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Post by anthony40 on Apr 6, 2022 20:17:59 GMT
For anyone interested this documentary is on Sky Arts
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4,177 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Apr 7, 2022 19:09:24 GMT
Apologies if I have posted this in the wrong section- moderators, move if need be.
This was a 2013 HBO documentary directed by James Lapine, complex of many interviews with the great man himself over the many years, some of when he was an extremely young man.
Most show were covered.
Some really interesting tit bits. How Send in the Clowns was written in such a way that it allow non-singers enough space to breathe. It also covers all of the many artists who have covered it.
The lessons that he learn from the flops Do I hear A Waltz and Anyone Can Whistle.
How My Friends- Sweeney Todd singing to his recently reunited razor blades is a love song.
The connections of the words the pinch and the paunch and the pension in the song The Millers Son and how he had to think as the character.
There were scenes with the original Broadway cast recording Company, especially Being Alive.
The problem he has was that this was a shoe about marriage, of which he's had no experience. So he had a friend, Mary Rofhres who was on her second marriage over for dinner and he got out a notepad and took notes.
He was able to recall his time with Ether Merman during Gypsy and how, at the time, he was writing for a particulate performer.
He recalled that one of the things he learnt as a songwriter was that he constantly had to justify every word
Somethings Coming from West Side Story is an arc song; how you as the listener is seeing the journey that is yearning to take.
They showed how Yvonne De Carlo- a famous film actress, now on television- was cast in Follies and destined to sing a filler song called Can That Boy Foxtrot! which eventually became I'm Still Here in the show.
For this song he was inspired by Joan Crawford who's career had also arced, which, at the time, DeCarlo's career was taking.
They touched briefly on Pacific Overtures and again, ever so briefly, his sexuality and his regret that he'd never had children and the importance of teaching.
The song Sunday from his personal favourite show that was never meant to get to Broadway is supposed the resemble a funeral march- with the long, drawn out harmonising.
There was even, remarkably, a filmed version of Opening Doors from Merrily We Roll Along starting Darren Criss, Jeremy Jordan and America Ferrera including Sondheim himself and said when he wrote it he was trying to recall what he was going through at a similar age.
I mean, I just stumble across this and would urge any Sondheim fan to watch this on catch-up if you can
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Post by Deal J on Apr 8, 2022 7:32:09 GMT
I agree it's a great documentary, seeing him in the 'Opening Doors' number got me quite emotional. Lovely stuff.
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Post by singingbird on Apr 8, 2022 8:04:43 GMT
I really hope it's repeated sometime soon, as I didn't get to see it and it sounds amazing.
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4,961 posts
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Post by Someone in a tree on Apr 8, 2022 8:11:49 GMT
I really hope it's repeated sometime soon, as I didn't get to see it and it sounds amazing. It's still on a famous video sharing site.
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287 posts
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Post by singingbird on Apr 8, 2022 9:12:18 GMT
I really hope it's repeated sometime soon, as I didn't get to see it and it sounds amazing. It's still on a famous video sharing site. Thank you!!
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Post by scarpia on Apr 8, 2022 11:48:35 GMT
...is anyone going to mention that utterly weird thing involving Jarvis Cocker?
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4,177 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Apr 8, 2022 11:57:01 GMT
...is anyone going to mention that utterly weird thing involving Jarvis Cocker? Oh yes, I forgot about that. It was weird. Was it from a film?
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Post by Deal J on Apr 8, 2022 13:41:57 GMT
I rather liked that - but then I'm a fan of PULP so I'm biased. It was filmed especially for the documentary, I think it was to show how versatile Sondheim's work is.
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Post by Phantom of London on Apr 8, 2022 23:35:53 GMT
Judging by the thread title, I thought Stephen Sondheim had been reincarnated as Catherine Howard.
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