
JEROME ROBBINS’ BROADWAY REDUX By Peter Filichia
Jason Alexander gave me a brilliant pre-emptive strike. That was late ’88, I recall. He was about to open as the leading man of JEROME ROBBINS’ BROADWAY. In addition to performing, he’d write the continuity which he’d deliver as narrator. Robbins was both creating and recreating his previous successes. With an unprecedented 22 weeks of […]

LA CAGE AUX BOSTON By Peter Filichia
“Thank you, Boston!” So read the small round sticker that adorned the cover of some LA CAGE AUX FOLLES original cast albums. Given that hundreds of musicals had met with rapturous success in New England’s best theater town – SOUTH PACIFIC, THE SOUND OF MUSIC, MAME, CABARET and PROMISES, PROMISES among dozens of others – […]

THREE CHEERS FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE By Peter Filichia
This week, you might wish that you lived in Pennsylvania. (Even if it’s hot as hell in Philadelphia.) For The Keystone State, as it’s chummily called, considers Flag Day – June 14th – a state holiday. Plenty of Pennsylvanians have the day off from work. Even if you don’t have the entire day at your […]

ANOTHER LISTEN TO DEAR WORLD By Peter Filichia
So, after writing the scores to HELLO, DOLLY! in 1964 and MAME in 1966, what could Jerry Herman do for an encore? In 1967, when DOLLY was on course to becoming the longest-running musical in Broadway history, Herman announced that he’d tackle Jean Giraudoux’s fanciful comedy THE MADWOMAN OF CHAILLOT. What? Both Dolly and Mame […]
OLIVER! REVIEWING THE SITUATION By Peter Filichia
These two brief stories are true. Walking down West 43rd Street last week, I saw a teenage boy and a teenage girl holding hands, swinging them back and forth, and loudly singing with great joy. Their song of choice was “I’d Do Anything” from OLIVER! Seven minutes later – and yes, I did check my watch to verify that so little time had passed – I […]