Difference between revisions of "Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris"

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Photograph - NELM Manuscripts - '''Collection''': [[Jill Fletcher|FLETCHER, Jill]]: 2005. 75. 19. 50.
 
Photograph - NELM Manuscripts - '''Collection''': [[Jill Fletcher|FLETCHER, Jill]]: 2005. 75. 19. 50.
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''Cape Times'', 13 August 2007.
  
 
[[Caroline Smart]], History of Durban Supper Theatre, article first published in [[ArtSmart]],  2007-07-22 (last edited : 2007-10-15)[http://www.artsmart.co.za/supper/archive/1213.html]
 
[[Caroline Smart]], History of Durban Supper Theatre, article first published in [[ArtSmart]],  2007-07-22 (last edited : 2007-10-15)[http://www.artsmart.co.za/supper/archive/1213.html]

Revision as of 09:07, 29 August 2015

Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris is an American musical revue of the songs of Jacques Brel by Eric Blau and Mort Shuman. All of the songs were translated from the French by Blau and Schuman, with the help of Brel himself.

The original show debuted Off-Broadway on January 22, 1968 at The Village Gate Theater in Greenwich Village.

It ran for four years and nearly 2 000 performances, and was turned into a film in 1975, with Brel himself making an appearance. The latest off-Broadway revival in 2006 has received rare reviews and award nominations.


The original text

Performance history in South Africa

The show was first produced in South Africa by Taubie Kushlick in 1972, a production which became the longest-running musical production in South Africa’s musical history up to that date. It opened at the Chelsea Theatre in Hillbrow featuring of Jean Dell, Ann Hamblin, Ferdie Uphof, Alain D. Woolf, Irene Frangs and Robin Dolton. A cast recording was released later that year. Over time, other performers joined the cast, notably Gay Lambert, Joe Masiell (who had appeared in the New York production), and Sandy Layne. Lighting by Taubie Kushlick. Set by Zwi Fefer. Stage and lighting director Rita Ehlers. Theatre manager Norma Biaggi.

It remains the longest running show ever to play in South Africa, having also toured the country playing in Cape Town, Durban and other centres.

A new production opened in 1975, with two new cast members, Judy Page and Bruce Millar alongside Ann Hamblin and Ferdie Uphof.

In 2010 directors Colin Law and Dean Roberts presented a production of Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris – based on the 2006 Off-Broadway incarnation of the show. [Source: [[1]

Translations and adaptations

The show was turned into a film in 1975, with Brel himself making an appearance.

In 1979 Kushlick created a new show Encore Brel using material that had not been seen in the original production; while some of these were Shuman/Blau translations, others were the work of Helen Austin, Herbert Kretzmer, Rod McKuen, Brian Rogers and others. The cast was Ann Hamblin, Laurika Rauch and Ferdie Uphof.

In 1983 Kushlick again created a new revue using songs from both her previous productions and titled it The Best of Brel. She directed it for PACT at the Pretoria State Theatre, before it moved to the Leonard Rayne Theatre. Kushlick staged this version again in 1986.

A large number of other Brel-based shows have been done over the years, including shows by Danielle Pascal, ** and a new compilation, Back To Back To Brel was produced by Gordon Ross and Anthony Sarankin and ran at Grazies Theatre Restaurant in Randburg from September – November 1993. It too was an eclectic mix of Brel songs, some in English, some in French.

In the mid 1980s Bradley Mart, Brenda Radloff and Themi Venturas appeared in a show referred to as Jacques Brel, possibly An Evening with Jacques Brel, the opening show of the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre Bistro in Durban. (See Photograph - NELM Manuscripts - [Collection: FLETCHER, Jill]: 2005. 75. 19. 50)

A theatrical cabaret, Kissed by Brel, was directed by Geoffrey Hyland with Claire Watling and Godfrey Johnson at the National Arts Festival 2007.

Sources

Taubie Kushlick's Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris programme notes in 19**.

http://www.ambafrance-sg.org/An-evening-with-Jacques-Brel

Photograph - NELM Manuscripts - Collection: FLETCHER, Jill: 2005. 75. 19. 50.

Cape Times, 13 August 2007.

Caroline Smart, History of Durban Supper Theatre, article first published in ArtSmart, 2007-07-22 (last edited : 2007-10-15)[2]

Personal e-mail correspondence from Anthony Sarankin, 18 August 2015.

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