Harold Prince Cabaret Essay

1150 Words5 Pages

1. Harold Prince went into rehearsal in the fall of 1966, he had no idea how the musical Cabaret, the first musical to deal with the emergence of Nazi Germany was going to turn out. In the mid 1960’s, Prince directed two musicals and each of the stories were heavier on the atmosphere than plot. They dealt with the seamier side of life in Berlin, such as nightclubs, anti-Semitism, libertinism, during the time period where Hitler was about to begin his reign of power. Princes collaborators were Joe Masteroff who wrote the book She Loves Me and the team of John Kander and Fred Ebb. Shortly after, the team began to sort through the material and they were drawn to Berlin and also to its Cabaret scene. Sally Bowles who was the most compelling female …show more content…

Gerome Ragni and James Rado found a musical script about life among the flower children in the East village and then they kept bugging Joseph Papp to do something with it. The source material is a lot like the show Henry, Sweet Henry. The show was a very traditional book show about two fifteen-year-old girls. The second act of the show featured a hippie section which got good reviews by …show more content…

In the 1960’s rock and roll spoke to the youth, rock was about youth and it was the pop culture wedge that divided parents and children. A younger audience began coming to the musical, because they were very interested by the music. Hair made musical theatre history by defining the genre of rock musical. The shows nudity was a first for a Broadway musical, as was its first full rock score.

5. Non-linear story telling is where events are shown in non-chronological order, or in other ways where the story doesn’t follow the usual pattern of the events that are featured. When Sondheim wrote the score, he wrote it mostly perpendicular, the characters in the story were commenting out of turn, or stepping outside of the situation to comment on themselves, on love or on commitment. During Sondheim early career as a writer, his works were being ignored, but soon people began praising him for his cleverness, irony and