Fosca,Kane Alexander as Giorgio, andSilvie Paladino as Clara.

The musical had its Italian premiere at theCantiere Internazionale d'Arte ofMontepulciano on July 12, 2019, directed byKeith Warner. The musical direction was byRoland Boer, andJanie Dee played Fosca.[19]

A production was staged in 2018 atSignature Theatre directed by Matthew Gardiner and starringClaybourne Elder as Giorgio, Natascia Diaz as Fosca and Steffanie Leigh as Clara. It was Signature's second production of the work.[4]

The show was set to open in Pasadena, California, on March 15, 2020, directed by Michael Michetti atBoston Court Pasadena, but was postponed, and later canceled, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a production produced byRuthie Henshall who also starred as Fosca,Passion opened at theHope Mill Theatre in Manchester on May 5, 2022, directed by Michael Strassen.

Casts

[edit]
CharacterOriginal Broadway Cast
1994
Original West End Cast
1996
ClaraMarin MazzieHelen Hobson
Giorgio BachettiJere SheaMichael Ball
FoscaDonna MurphyMaria Friedman
Colonel RicciGregg EdelmanDavid Firth
LudovicMatthew PorrettaBarry Patterson
Doctor TambourriTom AldredgeHugh Ross
Major RizzolliCris GroenendaalNigel Williams

Synopsis

[edit]

The musical is usually presented in one act. An intermission was added only for the London production.

Act I

[edit]

In Milan in 1863, two lovers are at the height of ecstasy ("Happiness"). The handsome captain, Giorgio, breaks their reverie by telling Clara that he is being transferred to a provincialmilitary outpost. In the next scene, Giorgio is in the mess hall at the army camp with Colonel Ricci, the unit's commanding officer, and Dr. Tambourri, its physician. He thinks longingly of Clara ("First Letter") and she thinks longingly of him ("Second Letter"). Giorgio's thoughts are interrupted by a bloodcurdling scream. The Colonel tells him not to worry; it's just Fosca, his sick cousin. Giorgio offers to lend her some of his books.

As he begins to adjust to the tedium of life at the outpost, the sensitive Giorgio feels increasingly out of place amongst the other men ("Third Letter"). He starts becoming friendly with the Doctor, who says Fosca has a nervous disorder. She frequently collapses into seizures, exposing her suffering and need for connection.

Fosca arrives after dinner to thank Giorgio for the books. When he suggests she keep a novel longer to meditate over it, she explains that she does not read to think or search for truth, but to live vicariously through the characters. She then darkly muses on her life ("I Read"). Giorgio awkwardly changes the subject, but when he observes a hearse pulling up, Fosca has a hysterical convulsion. Giorgio is stunned and appalled ("Transition").

The next afternoon, the Colonel, the Doctor, Giorgio, and Fosca go for a walk together. As they stroll through a castle's neglected garden, Giorgio politely engages Fosca in conversation while mentally narrating a letter to Clara. When Fosca confesses that she feels no hope in her life, he tells her that "the only happiness that we can be certain of is love." Fosca is hurt and embarrassed, but recognizes that Giorgio, like herself, is different from others, and asks for his friendship ("Garden Sequence").

Giorgio and Clara exchange letters about Fosca. Clara urges him to avoid her whenever possible. When Giorgio is preparing to take a five-day leave, Fosca shows up unexpectedly, begging him to return soon. Fosca is next seen reading, stone-faced, from a letter Giorgio has sent rejecting her feelings as he and Clara make love ("Trio").

Upon Giorgio's return, Fosca reproaches him. She demands to know about his affair and learns that Clara is married. In a sharp exchange, they agree to sever all ties. Weeks go by with no contact between them, but just as he is beginning to think he is finally free of Fosca, Giorgio is informed by the Doctor that she is dying. His rejection of her love has exacerbated her illness. Giorgio, whose job as a soldier is to save lives, must visit her sickbed. He reluctantly agrees.

Giorgio enters Fosca's chamber, and she implores him to lie beside her while she sleeps. At daybreak, Fosca asks him to write her a letter acknowledging the impact that she has made on his soul ("I Wish I Could Forget You"). She then tries to kiss him. She is seized by another convulsive attack, and he hastens from the room.

Act II

[edit]

The soldiers gossip about Giorgio and Fosca while playing pool ("Soldiers' Gossip"). The Colonel thanks Giorgio for the kindness he has shown Fosca and explains her history. As a child, Fosca's parents doted on her, and she once had illusions about her looks. When she was 17, the Colonel introduced her to anAustrian count, Ludovic. Fosca was taken with him, though she had her reservations. Once they were married, Ludovic took all her family's money. Fosca eventually discovered that he had another wife and a child. When confronted, he admitted his deception and vanished. It was then that Fosca first became ill. After her parents died, she went to live with the Colonel, who felt responsible for her circumstances ("Flashback").

Meanwhile, Clara has written Giorgio a letter ("Sunrise Letter") in which she describes her fear of losing love when she is old and no longer beautiful. Giorgio makes his way to a desolate mountain and is in the midst of reading when Fosca appears. After Giorgio lashes out at her in anger ("Is This What You Call Love?"), she crumples and faints. He picks her up and carries her back in the rain.

The rain, the ordeal of getting Fosca back to camp, and perhaps exposure to her contagious emotions conspire to give Giorgio a fever. He falls into slumber and dreams that Fosca is dragging him down into the grave ("Nightmare"). The Doctor sends him to Milan on sick leave ("Forty Days"). As he boards the train, he is followed once again by Fosca. She apologizes for everything and promises to keep her distance for good. Giorgio pleads with her to give him up. She explains that her love is not a choice: it is who she is, and she would gladly die for him ("Loving You"). Giorgio is finally moved by the force of her emotion. He takes her back to the outpost ("Transition").

The Doctor warns Giorgio that he must stop seeing Fosca because she threatens his mental and physical health. Giorgio requests to forgo his leave; he feels it his duty to stay and help her as much as he can. In Milan, Clara questions him jealously about Fosca. Giorgio asks Clara to leave her husband and start a new life with him, but she says she cannot because of her son.

At Christmas, Giorgio is told that he has been transferred to military headquarters. Later, he reads Clara's newest letter, in which she asks him to wait until her son is grown before planning a more serious commitment ("Farewell Letter"). Giorgio finds he no longer desires the carefully arranged, convenient affair they shared ("Just Another Love Story").

Having discovered the letter Fosca dictated, the Colonel accuses Giorgio of leading her on and demands a duel. Giorgio insists the letter is sincere. The Doctor attempts to mediate between them, but Giorgio insists on seeing her again. He realizes that he loves Fosca, for no one has ever truly loved him but her. That evening, he returns to Fosca's room, knowing that the physical act might very well kill her ("No One Has Ever Loved Me"). They embrace, their passion consummated at last.

The duel takes place the following morning behind the castle. Giorgio shoots the Colonel and lets out a shrill howl eerily reminiscent of Fosca's earlier outbursts.

Months later, Giorgio is in a hospital, dazed, recovering from a nervous breakdown. He is told that Fosca died shortly after their night together; the Colonel recovered from the wound. Dreamlike, the other characters in the story reappear as Giorgio begins reading Fosca's last letter. Gradually her voice joins his, and together they look back on their revelations ("Finale").

The company walks off, Fosca last, leaving Giorgio alone at his table.

Scenes and musical numbers

[edit]

Note: No song titles appear in the program; titles below are from cast recordings.

Scene 1: Clara's bedroom in Milan

  • Happiness – Clara and Giorgio

Scene 2: The dining quarters; Outdoors; The dining quarters

  • First Letter ("Clara, I cried...") – Clara and Giorgio
  • Second Letter ("Giorgio, I too have cried") – Clara and Giorgio
  • Third Letter ("Clara, I'm in hell") – Clara, Giorgio and Soldiers
  • Fourth Letter ("Yesterday I walked through the park...") – Clara
  • I Read – Fosca
  • Transition #1 ("How can I describe her?"/"The town – it is remote, isn't it?") – Giorgio/Soldiers

Scene 3: The castle garden

  • Garden Sequence
    • "All the while as we strolled..." – Giorgio, Clara
    • "Love that fills every waking moment..." – Clara, Giorgio
    • "To speak to me of love..." – Fosca

Scene 4: The dining quarters

  • Three Days – Fosca
  • Transition #2 ("All the time I watched from my room...") – Soldiers

Scene 5: The courtyard; Fosca's drawing room & Clara's bedroom

  • Happiness – Trio (Fifth Letter) – Fosca, Giorgio, Clara
  • Transition #3 ("I watched you from my window...") – Attendants

Scene 6: Fosca's Drawing Room; Doctor Tambourri's office

  • Three weeks/"This is hell..." – Clara/Soldiers

Scene 7: Fosca's bedroom

  • "God, you are so beautiful..." (Happiness) – Fosca
  • I Wish I Could Forget You – Fosca (Giorgio)
  • Transition #4 ("How can I describe her? The wretchedness, the embarrassment.") – Soldiers

Scene 8: Billiard room; Outdoors; Flashback to Fosca's past

  • Soldiers' Gossip #1 – Soldiers

Scene 9: Flashback to Fosca's past

  • Flashback – Colonel Ricci, Fosca, Fosca's Mother, Fosca's Father, Ludovic, Mistress

Scene 10: The Mountainside, a distance from the outpost.

  • Sunrise Letter – Clara and Giorgio
  • Is This What You Call Love? – Giorgio

Scene 11: Parade ground; Giorgio's bedroom

  • Soldiers' Gossip #2 – Soldiers
  • Transition #5 – Nightmare ("Everywhere I turn...") – Group #1 and #2

Scene 12: A Train compartment to Milan; back at the Courtyard

  • Transition #6 ("To feel a woman's touch...") – Major Rizolli
  • Forty Days – Clara
  • Loving You – Fosca
  • Transition #7 ("How long were we apart") – Woman, Man
  • Soldiers' Gossip #3 – Soldiers

Scene 13: Near the Milan Train Station

  • "Giorgio, I didn't tell you in my letter" – Clara

Scene 14: A Christmas party at the dining quarters.

  • La Pace Sulla Terra (Peace on Earth) – Lieutenant Torasso
  • Farewell Letter – Clara
  • Just Another Love Story (Happiness/Is This What You Call Love?) – Giorgio and Clara

Scene 15: Doctor Tambourri's office; Fosca's Bedroom

  • No One Has Ever Loved Me (Extended) – Giorgio (to Dr. Tambourri) †
  • No One Has Ever Loved Me – Giorgio (to Fosca)
  • "All this happiness..." (Happiness – Reprise) – Fosca

Scene 16: An Open Field

  • The Duel

Scene 17: A hospital

  • Final Transition – Company
  • Finale (Your Love Will Live In Me) – Giorgio, Fosca, Company

† Cut from the original Broadway production and then restored to 1996 London production.

Response and analysis

[edit]

Passion was generally admired by critics for its ambition but savaged by theatregoers when it first opened. In particular, audiences were repelled by the characterization of Fosca. During previews, people would applaud whenever Fosca had a meltdown. In one performance, someone from the balcony yelled "Die, Fosca! Die!"[20]

Sondheim said the show is about how "the force of somebody's feelings for you can crack you open, and how it is the life force in a deadened world."[21] In response to the hostility encountered during the early performances, he has said:

The story struck some audiences as ridiculous. They refused to believe that anyone, much less the handsome Giorgio, could come to love someone so manipulative and relentless, not to mention physically repellent, as Fosca. As the perennial banality would have it, they couldn't "identify" with the main characters. The violence of their reaction, however, strikes me as an example of "The lady doth protest too much." I think they may have identified with Giorgio and Fosca all too readily and uncomfortably. The idea of a love that's pure, that burns withD.H. Lawrence's gemlike flame, emanating from a source so gnarled and selfish, is hard to accept. Perhaps they were reacting to the realization that we are all Fosca, we are all Giorgio, we are all Clara.[2]

Michiko Kakutani of theNew York Times wrote thatPassion had "a lush, romantic score that mirrors the heightened, operatic nature of the story . . . Jonathan Tunick's orchestration plays an especially important role in lending the music a richness of texture and bringing out its sweeping melodic lines. The sets and lighting are warm and glowy and fervent, reminiscent of the colors of Italian frescoes and evocative of the story's intense, highly dramatic mood. Less a series of individual songs than a hypnotic net of music, the show's score traces the shifting, kaleidoscopic emotions of the characters, even as it draws the audience into the dreamlike world of their fevered passions."[21]

Clive Barnes gave the musical a rave review: "Once in an extraordinary while, you sit in a theater and your body shivers with the sense and thrill of something so new, so unexpected, that it seems, for those fugitive moments, more like life than art.Passion is just plain wonderful—emotional and yes, passionate . . . Sondheim's music—his most expressive yet—glows and glowers, and Tunick has found the precise tonal colorations for its impressionistic moods and emotional overlays. From the start of his career, Sondheim has pushed the parameters of his art. Here is the breakthrough. Exultantly dramatic, this is the most thrilling piece of theater on Broadway."[22]

TheNew York Times review of the original Broadway production called it an "unalloyed love story . . . The score contains some insinuating melodies. You can hear madness in the ecstatic lilt." But, the reviewer wrote, "the boldness of the enterprise never quite pays off. The musical leads an audience right up to the moment of transcendence but is unable in the end to provide the lift that would elevate the material above the disturbing."[23]

In his review of the Off-Broadway revival,Ben Brantley calledPassion "the most personal and internalized of Sondheim's works . . . Of all the directors who have staged Mr. Sondheim's musicals, no one cuts closer to their heart thanJohn Doyle, a minimalist with a scalpel. When it was first staged, in 1994, this concentrated portrait of a romantic triangle seemed to take place at a chilly, analytic remove. In contrast Mr. Doyle'sPassion comes across as a pulsing collective fever dream. And it reminds us that out of such dreams a startling clarity can emerge, almost painful in its acuteness . . . What follows is the gradual shift of Giorgio's affections from the seductive, radiant Clara to the demanding Fosca, who pursues him with an obsessiveness to rival the revenge fixation of Sweeney Todd. If this is, on the surface, a most improbable transition, it also feels inevitable here, as Giorgio arrives at the realization that 'love within reason is not love at all' . . . but I didn't stop to think that I was listening to songs. I was hearing thought. And at moments, I was hearing a distillation of pure emotion."[24]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Original Broadway production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1994Tony AwardBest MusicalWon
Best Book of a MusicalJames LapineWon
Best Original ScoreStephen SondheimWon
Best Actor in a MusicalJere SheaNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalDonna MurphyWon
Best Featured Actor in a MusicalTom AldredgeNominated
Best Featured Actress in a MusicalMarin MazzieNominated
Best Direction of a MusicalJames LapineNominated
Best Costume DesignJane GreenwoodNominated
Best Lighting DesignBeverly EmmonsNominated
Drama Desk AwardOutstanding MusicalWon
Outstanding Book of a MusicalJames LapineWon
Outstanding Actor in a MusicalJere SheaNominated
Outstanding Actress in a MusicalDonna MurphyWon
Outstanding Director of a MusicalJames LapineNominated
Outstanding OrchestrationsJonathan TunickWon
Outstanding LyricsStephen SondheimWon
Outstanding MusicWon
Outstanding Set DesignAdrianne LobelNominated
Outstanding Costume DesignJane GreenwoodNominated
Outstanding Lighting DesignBeverly EmmonsNominated
Theatre World AwardJere SheaWon

Original London production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1997Laurence Olivier Award[25]Best New MusicalNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalMaria FriedmanWon
Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a MusicalHugh RossNominated
Best Set DesignPaul FarnsworthNominated

2010 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2011Laurence Olivier Award[26]Best Musical RevivalNominated
Best Actor in a MusicalDavid ThaxtonWon
Best Actress in a MusicalElena RogerNominated
Evening Standard AwardsBest Musical RevivalWon

2013 Off-Broadway Revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2013Drama Desk AwardsDrama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a MusicalNominated
Outstanding Actor in a MusicalRyan SilvermanNominated
Outstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalMelissa ErricoNominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a MusicalStephen BogardusNominated
Outstanding DirectorJohn DoyleNominated
Outstanding Sound Design in a MusicalDan Moses SchreierNominated
Outstanding Lighting DesignJane CoxNominated

References

[edit]
  1. ^Secrest, Meryl.Stephen Sondheim: A Life. Delta; new edition (1999), 337
  2. ^abSondheim, Stephen.Look, I Made a Hat: Collected Lyrics (1981–2011). Knopf (2011), 177
  3. ^Secrest, Meryl.Stephen Sondheim: A Life. Delta; new edition (1999), 379
  4. ^PASSION 10th Anniversary Concert to Benefit Friends in Deed
  5. ^ListingArchived 2012-02-22 at theWayback Machine donmarwarehouse.com
  6. ^Shenton, Mark."Sondheim's 'Passion' Opens at London's Donmar Warehouse Sept. 21"Archived 2010-09-22 at theWayback Machine playbill.com, September 21, 2010
  7. ^Shenton, Mark."'Passion' and Clybourne Park Win Evening Standard Awards; Sir Peter Hall, Michael Gambon Honored"Archived 2012-10-19 at theWayback Machine playbill.com, November 28, 2010
  8. ^"David Thaxton Wins Best Actor in a Musical"Archived 2012-09-09 atarchive.today,Olivier Awards, 13 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-14.
  9. ^[1],The New York Times. Patricia Cohen. "Classic Stage Season to Begin with Rodgers and Hammerstein's 'Allegro'." March 6, 2014. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  10. ^[2],Broadwayworld.com. Retrieved 2013-4-11.
  11. ^Culwell-Block, Logan."9 Original Cast Albums Featuring Replacement Performers",Playbill, November 17, 2022
  12. ^"Passion". 24 February 2017.
  13. ^The Sondheim Celebration at the Kennedy Center sondheimguide.com, retrieved December 15, 2009
  14. ^Anthony, Michael. "Classical:Sondheim's 'Passion'", Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), p. 11F, February 22, 2004
  15. ^"Pia Douwes, Vera Mann Stanley Burleson and rehearsing for Passion" nieuwsbank.nl (translation), June 7, 2004
  16. ^Passion recording in Dutch discogs.com, retrieved December 14, 2009
  17. ^"Passion (Live from Lincoln Center)".Emmys.com.Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. RetrievedOctober 29, 2019.
  18. ^Jones, Kenneth."Brazier, Gasteyer, Voytko Are Passion's Trio in Chicago, Oct. 2-Nov. 11", playbill.com, October 2, 2007
  19. ^"Passion: Italian premiere with Janie Dee and Philip Smith, sondheimsociety.com, July 12, 2019
  20. ^Secrest, Meryl.Stephen Sondheim: A Life. Delta; new edition (1999), 386
  21. ^abKakutani, Michiko."Theater:Sondheim's Passionate 'Passion'"The New York Times, March 20, 1994
  22. ^Barnes, Clive.[3]The New York Post, May 11, 1994
  23. ^Richards, David."Review/Theater; Sondheim Explores the Heart's Terrain"The New York Times, from Books, The New York Times on the Web, May 10, 1994
  24. ^Brantley, Ben."Close Enough to Singe Your Soul"The New York Times, February 28, 2013,
  25. ^"Olivier Awards, 1997Archived 2008-03-15 at theWayback Machine albemarle-london.com, retrieved December 14, 2009
  26. ^"List of Winners, 2011" Olivierawards.com, accessed March 15, 2011
  • Original Broadway Cast Album booklet

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