Showing posts with label Romeo and Juliet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romeo and Juliet. Show all posts

September 29, 2018

Tales of Tomorrow & Sergei Prokofiev

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In the early fifties my family bought a TV from Montgomery Wards and I remember watching television on Guy Place.     




The living room would be jammed with the whole family, mom, Lucy, Ben, etc (links below). The adults would have the couch and chairs while us kids would sit on the floor. I was VERY near-sighted so I would sit directly under the TV which had a 16-inch screen; this was eNORmous for that time. 

1950-1959 Airline (Wards
(05WG-3039C)  16" console  
     

I have terrific memories of the shows we watched: I Love Lucy (of course), The Twilight Zone, etc. But my VERY first memory of watching was, Tales of Tomorrow. This show is forever burned in my memory.   
     
I recall the intro theme for the show vividly! It would raise the hairs on the back of my neck and what few hairs I had on my arms; it was years before I discovered who the composer was.

The theme music was written by the Russian composer, Sergei Prokofiev, for his 1938 ballet in four acts, Romeo and Juliet, Op. 64. The very short piece of music opens the segment, Montagues And Capulets (links below).      


Sergei Prokofiev - New York, 1918 


Tales of Tomorrow was an American anthology science fiction series that was performed and broadcast live, mistakes and all as hysterically related by lighting designer, Imero Fiorentino (link below). It had a cheesy electronic organ accompaniment at times (common for the period). It was aired on the ABC network from 1951 to 1953.  

The series covered stories such as Frankenstein, starring Lon Chaney, Jr., 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea starring Thomas Mitchell as Captain Nemo, and many other stories featuring a fantastic array of performers: Boris Karloff, Brian Keith, Lee J. Cobb, Veronica Lake, Rod Steiger, Bruce Cabot, Franchot Tone, Gene Lockhart, Walter Abel, Cloris Leachman, Leslie Nielsen, Paul Newman and many others (complete list @ link below).   

Tales of Tomorrow had many similarities to the later Twilight Zone which also covered one of the same stories (What You Need). In total it ran for eighty-five 30-minute episodes. It was called “the best science-fiction fare on TV today” by Paul Fairman, editor of If.


If magazine

    
The idea for this science fiction television series was developed by Theodore Sturgeon and Mort Abrahamson, together with the membership of the Science Fiction League of America. The original title was planned as Tomorrow is Yours. A deal was struck with photographer Richard Gordon and writer George Foley, giving the producers of the show first choice of any of the 2,000 short stories and 13 novels by the various members of the League.        

Tales of Tomorrow was the first dramatized showcase for several authors, Arthur C. Clarke; etc. Other early science fiction writers whose work was reflected in the series included Fredric Brown (The Last Man on Earth and Age of Peril), Philip Wylie (Blunder) who with Edwin Balmer wrote When Worlds Collide, C. M. Kornbluth (The Little Black Bag) and Stanley G. Weinbaum (The Miraculous Serum). The show was intended for adults; at the time, most science fiction productions were targeted to children. The producers wanted to blend mystery and science fiction, and emphasize fast pacing and suspense.

Tales of Tomorrow episodes, with ads included, were recorded on Kinescope which can be seen on YouTube (links below).              
             
      
       
              


Viewfinder links:      
       
Sergei Prokofiev
Bernard E. Simonson, Jr.       
Christine K. Simonson         
Lucy Cadena-Jazzux         
Television       
The Twilight Zone        
          
Net links:      
       
IMDb ~ full cast & writing credits             
Academy of Television ~ Lighting Director Imero Fiorentino interview   
Sci-Fi Wire ~ Remembering the first sci-fi anthology series    
   
YouTube links:      
       
Tales of Tomorrow  
              ~ intro theme music 
Sergei Prokofiev ~ Romeo And Juliet - Montagues And Capulets
              ~ The Crystal Egg ( H.G. Wells )  
              ~ What you need (1952)      
Tales of Tomorrow episodes                         

      

        
"Stuff happens!"
              ~ Imero Fiorentino 
         




To the family and especially Lucy!


 
        
          
Styrous® ~ Saturday, September 29, 2018      

 













September 26, 2017

20,000 Vinyl LPs 110: West Side Story ~ Maria, Tony, Bimbo's & Leo Friedman

vinyl LP album cover
album cover photo by Leo Friedman 
photo of album cover by Styrous®


Sixty years ago today, September 26, 1957, the Broadway musical, West Side Story, burst onto the theater world and changed the form and character of musicals forever.      

The original cast album with its iconic image of Maria and Tony running down a street in New York is one of the most famous photos used on a record album; it, the album, has been an integral part of my life in many ways. In 1958-59 West Side Story was the soundtrack for my life.          
        

vinyl LP album cover detail
album cover photo by Leo Friedman 
photo of album cover detail by Styrous®


The songs were uplifting, inspiring and new. The dance at the gym with its jazzy mambo completely knocked me out! And, of course, Maria is just . . . well, it's just! I still begin to tear up when I hear it and I think of Ann. Somewhere was "our" song. We were so in love and I remember taking her to see the first touring production when it came to San Francisco. By the time it got here Larry Kert, as Tony, was the only member of the original cast in the 1959 US Tour.


West Side Story playbill 
September 14, 1959 
photo by Styrous®
(click HERE to see 1959 souvenir program)



We went to Bimbo's afterward and had dinner; it was an upscale supper club with entertainment but I don't remember who was performing. I do remember I had Chicken á la King because it was the cheapest thing on the menu; I was 19, living on my own, working my way through college and didn't have a whole lot of money.        


Bimbo's 365 Club 
December 5, 2008 
San Francisco, CA 


There is a story behind the photograph used on the cover of the album. It looks very spontaneous but it was carefully staged by photographer Leo Friedman. The “West Side Story” shot, which became the cover of the cast album, was the result of attempts by Friedman after having tried several settings around New York City and ending up along a row of tenements on West 56th Street.   


vinyl LP album cover
album cover photo by Leo Friedman 
photo of album cover by Styrous®

“I made a mark on the street, and I said to Carol: ‘I want Larry chasing you up the street. When you hit that mark, don’t look at me down here, look up, with your head up,” Friedman recalled, “And that’s what I took.”

And so, after what the weary actress, Carol Lawrence, remembered as 300 tries, the shot Friedman wanted was finally captured and, as they say, the rest is history. Actually, there is more history; he got a pretty raw deal in the end. (link to Friedman info below).   


vinyl LP album cover detail
album cover photo by Leo Friedman 
photo of album cover detail by Styrous®


  

The score for West Side Story was written by Leonard Bernstein with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. It was orchestrated by Sid Ramin and Irwin Kostal following detailed instructions from Bernstein, who then wrote revisions on their manuscript (the original, heavily annotated by Ramin, Kostal and Bernstein himself is in the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at Columbia University). Ramin, Kostal, and Bernstein are billed as orchestrators for the show. The orchestra consisted of 31 players: a large Broadway pit orchestra enhanced to include 5 percussionists, a guitarist and a piano/celesta player.    


vinyl LP album back cover 
photo by Styrous®

The dark theme of the story (based on Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare), sophisticated music, extended dance scenes, and focus on social problems marked a turning point in American musical theatre. Then there is the Bernstein score for the musical which includes Something's Coming, Maria, America, Somewhere, Tonight, Jet Song, I Feel Pretty, A Boy Like That, One Hand, One Heart, Gee, Officer Krupke, and Cool (links below to all on YouTube).      



vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


The original 1957 Broadway production, directed and choreographed by Jerome Robbins and produced by Robert E. Griffith and Harold Prince, marked Sondheim's Broadway debut. It ran for 732 performances before going on tour. The production was nominated for six Tony Awards including Best Musical in 1957. However, the award went to The Music Man by Meredith Willson. Robbins won the Tony Awards for his choreography and Oliver Smith won for his scenic designs.  
 


vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®



The creators' innovations in dance, music and theatrical style resulted in strong reactions from the critics. Walter Kerr wrote in the New York Herald Tribune on September 27, 1957:  
"The radioactive fallout from West Side Story must still be descending on Broadway this morning. Director, choreographer, and idea-man Jerome Robbins has put together, and then blasted apart, the most savage, restless, electrifying dance patterns we've been exposed to in a dozen seasons ...."     
John Chapman's review in the New York Daily News on September 27, 1957, headed: "West Side Story a Splendid and Super-Modern Musical Drama":   
"The American theatre took a venturesome forward step when the firm of Griffith & Prince presented West Side Story at the Winter Garden last evening. This is a bold new kind of musical theatre – a juke-box Manhattan opera."      
Time magazine found the dance and gang warfare more compelling than the love story and noted that the show's "putting choreography foremost, may prove a milestone in musical-drama history ...  
"While critics speculated about the comic-tragic darkness of the musical, audiences were captivated. The story appealed to society's undercurrent of rebellion from authority that surfaced in 1950s films like Rebel Without a Cause. West Side Story took this one step further by combining the classic and the hip."    


vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


In 1961, West Side Story was made into a film; directed by Robert Wise, it starred Natalie Wood, Richard Beymer, Russ Tamblyn, Rita Moreno, and George Chakiris.    

That same year, Stan Kenton recorded Kenton's West Side Story (a jazz version) that received a 1962 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance – Large Group (Instrumental) (More on this in a future article).    


vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®





 
vinyl LP, side 1
photo by Styrous®



vinyl LP label, side 1
photo by Styrous®











vinyl LP, side 2
photo by Styrous®


vinyl LP label, side 2
photo by Styrous®


     

Act 1

Act 2 

  • "I Feel Pretty" – Maria, Rosalia, Estella, & Consuelo
  • "Somewhere" – Consuelo, danced by Company
  • "Gee, Officer Krupke" – Action, Snowboy & Jets
  • "A Boy Like That" – Anita & Maria
  • "I Have a Love" – Anita & Maria
  • "Taunting" – Anita & Jets
  • "Finale" – Company    


Credits:

Notes:  

Six-Eye Stereophonic release without "360°-Sound" (see Images)
US-Two Eye Repress: Leonard Bernstein - West Side Story - Original Broadway Cast
US-Half Dozen Repress: Leonard Bernstein - West Side Story - Original Broadway Cast

West Side Story opened in New York at the Winter Garden Theatre September 26th, 1957, following engagements in Washington and Philadelphia.


Barcode and Other Identifiers
  • Matrix / Runout (Side 1 on Label): XSM 41521
  • Matrix / Runout (Side 2 on Label): XSM 41522
  • Barcode (Stamped Side 1): XXSM41521-1E
  • Barcode (Stamped Side 2): XSM41522-1B

Label: Columbia Masterworks ‎– OS 2001
Format: Vinyl, LP, Stereo
Country: US
Released: Oct 1957
Style: Musical, Modern
             

        
Viewfinder links:         
          
West Side Story ~ 1959 souvenir program     
Leo Friedman ~ Broadway's Photographer      
      
Net links:         
          
West Side Story ~    
            Synopsis        
            Characters
            Principal cast       
            Musical numbers              
            Recordings      
            Awards and nominations   
            West Side Story (film) website         
       
YouTube links:         
          
            Jet Song          
           Something's Coming  
           The Dance at the Gym      
            Maria
            Tonight  
           America  
           Cool   
           One Hand, One Heart    
           Tonight (Quintet & Chorus)   
           I Feel Pretty
           Somewhere      
           Gee, Officer Krupke        
           I Have a Love        
           Finale
West Side Story (the film)                
        West Side Story Reunion 
        Making of a classic        
        The Making of West Side Story  (1 hr. 20 min.)        
          
         
        
       
"There's a Place For Us . . . " 
       ~ Somewhere
         
           
Styrous® ~ Monday, September 26, 2017