Adam Guettel
Adam Guettel | |
---|---|
Born |
Manhattan, New York City, USA | December 16, 1964
Genres | Musical theatre |
Occupation(s) | Composer, lyricist |
Years active | 1996-present |
Labels | Nonesuch/Elektra Records |
Adam Guettel (/ˈɡɛtəl/; born December 16, 1964) is an American composer-lyricist of musical theater and opera. He is best known for the musical The Light in the Piazza, for which he won two Tony Awards, for Best Score and Best Orchestrations, and two Drama Desk Awards, for Best Music and Best Orchestrations.
Biography
Early years
Guettel was born December 16, 1964 to film executive Henry Guettel and writer/composer Mary Rodgers (daughter of famed composer Richard Rodgers), and was raised on the Upper West Side of New York City. He performed as a boy soprano soloist in operas including Pelléas et Mélisande and The Magic Flute, both at the Metropolitan Opera and the New York City Opera, and in another production of Pelléas with the Santa Fe Opera. He was also slated to play Amahl in the film remake of Gian Carlo Menotti's "Amahl and the Night Visitors". He later claimed that he ended his career as a boy soprano at age 13, by faking that his voice was changing; he turned to music composition soon afterward.[1] He attended Phillips Exeter Academy, School Year Abroad (SYA France), Interlochen Center for the Arts and graduated from Yale University in 1987.
Career
His early works include 1996's Floyd Collins, Love's Fire, and Saturn Returns (which was recorded as Myths and Hymns). Guettel's music was almost immediately characterized by its complexity and chromaticism. His major influences include Igor Stravinsky, Maurice Ravel, Claude Debussy, Benjamin Britten, and Stevie Wonder. Stephen Sondheim has referred to Guettel's work as "dazzling."[2] Guettel's songs have been recorded by such artists as Audra McDonald and Brian d'Arcy James. He also contributed original scores to several documentary films, including Arguing the World and Jack: The Last Kennedy Film. In 1999, he performed a concert evening of his own work at New York's Town Hall.
In 2004, Guettel contributed vocals to Jessica Molaskey's P.S. Classics album Make Believe, dueting with Molaskey on the song "Glad To Be Unhappy." After six years working on the project,[1] Guettel's musical The Light in the Piazza opened on Broadway in 2005. The show, which starred Victoria Clark and Kelli O'Hara, met with mixed critical notices, but on June 5, 2005, Adam Guettel won the Tony Award for Best Original Score and the Tony Award for Best Orchestrations.
He spent much of the period from 2005 to 2007 working on a musical adaptation of The Princess Bride with original screenwriter William Goldman. As of January 2007, Guettel had written the music for ten songs for the project. An orchestral suite from the score was performed at the Hollywood Bowl in November 2006, and Lincoln Center conducted a workshop of Bride in January 2007. The project was abandoned when Goldman reportedly demanded 75 percent of the author's share, even though Guettel was writing both the music and the lyrics.[3]
In summer 2007, Guettel composed incidental music for a production of Anton Chekhov's play Uncle Vanya at the Intiman Playhouse in Seattle, Washington.[4]
In July 2009, the Signature Theatre of Arlington, Virginia commissioned Guettel to write a new musical for their 2011-2012 season, under the auspices of their American Musical Voices Project.[5] Currently in the works, this will be a musical adaptation of the Danny Boyle film Millions. Other current projects include an opera based on the short stories of Washington Irving and a musical of The Invisible Man, which is rumoured to be directed by Daniel Kramer. He is also making a musical out of the 1962 film Days of Wine and Roses.[6]
Another major aspect of Guettel's career is his work as a teacher. Since 1995, he has taught masterclasses and seminars in musical theatre performance and songwriting, considering this to be an important complement to his work as a composer. He has led such classes at DePauw University, New York University, Pace University, Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University, Emerson College, Elon University, The Boston Conservatory, Southern Methodist University, Syracuse University, and many others.
Guettel received an honorary doctorate from Lehman College in 2007.
Personal life
In a 2003 profile in The New York Times, Guettel discussed, among other things, his history with addiction. Published during the Seattle tryout of The Light in the Piazza, he spoke with regret about an earlier time in his life when these struggles hindered his creative productivity.
While Guettel is best known for his work in the theatre, he is lesser-known for his work in environmental conservation. His lifelong concern for the environment was sparked at age seven, when he read The Lorax, by Dr. Seuss. Today, his conservation efforts are primarily carried out on behalf of family dairy farms in New York State and Vermont, where he has a residence. His interest in Dr. Seuss carried into his professional life: at age 19, he composed and orchestrated a one-act opera based on The Butter Battle Book, which was never produced due to rights negotiations.
Family
Guettel is the son of composer, author and Juilliard School chairman Mary Rodgers, who died on June 26, 2014 and grandson of legendary musical theater composer Richard Rodgers. His father Henry Guettel (died October 7, 2013) was a film executive[7] and was the Executive Director of the Theater Development Fund.[8]
When Guettel took up music composition in his mid-teens, he was encouraged by his family. His mother said that she offered him advice for around a year, "After that, he was so far beyond anything I could ever have dreamed of, I just backed off."[1] Richard Rodgers, who died when Guettel was 15, overheard an early composition, said he liked it and asked him to play it louder. Guettel has qualified the compliment, noting that "He was literally on his deathbed on the other side of the living-room wall."[1] In his high school and collegiate years and into his early twenties, Guettel worked as a rock and jazz musician, singing and playing bass, before realizing "that writing for character and telling stories through music was something that I really loved to do, and that allowed me to express love."[9]
Influences
In an interview, Guettel stated a portion of his influences that included I.M. Pei, Louis Kahn, Vincent Scully, Jane Jacobs, Stravinsky, Stevie Wonder, Adam de la Halle, Harry Nilsson, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Steve Jobs, Björk, Korngold, Benjamin Britten, William Inge, Stephen Sondheim, Jody Williams, and Marvin Gaye.[10]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Green, Jesse (2003-07-06). "A Complicated Gift". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ↑ Rich, Frank (2000-03-12). "Conversations With Sondheim". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-01-17.
- ↑ Riedel, Michael (2007-02-16). "'Bride' Not to Be While Broderick Balks at 'Producers'". The New York Post. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
- ↑ Hernandez, Ernio (2007-06-12), "Samantha Mathis Stars in Lucas' New Uncle Vanya — with Music by Guettel — Beginning June 12", Playbill, retrieved 2007-09-30.
- ↑ Signature theatre announces three new musical commissions and two awards as part of "American musical voices project" (PDF), Sig, archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-28.
- ↑ "Adam Guettel’s new musical projects include The invisible man, Days of wine & roses & more", Play bill.
- ↑ Cohen, Steve (1999-06-08). "From Floyd to Florence, with Saturn in Between: Adam Guettel Keeps Changing Chords". Playbill. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
- ↑ "TKTS to Begin Experiment With 2-Tier Price Discounts". The NY Times. 1992-02-20.
- ↑ DeFoe, Ryan (2001-02-12). "An Interview with Adam Guettel". Talkin' Broadway. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
- ↑ "Twenty questions: A quick chat with Adam Guettel", Aussie Theatre (AU).
External links
- Adam Guettel at the Internet Broadway Database
- Adam Guettel at the Internet Movie Database
- "Interview", Studio 360 (radio program), 2005.
- Frank J. Oteri (August 7, 2006), "Adam Guettel in conversation with Frank J. Oteri" (includes video), NewMusicBox (cover).
- "Interview", American Theatre Magazine, October 2003.
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