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  • Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel

    Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel by Carter, Tim;

    Series: Oxford Keynotes;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 9 November 2017

    • ISBN 9780190693442
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages160 pages
    • Size 206x140x15 mm
    • Weight 204 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 16 line art; 8 halftone
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    Short description:

    Carousel (1945) was Rodgers and Hammerstein's second collaboration following their hugely successful Oklahoma! (1943). Based on Ferenc Molnár's play, Liliom (1909), it took Broadway musical theater in far darker directions given its subject and extensive music. Here we discover how it came about, and what it was trying to achieve.

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    Long description:

    Carousel (1945), with music by Richard Rodgers and the book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, was their second collaboration following the surprising success of Oklahoma! (1943). They worked again with Theresa Helburn and Lawrence Langner of the Theatre Guild (producers), Rouben Mamoulian (director), and Agnes de Mille (choreographer). But with Oklahoma! still running to sell-out houses, they needed to do something quite different.

    Based on a play, Liliom (1909), by the Hungarian playwright Ferenc Molnár, Carousel took Broadway musical theater in far darker directions because of its subject matter-the protagonist, Billy Bigelow, is wholly an anti-hero-and also given its extensive music that some claimed came close to opera. The action is shifted from a gritty working-class suburb of Budapest to the New England coast (Maine), but the themes remain the same as two social misfits try to survive harsh economic times. Billy Bigelow is unemployed, prone to domestic violence, and dies in the course of committing a robbery; Julie Jordan sticks by him through thick and thin; and the show seeks some manner of redemption for both of them as Billy is given a day back on earth to do some good for his wife and their daughter. Troubling though these matters are nowadays, they fit squarely in the context of a country moving through the end of World War II to an uncertain future.

    Not for nothing had composers such as Giacomo Puccini and Kurt Weill already tried to persuade Molnár to release his play. It also led Rodgers and Hammerstein to new heights: songs such as "If I Loved You," Billy's "Soliloquy," and "You'll Never Walk Alone" transformed the American musical. In this book, we discover how and why they came about, and exactly what Carousel was trying to achieve.

    Through his careful analysis and compelling reading of new sources, Carter makes a compelling case for scholars and performers to reconsider a work that might otherwise be dismissed, and provides a fascinating historical narrative in the process.

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    Table of Contents:

    Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Sources and permissions
    List of illustrations, tables, and music examples
    1: Carousel in Context
    2: Molnár's Liliom: From Budapest to Broadway (and Beyond)
    Three film versions
    The Theatre Guild, American musical theater, and a would-be Carousel
    Molnár sees Oklahoma!
    3: Creating Carousel
    Some dilemmas
    Hammerstein's draft scenario
    Casting, rehearsals, and tryouts
    4: A Duet, a Soliloquy, and a Ballet
    The "Bench scene"
    "Soliloquy"
    "Louise's Ballet"
    5: The Problems of an Ending
    Up or down?
    A post-war message
    6: From Stage to Screen (and Back)
    The search for "American opera"
    Carousel on film
    Restoring Carousel
    Appendix: Hammerstein's Scenario for Carousel
    Further Reading, Listening, and Viewing
    Notes
    Index

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