The Denver Center Theatre Company has assembled a stellar group of Broadway performers to bring Jane Austen's beloved romance to life in SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL, with book and lyrics by Jeffrey Haddow and music by Neal Hampton. It will receive its world premiere production April 5. Many thanks to its director and choreographer, Marcia Milgrom Dodge, for accepting to answer some questions about her work, Jane Austen and Sense & Sensibility.
- Your Sense
& Sensibility The Musical will receive its world premiere production soon, on April 5th. Does it take more sense or more sensibility
to bring such a beloved novel to life on stage?
(picture courtesy of Marcia Milgrom Dodge) |
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How
different is Sense and Sensibility from anything you’ve worked on so far?
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It’s the most romantic show I’ve ever worked
on.
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You’ve assembled a stellar group of Broadway
performers for this grand musical. Can
you tell us something about them ?
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Sure.
Our sisters will be played by two exciting young leading ladies:
Stephanie Rothenberg (Elinor) and Mary Michael Patterson (Marianne) who bring
such beauty and vitality to these roles.
Our trio of suitors: Nick Verine (Edward), Jeremiah James (Willoughby)
and Robert Petkoff (Col. Brandon) are all handsome leading men with enormous
charisma and depth of feeling. Mrs.
Jennings and Sir John are played by Ruth Gorttschall and Ed Dixon, two of the
livliest Broadway performers who last appeared together on Broadway in Mary Poppins. And rounding out the company are the
versatile Joanna Glushak (Mrs. Dashwood and Mrs. Ferrars), the saucy Stacie
Bono (Lucy), the hilarious Liz Pearce & Andrew Kober (Fanny & John
Dashwood), Daniella Dalli, Preston Dyar, Kate Fisher, Jessica Hershberg, Steven
Strafford, Josh Walden and Jason Watson who play Society People, Servants, Country
Gentry and (with a few surprises) everyone in between!
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The story focuses on the two heroines and their
love predicaments. Elinor and Marianne, sense and sensibility. Their sisterly
bond goes beyond their differences and at the end of the journey, they look
more one like the other. One acquires more sense and loses part of her
impulsiveness, the other lets her heart start to rule over her head. Who of the
two sisters can you sympathize with more?
-
Hmmm.
That’s a tough one. My heart goes
out to Elinor for her inability to show her emotions. But Marianne pays a great price for her wild
abandon. As one of four sisters
(including a Marianne!) there was a great amount of balancing of both sides in
our house.
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And now the gentlemen: Edward Ferrars, John
Willoughby and Colonel Brandon. They form an interesting gallery of
fascinating male characters, each of them with his own peculiarities. Which
feature/s in their personalities did you
decide to highlight in your adaptation?
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We've tried to make Edward's awkwardness
understandable and attractive. His inability to express his emotions
resonates with the equally repressed Elinor, and when they're both free to open
up, the liberation should be tremendously satisfying to them and to the
audience. We have also tried to make Brandon's selfless love for Marianne and
his unswerving loyalty ultimately more sexy than Willoughby's glitter and dash.
At the end of our show, we don't want anyone in the audience thinking for a
minute that either sister has "settled" for anything. On the
contrary, they should leave exhilarated that the right hearts have finally been
united.
I have confessed more than once that I’ve got a
crush on Willoughby and I’d rather elope
with him, hoping to rescue his
damaged soul and to succeed in changing his libertine nature, than marry loyal, faithful (boring?) Edward
or Brandon. Who of the three would you choose instead?
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I think it would be difficult to choose and actually
must stay mum on this so as not to play favorites with my actors who play the
roles!
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As a director, what is the most challenging
aspect in staging a musical version of a widely popular classic?
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I want to please the Jane Austen fans, but at
the same time I want to create fans for the musical. Not everyone who will attend the production
is a Jane Austen reader. My job is to
make the show stand on its own terms as a beautiful piece of theatre.
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What is the achievement you are most proud of
in this production?
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The opportunity that The Denver Center Theatre
is giving to the production; to allow me to assemble the best creative team and
acting company possible for this production.
And my collaboration with the authors.
There is great trust among us and that is extremely special.
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The aspect you are most worried about?
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Not a thing!
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Will Janeites find great changes from their beloved
original text?
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They will find a few changes made that
primarily help move the story along and allow for deeper character development
on a few key people.
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Music and dance were two things Jane Austen
deeply loved. Do you think she would be proud of watching her characters
sing and dance and brought to life on
stage?
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Oh yes! Neal Hampton’s music feels rooted in
the period but has contemprary harmonies
that make the characters emotional lives feel relevant and immediate. And I’ve done exhaustive research on the
dances of the Regency period. I think
Jane Austen will appreciate that attention to detail coupled with my own
particular choreographic impulses.
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Jane Austen novels like S & S or P&P
were published 200 years ago. What is the great appeal they still go on having
on modern audiences?
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Romance. Romance. Romance.
- Why should Janeites come to see Sense &
Sensibility The Musical? And B. why should Austen newbies come?
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“Janeites” should come to Sense & Sensibility The Musical to see and hear their favorite
characters sing their hearts out in a highly original musical theatre adaptation
of the beloved novel. “Austen Newbies”
should come to Sense & Sensibility
The Musical for the most romantic musical theatre experience of their
lives!
More about our guest
After working in regional theatre, off-Broadway and elsewhere for thirty years, Marcia Milgrom Dodge directed and choreographed her first Broadway production, a revival of Ragtime in 2009. The production received 7 Tony Award Nominations including one for Dodge for Best Director of a Musical. Her Kennedy Center production of Ragtime received four 2010 Helen Hayes Awards including one for her for Best Director, Resident Musical.
2 comments:
I am not a fan of musicals, but I would definitely go to this one. Very curious to hear all the S&S characters singing and see them dancing.
After you close in Denver, please take the show on the road so the rest of us can see it! Sounds very exciting.
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