First Impressions (musical)

First Impressions

1959 Original Broadway Cast Recording
Music George Weiss
Bo Goldman
Glenn Paxton
Lyrics George Weiss
Bo Goldman
Glenn Paxton
Book Abe Burrows
Basis

Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice

and Helen Jerome's 1935 play based on the novel
Productions 1959 Broadway

First Impressions is a Broadway musical with music and lyrics by George Weiss, Bo Goldman, and Glenn Paxton, and book by Abe Burrows, who also directed the musical. It is based on Helen Jerome's 1935 stage adaptation of Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice.

Background

Abe Burrows, who had previously written the books for the successful musicals Guys and Dolls, Can-Can, and Say, Darling, wrote the book for a new musical adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.[1] The score was credited to three authors: George Weiss, Robert Goldman, and Glenn Paxton, though composer Jule Styne, who produced the show under the auspices of the "Jule Styne Organization", was said to have augmented the score.[1] The score mixes early-19th-century "period" music with standard Broadway idioms of the 1950s. The musical was originally titled A Perfect Evening, but before rehearsals began, the show's creators changed it to First Impressions, Austen's original, pre-publication title for Pride and Prejudice.[1]

The musical concentrates more than the novel does on Mrs. Bennet's perspective and on her tireless attempts to marry off her five marriageable daughters despite the family's lack of money. The emphasis on Mrs. Bennet is the result of having cast a star (Hermione Gingold) in what was meant by Austen to be a secondary role.

According to Granger, the musical was beset by a series of disasters, the most notable all involving the frequently dangerous sets. Granger said several dancers were injured during rehearsals and the tryout in New Haven. Moreover, reports Granger, Gingold and Bergen disliked each other, and Mitchell felt ill-used.[2] Stuart Hodes Mitchell's understudy and one of the injured dancers, says that Granger's account was exaggerated.[3] Hodes also notes that Lucas's several replacements as choreographer included an uncredited Herbert Ross.[3]

Fifteen-year-old Lauri Peters, who played Kitty Bennet, left a good enough first impression on Richard Rodgers that he invited her to audition for his next show, The Sound of Music. Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II cast her in the role of Liesl, the eldest daughter, in the 1959 original Broadway production of the The Sound of Music. Peters shared a Tony Award nomination for the role, and stayed with the show for two years.

When Jane Austen wrote her first novel, a novel about the Bennet family of Longbourne, she called it First Impressions, but she couldn’t find a publisher. However, once Sense & Sensibility, Austen’s second novel, became a popular success, T. Egerton of Whitehall, the publisher of Sense & Sensibility, agreed to release First Impressions with a new name: Pride & Prejudice. In this early instance of successful branding, a novel called First Impressions went nowhere, but given a new title, Pride & Prejudice quickly became one of the great classics of Western literature.[4]

Production

The Broadway production premiered at the Alvin Theater, New York City, on March 19, 1959, and played 84 performances. The stars of the original cast were Hermione Gingold (as Mrs. Bennet), Polly Bergen (as Elizabeth Bennet), and Farley Granger (as Mr. Darcy), supported by Phyllis Newman (Jane Bennet), Ellen Hanley (Charlotte Lucas), Christopher Hewett (Mr. Collins), Donald Madden (Charles Bingley), and James Mitchell (Capt. Wickham). Hewett replaced Hiram Sherman after the show's out-of-town tryout, while Hanley replaced Bergen shortly into the run.

Synopsis

Like the novel, the musical is concerned primarily with the rocky courtship between Elizabeth Bennet, a poor gentlemen's daughter with four sisters, and Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy, a wealthy aristocrat who arrives in Miss Elizabeth's rural village in 1813. The course of true love is hindered by minor character flaws on both sides—his pride and reserve, which look like arrogance to her, and her tendency to jump to erroneous conclusions based on little evidence, as well as her verbal assertiveness, which mildly scandalizes him. Both eventually realize that they have misjudged each other, however, and find that they are actually ideally suited for each other.

Songs

In addition, there were two dance numbers for Mitchell and the ensemble, choreographed by Jonathan Lucas. After decades out of print, the original cast album was rereleased on CD in 2002.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Mandelbaum, 262
  2. Granger 123-130
  3. 1 2 Hodes, Stuart. "Who's Next in the Barrel?"
  4. Huttner, Jan Lisa (September 18, 2014). Tevye's Daughters: No Laughing Matter. New York City, New York: FF2 Media. ASIN B00NQDQCTG. Retrieved 27 October 2014.

External links

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