A 50th anniversary London concert production of Pippin is presented April 29–30 at
the Theatre Royal Drury Lane.
Featuring the London Musical Theatre Orchestra and a 50-member choir, the concerts of the Stephen Schwartz-Roger O. Hirson musical are directed by Jonathan O'Boyle with musical direction by Chris Ma.
Alex Newell—the first openly non-binary performer to win a Tony in an acting category for their role as Lulu in Shucked—is the Leading Player.
Newell is joined by Jac Yarrow (Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat) in the title role; Olivier winner Patricia Hodge, who created the role of Catherine in the original 1973 West End premiere of Pippin, as Berthe; Lucie Jones (Wicked, Waitress) as Catherine; Guys and Dolls Olivier nominee Cedric Neal as Charlemagne; Zizi Strallen (Mary Poppins) as Fastrada; Ryan Heenan as Theo; and Idriss Kargbo as Lewis with Amonik Melaco, Jak Allen-Anderson, Sally Frith, and Gleanne Purcell-Brown as Players.
In an earlier statement composer-lyricist Schwartz said, “Although there have been some excellent recent productions of Pippin in the U.K., the show never gets to be heard with a full live orchestra and choir. This concert, with a cast led by the astonishing Alex Newell and produced under the always first-rate auspices of Katy Lipson’s Aria Entertainment and Carter Dixon McGill, promises to be a once-in-a-blue-moon event. I for one cannot wait to experience it!”
The concerts also have choreography by Joanna Goodwin,
set and costume design by Polly Sullivan, lighting design by Jamie
Platt, sound design by Adam Fisher, orchestrations by Simon Nathan based
on original orchestration by Larry Hochman, and casting by Jane Deitch.
Bob Fosse directed and choreographed the original 1972 Broadway production of Pippin, imposing his conceptual vision onto composer Schwartz and librettist Hirson's bittersweet fairytale. Ben Vereen was the Leading Player ("Magic to Do," "Simple Joys"), John Rubinstein played the searching Pippin ("Corner of the Sky," "With You"), Jill Clayburgh was his love interest ("I Guess I'll Miss the Man," "Kind of Woman"), Leland Palmer his evil stepmother ("Spread a Little Sunshine"), and Irene Ryan was Pippin's feisty grandmother ("No Time At All"). The show ran 1,944 performances, closing June 12, 1977.
The original production won five 1972 Tony Awards: Best Actor in a
Musical (Vereen), Best Scenic Design (Tony Walton), Best Lighting Design
(Jules Fisher), and Best Choreography and Best Direction of a Musical,
both for Fosse. The 2013 Broadway revival won four Tonys, including Best
Revival of a Musical.
The concerts are produced by Katy Lipson for Aria Entertainment and Carter Dixon McGill Productions.
Visit LWTheatres.co.uk.
Look back at the original Broadway production of Pippin below.