Hallelujah, Baby! | |
Music: | Jule Styne |
Lyrics: | Adolph Green Betty Comden |
Productions: | 1967 Broadway 2004 Arena Stage George Street Playhouse |
Awards: | Tony Award for Best Musical Tony Award for Best Score |
Hallelujah, Baby! is a musical with music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Adolph Green and Betty Comden, and a book by Arthur Laurents. The show is "a chronicle of the African American struggle for equality during the [first half of the] 20th century."[1]
The musical premiered on Broadway in 1967 and made a young Leslie Uggams a star. It won the Tony Award for Best Musical. In 2004, Laurents restaged the show twice with the same cast, in Washington D.C at the Arena Stage and at the George Street Playhouse in New Jersey, in order to update and streamline the story for modern sensibilities, and potentially move to New York for a full revival. The score was updated by Adolph Green's daughter, Amanda Green. Critics noted that although the score and performances were entertaining and had its merits, the book was still too outdated. [2] [3]
Georgina is a talented, beautiful and ambitious African American woman, determined to have a career. Overcoming many obstacles, she rises to stardom. She makes her way through the Great Depression, World War II, and the beginning of the civil rights movement. Her mother advises her to "keep her place" as a maid on a South Carolina estate, but Georgina negotiates the blocks to stardom from her negative and opportunistic mother. She encounters the racism that pervades society and show business.
Two men vie for Georgina's attention. Harvey, who is white, is able to provide opportunities for her. Her fiancé, Clem, who is a black train porter, cannot help her on her journey. By the 1950s, she is a successful singer in an expensive night club. However, Clem, who became an Army captain and then a civil rights activist, challenges Georgina's life goals.
Character | Broadway (1967)[4] | Summer Stock Tour (1968)[5] | Arena Stage (2004)[6] | Off-Broadway (2018)[7] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Georgina | Leslie Uggams | Diana Sands | Suzzanne Douglas | Stephanie Umoh | |
Momma | Lillian Hayman | Rosetta LeNoire | Ann Duquesnay | Vivian Reed | |
Clem | Robert Hooks | Leon Bibb | Curtiss Cook | Jarran Muse | |
Mary | Barbara Sharma | Connie Danese | Laurie Gamache | Jennifer Cody | |
Harvey | Allen Case | Larry Keith | Stephen Zinnato | Tally Sessions | |
Mr. Charles / Timmy | Frank Hamilton | N/A | |||
Mrs. Charles / Ethel | Marilyn Cooper | Betsy Langman | N/A | ||
Tip | Winston DeWitt Hemsley | Bernard Johnson | Randy Donaldson | Bernard Dotson | |
Tap | Alan Weeks | Mabel Robinson | Gerry McIntyre | Randy Donaldson |
"Witches Brew" had a tune that was recycled from "Call Me Savage," a song from a prior musical Fade Out – Fade In and was originally sung by Carol Burnett.
The musical opened on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on April 26, 1967, and closed on January 13, 1968, after 293 performances and 22 previews. It was directed by Burt Shevelove, choreographed by Kevin Carlisle, musical direction by Buster Davis, orchestrations by Peter Matz, with scenic design by William and Jean Eckart, costumes by Irene Sharaff and lighting by Tharon Musser. The production won five Tony Awards (out of nine nominations), including Best Musical, and Uggams and Hayman won the Tonys for Best Actress and Best Featured Actress, respectively, for their performances. This remains the only show to win the Tony for Best Musical after it closed.
Arthur Laurents felt that "the original production was too soft in its take on black social progress during the first six decades or so of the twentieth century. It was originally written with Lena Horne in mind. When the steely Horne opted out of the project, it was rewritten to suit the more youthful and bubbly Leslie Uggams." In the 2004 production, Laurents attempted "to add levels of darker intensity.... However, the music and lyrics are in the infectiously bright and bubbly style of musical comedy, and his efforts in this area reduce the charm and good spirits of the show without adding much of significance in the way of depth or insight."[8] According to Laurents, after Lena Horne declined to do the show, "What we should have done is abandon the show.... Instead it was rewriten for a woman who is one of the nicest women I have ever met in the theatre, Leslie Uggams,--and, God knows, she has a beautiful voice ... she was good, but it wasn't that original show. The show lost its edge, and I must say I lost interest in it."[9]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1967 | Theatre World Award | Leslie Uggams | ||
1968 | Tony Award | Best Musical | ||
Best Original Score | Jule Styne, Adolph Green and Betty Comden | |||
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical | Robert Hooks | |||
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical | Leslie Uggams | |||
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical | Lillian Hayman | |||
Best Direction of a Musical | Burt Shevelove | |||
Best Choreography | Kevin Carlisle | |||
Best Producer of a Musical | Albert W. Selden, Hal James, Jane C. Nussbaum and Harry Rigby | |||
Best Costume Design | Irene Sharaff |
Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | Outstanding Supporting Actress, Resident Musical | Ann Duquesnay | [10] | ||
2005 | Helen Hayes Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress, Resident Musical | |||