A Chorus Line: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Older Than They Look]]: {{spoiler|Connie.}}
* [[Older Than They Look]]: {{spoiler|Connie.}}
* [[Refrain From Assuming]]: Val's number was originally called 'Tits and Ass,' but was re-titled after the first line in the song to keep audiences from getting the joke. (In high school productions, the number is redubbed "This and That.")
* [[Refrain From Assuming]]: Val's number was originally called 'Tits and Ass,' but was re-titled after the first line in the song to keep audiences from getting the joke. (In high school productions, the number is redubbed "This and That.")
* [[Roman a Clef]]: All of the characters are based on recorded interviews with real dancers. Some of the dancers, like Renee Baughman and Priscilla Lopez, were eventually cast as "themselves." Maggie's story actually belongs to Donna McKechnie (the original Cassie), while Paul's story was originally co-author Nicholas Dante's, and so forth.
* [[Roman à Clef]]: All of the characters are based on recorded interviews with real dancers. Some of the dancers, like Renee Baughman and Priscilla Lopez, were eventually cast as "themselves." Maggie's story actually belongs to Donna McKechnie (the original Cassie), while Paul's story was originally co-author Nicholas Dante's, and so forth.
* [[Sadist Teacher]]: Diana Morales tells the story of one from her drama school days in her number, "Nothing."
* [[Sadist Teacher]]: Diana Morales tells the story of one from her drama school days in her number, "Nothing."



Revision as of 17:53, 9 January 2014

God, I hope I get it.

I hope I get it.

How many people does he need?
—From the Opening Chorus number.

In 1975, composer Marvin Hamlisch, lyricist Edward Kleban, and writers James Kirkwood, Jr. and Nicholas Dante decided to collaborate on a musical about the lives of those folks on the Broadway chorus line. They gathered a bunch of their friends in acting and dancing together for a long night of conversation (and wine) and taperecorded what was said. This was the result.

In this musical, the lives of many dancers converge on stage as they audition for a big musical. They do their best to impress the director, Zach, and hope they get the job. However, once they're down to seventeen, Zach makes a surprising request: he asks the dancers to tell their names, ages, and a little bit of their Backstory - where they come from and why they dance. Ranging from hilarious to heartbreaking, they tell their stories one by one. After one of them faces a possible career-ending injury, everyone confronts the question: what does it mean to them? In the end, eight are chosen.

They all reunite on stage for the final number, a triumphant and delightful song in praise of the "One" singular sensation.


This Show features examples of: