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Présentation:
Le célèbre film, le plus vu et celui
ayant fait le plus de ventes de l'histoire d'Hollywood raconté
par ses deux principales stars Julie Andres et Christopher
Plummer dans un documentaire reprenant de nombreux extraits
du film complètement renumérisé avec
la toute dernière technologie vidéo et sono.
Ce documentaire fait partie de la suite DVD 40ème anniversaire
du film, un document important et surtout, un film à
voir absolument. 10/10
(Wikipedia) The Sound of Music is a musical with music by
Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and a book
by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. It is based on the memoir
of Maria von Trapp, The Story of the Trapp Family Singers.
Many songs from the musical have become standards, including
the title song "The Sound of Music", "Edelweiss",
"My Favorite Things", "Climb Ev'ry Mountain"
and "Do-Re-Mi".
The original Broadway production, starring Mary Martin and
Theodore Bikel, opened in November 1959, and the show has
enjoyed numerous productions and revivals since then. It has
also been made into an Academy Award-winning 1965 film musical
starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. The Sound
of Music was the final musical written by Rodgers and Hammerstein;
Hammerstein died of cancer nine months after the Broadway
premiere.
After viewing The Trapp Family, a 1956 Austrian film about
the von Trapp family, and its 1958 sequel, The Trapp Family
in America (Die Trapp-Familie in Amerika), stage director
Vincent J. Donehue thought that the project would be perfect
for his friend Mary Martin; Broadway producers Leland Hayward
and Richard Halliday (Martin's husband) agreed. The producers
originally envisioned a nonmusical play that would be written
by Lindsay and Crouse and that would feature songs from the
repertoire of the Trapp Family Singers. Then they decided
to add an original song or two, perhaps by Rodgers and Hammerstein.
But it was soon agreed that the project should feature all
new songs and be a musical rather than a play.[1]
Details of the history of the von Trapp family were altered
for the musical. Georg Ludwig von Trapp lived with his family
in a villa in Aigen, a suburb of Salzburg. The real Maria
von Trapp was sent to be a tutor to one of the children, not
a governess to all of them. The Captain's oldest child was
a boy, not a girl, and the names of the children were changed
(at least partly to avoid confusion: the Captain's second
eldest daughter, the third of the seven, was also called Maria).
The von Trapps spent some years in Austria after Maria and
the Captain married – they did not have to flee right
away – and they fled to Italy, not Switzerland. Maria
von Trapp is said to have been unhappy with the movie's portrayal
of her husband as having been cold and stern prior to her
arrival, which she and their children strongly dispute.[2]
During the Cold War, the BBC planned to broadcast The Sound
of Music on radio in the event of a nuclear strike on the
United Kingdom. The broadcast would be part of an emergency
timetable of programs designed to "reassure" the
public in the aftermath of the attack.[3]
[edit] Synopsis
This plot summary may be too long or overly detailed. Please
help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making
it more concise. (December 2009)
Act I
In Salzburg, Austria, just before World War II, nuns from
Nonnberg Abbey are singing the Dixit Dominus. One of the postulants,
Maria Rainer, is missing. On the mountainside near the abbey,
Maria expresses her regret to leave the beautiful hills ("The
Sound of Music"). She returns to the abbey after the
gates are locked; the next day, the Mother Abbess and some
of the other nuns consider what to do about her ("Maria").
Maria explains that she was raised on that mountain and apologizes
for singing in the abbey garden without permission. The Mother
Abbess joins her in song ("My Favorite Things"),
but later tells Maria that she should spend some time outside
the abbey to help her decide whether she is ready for the
monastic life. The seven children of widower Captain Georg
von Trapp need a governess, and Maria will act as their governess
until September.
At his villa, von Trapp, a decorated World War I Captain of
the Austro-Hungarian Navy, informs Franz, the butler, and
Frau Schmidt, the housekeeper, that a new governess is coming
and that she will not be able to walk out as did her predecessor.
He also instructs them to prepare for his return from Vienna
with two guests. Maria arrives, and the Captain explains her
duties. He then summons the children with a bosun's whistle,
and they march in, clad in Navy-like uniforms. He introduces
the children (Liesl, Friedrich, Louisa, Kurt, Brigitta, Marta,
and Gretl) and teaches her their individual signals; but she
openly disapproves of this militaristic approach. When alone
with them, she breaks through their wariness, and after learning
that they do not know how to sing, she teaches them the basics
of music ("Do-Re-Mi").
That evening, Rolf, a young messenger, delivers a birthday
telegram to Franz and then meets with Liesl outside the villa.
Rolf lets slip that a colonel from Berlin is staying with
the Gauleiter and asks Liesl not to tell her father. He claims
he knows what is right for her because he is a year older
than she is ("Sixteen Going on Seventeen"). They
kiss and Rolf runs off, shocked by his boldness. As Maria
prepares for bed, Frau Schmidt gives her material to make
new clothes, as she had given all her worldly possessions
to the abbey for the poor. Maria asks for more material to
make play clothes for the children, but Frau Schmidt refuses
on grounds that they "march, not play". As Maria
says her evening prayers, Liesl slips through the window,
soaking wet from the thunderstorm. Maria agrees to keep her
secret. The other children run in, frightened by the storm.
To comfort and cheer them, Maria sings "The Lonely Goatherd".
Captain von Trapp arrives a month later with Baroness Elsa
Schräder and Max Detweiler, and they wonder why the children
are not there to greet them. When the Captain goes to look
for the children, Elsa tells Max that something is preventing
the Captain from marrying her. Max opines that only poor people
have the time for great romances ("How Can Love Survive").
Rolf enters, looking for Liesl. Surprised by the Captain,
he greets them with "Heil". The Captain orders him
off the property, maintaining that he is Austrian, not German.
Maria and the children leapfrog in, wearing play-clothes made
from the old drapes in Maria's room. Infuriated, the Captain
sends them off to clean up and change. Maria firmly tells
him that the children need him to love them, and he angrily
orders her back to the abbey. As she apologizes, they hear
the children singing "The Sound of Music", which
Maria had taught them, to Baroness Schräder. The Captain
joins in, and at the end he embraces the children. Alone with
Maria, he asks her to stay, thanking her for bringing music
back into his house. Elsa is suspicious of Maria until Maria
explains that she will be returning to the abbey in September.
The Captain gives a party to introduce Elsa to his friends,
and some of the guests argue over the Anschluss. Kurt asks
Maria to teach him to dance the Laendler. She demurs, but
he insists, and she attempts it. When he is unable to negotiate
a complicated figure, the Captain steps in to demonstrate.
Maria and the Captain dance until they come face-to-face,
and Maria breaks away, embarrassed and confused. When Max
arrives at the party, the Captain realizes that he needs another
woman to balance the dinner table and asks Maria to fill this
role. Max tells him that he cannot expect his guests to dine
with a nursemaid, but the Captain ignores the objection. Maria
and Brigitta discuss the expected marriage between Elsa and
the Captain, and Brigitta tells Maria that she and the Captain
are in love with each other. Elsa asks the Captain to let
the children say goodnight to the guests with a song. The
Captain resists; but Elsa nevertheless starts them off singing
"So Long, Farewell". Max is amazed at their talent
and decides that he needs them for the Kaltzberg Festival,
which he is organizing. After the guests leave for the dining
room, Maria unhappily slips out the front door with her luggage.
At the abbey, Maria tells the Mother Abbess that she is ready
to take her monastic vows; but the Mother Abbess realizes
that Maria is running away from her feelings. She tells Maria
that she must return to face the Captain and discover if they
love each other, and that, by actively searching for it, Maria
must find the life she was meant to live ("Climb Ev'ry
Mountain").
Act II
At the von Trapps' home, Max teaches the children how to sing
on stage, but does not tell the Captain that he has done so.
When the Captain enters and tries to get them to sing with
him, they complain that he is not doing it as did Maria, and
Elsa and Max leave the family alone. The von Trapps try to
figure out why Maria left, and the Captain reveals that he
has asked Elsa to marry him. The children try to cheer themselves
up by singing "My Favorite Things", but are unsuccessful
until they hear Maria singing on her way to rejoin them. When
Brigitta reveals the wedding plans, Maria decides to stay
only until the Captain can arrange for another governess.
Max and Elsa argue with the Captain about the imminent Anschluss,
trying to convince him that he must compromise, because it
is inevitable ("No Way to Stop It"). Elsa tries
to persuade him; but when he refuses, Elsa decides to break
off the engagement. Alone, the Captain and Maria finally admit
to their love, desiring only to be "An Ordinary Couple".
As they walk down the aisle, the nuns reprise "Maria"
against the wedding processional.
During the honeymoon, Max prepares the children to perform
at the Saltzberg Festival. Herr Zeller, the Gauleiter, arrives
and demands to know why they are not flying the flag of the
Third Reich now that the Anschluss has occurred. When the
Captain and Maria return early from their honeymoon, Brigitta
tells them that they are in time to hear them sing at the
Festival. The Captain refuses to allow the children to sing,
and when Max tries to convince him that the children would
sing for Austria, the Captain points out that Austria no longer
exists. Maria and Liesl discuss romantic love, and Maria assures
Liesl that in a few years, she will probably be married like
Maria ("Sixteen Going on Seventeen (Reprise)").
Rolf enters with a telegram for the Captain. He is cold to
Liesl and refuses to give Maria the telegram, but hands it
to Franz. The telegram offers the Captain a commission in
the German Navy. He asks Maria if he should accept in order
to keep his family safe. She tells him that his decision will
be hers, and he decides that they must secretly flee Austria.
German Admiral von Schreiber soon arrives to find out why
the Captain has not answered the telegram. On learning that
the Captain has just returned from his honeymoon, he congratulates
him and explains that the German Navy holds him in high regard,
offers him the commission and tells him to report immediately
to Bremerhaven to assume command. Maria says that he cannot
leave immediately, as they are all singing in the Festival
concert, and the Admiral agrees to wait until after the concert.
At the concert Maria, the Captain, and the children sing an
elaborate version of "Do-Re-Mi". After they finish,
Max brings out the Captain's guitar, and he sings "Edelweiss",
in which Austria's national flower becomes a declaration of
loyalty to Austria itself. Max prevents them from leaving
the stage, asking for an encore and announcing to the audience
that this is the von Trapp family's last chance to sing together
for a long time, thanks to the honor guard waiting to escort
the Captain directly to his new command. While the judges
decide on the prizes, the von Trapps sing "So Long, Farewell",
leaving the stage in small groups. Max then announces the
winners, stalling as much as possible. When he announces that
the first prize goes to the von Trapps and they do not appear,
the Nazis start a search. The family hides at the Abbey, and
the Nazis do not find them until Rolf comes upon them. He
calls his lieutenant, but on seeing Liesl, he reports that
he has found no one. He leaves, and one of the nuns tells
them that the borders have been closed. The von Trapps decide
to flee over the mountains, and they leave as the nuns reprise
"Climb Ev'ry Mountain".
[edit] Musical numbers
Act I
* "Praeludium" – Nuns
* "The Sound of Music" – Maria
* "(How Do You Solve a Problem Like) Maria" –
Nuns
* "My Favorite Things" – Maria and the Mother
Abbess
* "Do-Re-Mi" – Maria and the children
* "Sixteen Going on Seventeen" – Rolf and
Liesl
* "The Lonely Goatherd" – Maria and the children
* "How Can Love Survive" – Max and Elsa
* "The Sound of Music" (reprise) – Maria,
the Captain and the children
* "Ländler" (instrumental)
* "So Long, Farewell" – The children
* "Climb Ev'ry Mountain" – Mother Abbess
Act II
* "No Way to Stop It" – Max, the Captain,
and Elsa
* "An Ordinary Couple" – Maria and the Captain
†
* "Processional" – Nuns
* "Sixteen Going on Seventeen" (reprise) –
Maria and Liesl
* "Do-Re-Mi" (reprise) – Maria, the Captain,
and the children ‡
* "Edelweiss" – The Captain, Maria, and the
children
* "So Long, Farewell" (reprise) – Maria, the
Captain, and the children
* "Finale" – Nuns
Notes
* The musical numbers listed appeared in the original production
unless otherwise noted.
* † Sometimes replaced by "Something Good",
which was written for the film.
* ‡ Replaced by "The Lonely Goatherd" in the
1998 revival.
* In some productions, "My Favorite Things" follows
"Sixteen Going on Seventeen" in the thunderstorm
scene, while "The Lonely Goatherd" is shifted to
another scene.
* Many stage revivals have also included "I Have Confidence"
and "Something Good", which were written (music
and lyrics by Richard Rodgers) for the film version.
* Although many people believe that "Edelweiss"
is a traditional Austrian song, in fact the song was written
for the musical and did not become known in Austria until
after the film's success.[4]
* The Ländler dance performed by Maria and the Captain
during the party is only loosely based on the traditional
Austrian dance of the same name.[5]
[edit] Stage productions
[edit] 1959 Broadway production
The Sound of Music opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne
Theatre on November 16, 1959, moved to the Mark Hellinger
Theatre on November 6, 1962 and closed on June 15, 1963) after
1,443 performances. The director was Vincent J. Donehue and
the choreographer Joe Layton. The original cast included Mary
Martin (at 46) as Maria, Theodore Bikel as Captain Georg von
Trapp, Patricia Neway as Mother Abbess, Kurt Kasznar as Max
Detweiler, Marion Marlowe as Elsa Schraeder, Brian Davies
as Rolf, and Lauri Peters as Liesl.
The production shared the Tony Award for Best Musical with
Fiorello!. It also won for Best Actress in a Musical (Mary
Martin), Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Patricia Neway),
Best Scenic Design of a Musical (Oliver Smith), and Best Musical
Direction (Frederick Dvonch) and was nominated for Best Featured
Actor in a Musical (both Theodore Bikel and Kurt Kasznar)
and Best Director of a Musical (Vincent J. Donehue). The entire
children's cast was nominated for Best Featured Actress category
as a single nominee, even though two children were boys.
Martha Wright replaced Mary Martin in the role of Maria on
Broadway in October 1961, followed by Jeannie Carson in July
1962 and Nancy Dussault in September 1962. Jon Voight, who
eventually married co-star Lauri Peters, was a replacement
for Rolf's part. The national tour starred Florence Henderson,
and opened at the Riviera Theatre, Detroit on February 27,
1961 and closed November 23, 1963 at the O'Keefe Center, Toronto.
Henderson was succeeded by Barbara Meister in June 1962.
The original Broadway cast album sold three million copies.
[edit] 1961 London production
The London production opened at the Palace Theatre on May
18, 1961, and ran for 2,385 performances. It was directed
by Jerome Whyte and used the original New York choreography
supervised by Joe Layton and the original sets designed by
Oliver Smith. The cast included Jean Bayliss as Maria, followed
by Sonia Rees, Roger Dann as Captain von Trapp, Constance
Shacklock as Mother Abbess, Eunice Gayson as Elsa Schraeder,
Harold Kasket as Max Detweiler, Barbara Brown as Liesl, Nicholas
Bennett as Rolf and Olive Gilbert as Sister Margaretta.[6]
[edit] 1961 Australian production
The Australian production opened at Melbourne's Princess Theatre
in 1961 and ran for 3 years. The production was directed by
Charles Hickman, with musical numbers staged by Ernest Parham.
The cast included June Bronhill as Maria, Peter Graves as
Captain von Trapp, Rosina Raisbeck as Mother Abbess, Lola
Brooks as Elsa Schraeder, Eric Reiman as Max Detweiler, Julie
Day as Liesl, and Tony Jenkins as Rolf. A touring company
then played for years, with Vanessa Lee (Graves' wife) in
the role of Maria.
A recording was made in 1961. It was the first time a major
overseas production featuring Australian artists was transferred
to disc.
[edit] 1981 London revival
In 1981, at producer Ross Taylor's urging, Petula Clark agreed
to star in a revival of the show at the Apollo Victoria Theatre
in London's West End. Michael Jayston played Captain von Trapp,
Honor Blackman was the Baroness and June Bronhill the Mother
Abess. Despite Clark's misgivings that, at age 49, she was
too old to play the role convincingly, Clark opened to unanimous
rave reviews (and the largest advance sale in the history
of British theatre at that time). Maria von Trapp herself,
present at the opening night performance, described Clark
as "the best" Maria ever. Clark extended her initial
six-month contract to thirteen months. Playing to 101 percent
of seating capacity, the show set the highest attendance figure
for a single week (October 26–31, 1981) of any British
musical production in history (as recorded in The Guinness
Book of Theatre).[7] This was the first stage production to
incorporate the two additional songs ("Something Good"
and "I Have Confidence") that Richard Rodgers composed
for the film version.[8] The cast recording of this production
was the first to be recorded digitally, but, as of 2008, the
recording has not been released on compact disc.
[edit] Later productions
The 1988 Takarazuka (Japan) version
In 1988, the Snow Troupe of Takarazuka Revue performed the
musical at the Bow Hall (Takarazuka, Hyo¯go). Harukaze
Hitomi and Gou Mayuka starred.
1990 New York City Opera production
A 1990 New York City Opera production was directed by Oscar
Hammerstein II's son, James. It featured Debby Boone as Maria,
Laurence Guittard as Captain von Trapp, and Werner Klemperer
as Max Detweiler.
1993 Stockholm premiere
In the original Stockholm production, Carola Häggkvist
played Maria, Tommy Körberg played Captain Georg von
Trapp, Erik Skutnick played Max, and Emilia Brown played Gretl.
1998 Broadway revival
In 1998, director Susan H. Schulman staged the first Broadway
revival of The Sound of Music, with Rebecca Luker as Maria
and Michael Siberry as Captain von Trapp. It also featured
Patti Cohenour as Mother Abbess, Jan Maxwell as Elsa Schraeder,
Fred Applegate as Max Detweiler, Dashiell Eaves as Rolf, and
Laura Benanti, in her Broadway debut, as Luker's understudy.
Later, Luker and Siberry were replaced by Richard Chamberlain
as the Captain and Benanti as Maria. Lou Taylor Pucci made
his Broadway debut as the understudy for Kurt von Trapp. This
revival opened on March 12, 1998, at the Martin Beck Theatre,
where it ran for 15 months. It then went on tour in North
America. This production was nominated for a Tony Award for
Best Revival of a Musical.
1999 Australian revival
An Australian revival played in the Lyric Theatre, Sydney,
New South Wales from November 1999 to January 2000. Lisa McCune
played Maria; TV personality Bert Newton was Max; John Waters
was Captain von Trapp and Eilene Hannan as Mother Abbess.
The children's cast included Tim Draxl as Rolf and Pia Morley
as Liesl. This production was based on the 1998 Broadway revival
staging directed by Susan Schulman and choreographed by Michael
Lichtefield. The show was produced by the Gordon Frost Organisation
and Sports and Entertainment Limited. [9] The production also
toured until February 2001, in Melbourne (Princess Theatre,
March 21, 2000 through July 5, 2000), Brisbane (9 weeks),
), and Perth (August 3, 2000, 6 weeks) Adelaide. Rachael Beck
took over as Maria for the Perth and Adelaide seasons and
Rob Guest took over as Captain von Trapp in Perth.[10][11][12][13]
2005 Vienna Production
The first full-scale Austrian production opened on February
26, 2005 at the Volksoper Wien. It was directed and choreographed
by Renaud Doucet, with sets and costume design by André
Barbe. The 2005 cast included Sandra Pires as Maria, (Martina
Dorak and Johanna Arrouas as Maria in other productions),
Kurt Schreibmayer and Michael Kraus as Kapitän von Trapp
and Heidi Brunner, Gabriele Sima and Ulrike Steinsky as Mutter
Oberin (Mother Abbess). The production is still in the repertoire
of the Volksoper with 12-20 performances per season. [14][15][16]
2006 London revival
An Andrew Lloyd Webber production opened on November 15, 2006,
at the London Palladium and ran until February 2009, produced
by Live Nation's David Ian and Jeremy Sams. Following failed
negotiations with Hollywood star Scarlett Johansson[17], the
role of Maria was cast through a UK talent search reality
TV show called How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria? The
talent show was produced by (and starred) Andrew Lloyd Webber
and featured presenter/comedian Graham Norton and a judging
panel of David Ian, John Barrowman and Zoe Tyler.
Connie Fisher was selected by public voting as the winner
of the show. In early 2007, Fisher suffered from a heavy cold
that prevented her from performing for two weeks. To prevent
further disruptions, an alternate Maria, Aoife Mulholland,
a fellow contestant on How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria?,
played Maria on Monday evenings and Wednesday matinee performances.
Simon Shepherd was originally cast as Captain von Trapp, but
after two preview performances he was withdrawn from the production,
and Alexander Hanson moved into the role in time for the official
opening date along with Lesley Garrett as the Mother Abbess.
After Garrett left, Margaret Preece took the role. The cast
also featured Lauren Ward as the Baroness, Ian Gelber as Max,
Sophie Bould as Liesl, and Neil McDermott as Rolf. Other notable
replacements have included Simon Burke and Simon MacCorkindale
as the Captain and newcomer Amy Lennox as Liesl. Summer Strallen
replaced Fisher in February 2008, with Gemma Baird portraying
Maria on Monday evenings and Wednesday matinees.
The revival received enthusiastic reviews, especially for
Fisher, Preece, Bould and Garrett. A soundtrack recording
of the London Palladium cast was released.[18] Later assessments
continued to be favorable: "Summer Strallen has the look,
the style and the depth of character to convince her audience
that she is Julie Andrews and delivers her opening songs with
the right emphasis and quality.... I was very impressed with
Amy Lennox.... Preece... stepped up to the mark."[19]
The production closed on February 21, 2009 after a run of
over two years.[20]
2007 Stockholm revival
A Stockholm revival began in September 2007 with Pernilla
Wahlgren as Maria, Tommy Nilsson as Kapten von Trapp, Ulrika
Liljeroth and Emmi Christensson as Liesel, Gert Fylking as
Franz, Fillie Lyckow as Frau Schmidt, Malena Laszlo as Baroness
von Schröder, Johan Wahlström as Max Detweiler,
Jörgen Olsson as Rolf, and Margareta Dalhamn as Mother
Abbess. Some of the characters names were translated into
Swedish for a better flow, such as three of the children's
names: Fredrik, Märta and Greta. The production was directed
by Staffan Götestam and the choreography was done by
Denise Holland Bethke.[citation needed]
2007-2008 Salzburg Marionette Theatre production
The Salzburg Marionette Theatre has been touring their version
of the show, featuring the recorded voices of Broadway singers
such as Christiane Noll as Maria.[21] The U.S. tour began
in Dallas, Texas in November 2007.[22] It opens on May 9 in
Salzburg, with performances scheduled through December 2008.[23]
The director is Richard Hamburger.[24]
2008 International productions
An Oslo, Norway revival is scheduled to premiere in September
2008, with Maria Arredondo as Maria, Bjørn Skagestad
as the Captain and direction by Trond Lie, who directed the
1993 Stockholm production.[citation needed] In Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, a production ran with Kiara Sasso as Maria and Herson
Capri as the Captain.[25] A Dutch version of the musical premiered
in September 2008 with Wieneke Remmers as Maria, directed
by John Yost.[26]
2008 Canadian Production
Andrew Lloyd Webber, David Ian and David Mirvish present The
Sound of Music at Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto. The
role of Maria was chosen by the public through a television
show, How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?, which was produced
by Andrew Lloyd Webber and David Ian and aired in July and
August. Elicia MacKenzie was declared the winner over fellow
"Maria" Janna Polzin.[27] Polzin was cast as an
"alternate Maria" for Toronto stage production.
She is currently playing Maria twice a week (Wednesday evenings
and Saturday matinees), while MacKenzie will perform the role
six times weekly.[28] The show was set to close on January
3, 2010 after a run of 68 weeks. However, it has been extended
for one extra week from January 5, 2010-January 10, 2010.
It is the longest running revival to play Toronto.[29]
2009 Brazilian Production
With Kiara Sasso as Maria and Herson Capri as the Captain,
it ran in Rio de Janeiro for almost a year and opened in March
2009 in São Paulo. Still running.
2009 Mexican Production
This is the show's third professional production in Mexico
(the first in 1976 starring Lupita Dalessio, the second in
1980 starring Miriam Cossio and Héctor Gómez),
starring Bianca Marroquin as Maria, who has starred in the
Broadway production of Chicago as Roxie Hart.
2009 UK Tour
A UK tour was launched on 26 July 2009 at the Wales Millennium
Centre in Cardiff, starring original West End cast member
Connie Fisher as Maria. The production is scheduled to close
on the 20 March 2010 at the Grand Opera House, Belfast. Michael
Praed stars as Captain Von Trapp, Margaret Preece as the Mother
Abbess, Martin Callaghan as Uncle Max, Jacinta Mulcahy as
Baroness Schraeder, Jeremy Taylor as Rolf and Claire Fishenden
as Liesl. Kirsty Malpass will star as the Alternate Maria.[30]
2009 Graz/ Austria
The Sound of Music is performed in the Graz Opera House from
September 2009 until June 2010.[31]
[edit] Critical reaction
According to the book Opening Night on Broadway by Stephen
Suskin, the breakdown of the opening night critics' reviews
of the original production of The Sound of Music is as follows:
3 raves, 3 favorables, 0 mixed, 1 unfavorable and 0 pans.
The one negative notice came from Walter Kerr in the New York
Herald Tribune who wrote, "Before The Sound of Music
is halfway through its promising chores it becomes not only
too sweet for words but almost too sweet for music. The people
on stage have melted long before our hearts do."[32]
[edit] Cast recordings
Columbia Masterworks recorded the original Broadway cast album
a week after the show's 1959 opening. The album was the label's
first deluxe package in a gatefold jacket, priced $1 higher
than previous cast albums. It was #1 on Billboard's best-selling
albums chart for 16 weeks in 1960.[33] It is currently available
on CD from Sony in the Columbia Broadway Masterworks series.[34]
The 1960 London production was recorded by EMI and has been
issued on CD on the Broadway Angel Label.[35]
The 1965 film soundtrack was released by RCA Victor and is
one of the most successful soundtrack albums in history, having
sold over 10 million copies worldwide.[36] Recent CD editions
incorporate musical material from the film that would not
fit on the original LP. The label has also issued the soundtrack
in German, Italian, Spanish and French editions.
RCA Victor also released a cast album of the 1998 Broadway
revival produced by Hallmark.[37]
The Telarc label made a studio cast recording of The Sound
of Music, with the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra conducted by
Erich Kunzel (1987). The lead roles went to opera stars: Frederica
von Stade as Maria, Håkan Hagegård as Captain
von Trapp, and Eileen Farrell as the Mother Abbess. [38] The
recording "includes both the two new songs written for
the film version and the three Broadway songs they replace,
as well as a previously unrecorded verse of "An Ordinary
Couple.""[39]
The 2006 London revival was recorded and has been released
on the Decca Broadway label.[40]
There have been numerous studio cast albums and foreign cast
albums issued, though many have only received regional distribution.
According to the cast album database, there are 62 recordings
of the score that have been issued over the years.[41]
[edit] Historical accuracy
The musical presents a history of the von Trapp family, albeit
one that is not completely accurate: Georg Ludwig von Trapp,
who was in fact anti-Nazi, lived with his family in a villa
in a district of Salzburg, called Aigen. Maria and Georg had
been married 10 years before the Anschluss and had two of
their three children before that time. Georg had actually
considered a position in the Kriegsmarine, but ultimately
decided to emigrate.[42] The children's names are different,
at least part of the reason being that a daughter from von
Trapp's first marriage was also called Maria.
While the von Trapp family hikes over the Alps to Switzerland,
in reality they walked to the local train station and boarded
the next train to Italy, from which they fled to London and
ultimately the United States.[42] Salzburg is only a few miles
away from the Austrian-German border, and is much too far
from either the Swiss or Italian borders for a family to escape
by walking. Had the von Trapps hiked over the mountains, they
would have in all likelihood ended up in Germany, near the
Kehlsteinhaus, Hitler's mountain retreat in Berchtesgaden.
[edit] Cultural references
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Songs from the musical have been covered in popular music
(for example, "My Favorite Things" on Speakerboxxx/The
Love Below, a double album by the hip hop group OutKast and
pastiched in advertising (for example, in TV ads for "New
Skoda Fabia" (2007) and for the MasterCard credit card
(2007). My Favorite Things is also a 1960 album by jazz musician
John Coltrane, containing his interpretation of the eponymous
song.
Many television shows have featured characters singing songs
or pastiches of songs from the musical. The shows include
Seinfeld, Friends, Will & Grace, The OC (episode 313,
"The Pot Stirrer"), The Simpsons, Animaniacs (episode
13), and Family Guy. In other television shows, the musical
is merely mentioned (e.g., in the Charmed episode, "The
Power of Three Blondes").[citation needed] In Great Britain's
1970s hit television comedy The Good Life (known in the United
States as Good Neighbors), the character Margo muscles her
way into the role of Maria in The Sound of Music with her
neighborhood ladies' musical society (for one night only),
succumbs to stage fright, and tanks miserably, even confusing
the lyrics of "My Favorite Things" with the lyrics
of "Mack the Knife".
The musical features in the plot of films. For example, in
the 2000 indie film Dancer in the Dark the main character,
Selma, played by Björk, auditions for the role of Maria
in a local community theater production of the musical. Similarly,
in the 2005 Disney movie The Pacifier, Seth Plummer and Vice
Principal Murney are cast as Rolf and the Reverend Mother,
respectively, in a high school production of The Sound of
Music.[citation needed]
Informations
techniques sur le document |
| •Création: 5 janvier 2010 |
•Classement: G |
•Durée totale: 24 minutes |
| •Creation: January 5 2010 |
•Rating: G |
•Total duration: 24 minutes |
| •Production: 20th Century Fox |
•Droits d'auteur/Copyrights: GGTV/20th Century
Fox |
•Contact/Comments |
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