A Stoop on Orchard Street

A Stoop on Orchard Street is a musical by Jay Kholos. The story, inspired by a visit to the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, is a nostalgic look at the year 1910.[1] The musical premiered Off-Broadway in 2003, where it enjoyed a long run. It has since been revived several times.

Productions

A Stoop on Orchard Street was first performed in a workshop at the Gordon Jewish Community Center, Nashville, Tennessee, in November 2002.[2] The musical ran successfully Off-Broadway at The Mazer Theatre on the Lower East Side of New York City for a year and a half. The musical started in previews on July 8, 2003 with an opening night on August 7, 2003;[3] it closed on November 14, 2004. The production was directed by Lon Gary [3] and orchestrated by Tom Berger and Jeffrey Campos. It reported a total income of 2,650,000 unusual for a non-Equity musical housed in a 172-seat theater.

Stoop also toured in North America, starting at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, Skokie, Illinois in October 2004,[4] and also appearing in Los Angeles, (Canoga Park) (2005),[5] San Francisco, and the Leah Posluns Theatre, Ontario (October 2004),[6] with a separate company in Florida.[6][7] In a regional production, it played at the Helen Hayes Theatre Company, Nyack, New York in December 2004.[8]

Synopsis

On the Lower East Side of Manhattan on Orchard Street, in 1910, Eastern European immigrants, the Lomansky Family, begin a new life in America. An old vaudeville actor, Benny Lomansky, recalls his poverty-stricken childhood and the gossip around the tenement stoop, reliving the struggles and triumphs of his family and neighbors. He remembers that his father Hiram, who worked long hours for little pay, was envious of the lifestyle of his more affluent Americans. Hiram eventually abandons his family.

Roles and original principal cast

Musical numbers

Act One
Act Two

Response

The New York Times reviewer wrote that "This show -- one man's memories of his childhood on the Lower East Side almost a century ago -- is mostly self-important sentimentality, uninspired dancing and music with a badly recycled ring...the well-meaning, affectionately told story of a struggling immigrant Jewish family."[9]

The talkinbroadway reviewer wrote that " 'A Stoop on Orchard Street', while far too gentle to be placed along similar shows like 'Ragtime', 'Rags', or 'Fiddler on the Roof', often feels right at home where it's landed in the Mazer Theater. If sometimes staidly educational in its outlook and execution, the show is inherently intriguing and moving by benefit of its venue, in an area central to the lives of the early 20th century immigrants it documents. That authenticity would be hard to match elsewhere.[10]

References

  1. Gingerich, Tanya A. "A Musical Look at Immigrant Life". Downtown Express, Vol. 16, Issue 17, September 23–29, 2003, accessed May 16, 2011
  2. Nashville-based playwright debuts musical, dreams of a New York staging" nashvillescene.com, December 5, 2002
  3. 1 2 Jones, Kenneth." 'A Stoop On Orchard Street' Is Musical Tale of Immigrant Life, Opening Aug. 7 in NYC" playbill.com, July 25, 2003
  4. Weiss, Hedy."'Orchard Street' meanders through cliche-riddled territory-Abstract" Chicago Sun-Times, October 14, 2004, p.52
  5. Evan Henerson "'Orchard Street' A Shticky American Tale" Daily News (Los Angeles), March 11, 2005
  6. 1 2 Blackman, Carolyn. "Play reflects immigrant experience, A stoop on Orchard street", "Canadian Jewish News", October 21, 2004, Pg. 55 Vol. 34 No. 42
  7. Jones, Kenneth."Hit Non-Equity Musical 'Stoop on Orchard Street' Hits 200th Show in NYC Dec. 11; Florida Run Planned" playbill.com, December 4, 2003
  8. Gans, Andrew."Helen Hayes Season Features Klugman, Zorich and a Fair Lady" playbill.com, June 9, 2004
  9. Gates, Anita.Dreaming of Going Higher Than the Lower East Side" New York Times, August 19, 2003
  10. Murray, Matthew.'A Stoop on Orchard Street' talkinbroadway.com, August 7, 2003, accessed May 17, 2011
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