Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Music Notes with Howard - Evita


Music guru Howard has been doing a fantastic "Dark Monday" series on his BLOG, where he highlights the music from Broadway. This week he showcases a musical that I am crazy for - Evita - a musical I've actually never seen performed onstage. Let me explain...

Back in the early 80's my parents took a trip to NYC, where they saw Patti LuPone in Evita. They brought back the Broadway cast double-album (yes, I'm OLD), and I proceeded to wear those records out. I memorized every word of the show - lyrics I can recite to this day. I even choreographed an imaginary drag routine to the song "Rainbow High" - complete with hot Papi salon attendants and a FIERCE "reveal". Did I mention that I was 13 years old at the time?...


Evita - by Howard





It was 1979, and the musical Evita was all the rage. The music and lyrics were written by the hot young duo of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. And by hot I am meaning professionally, because there is no way at any given point in time Webber could be considered physically hot. It starred a young woman who had many roles on Broadway prior to this, but used the role of Eva Peron to skyrocket to fame. Patti LuPone was a tour de force in the role, and earned endless praise. Another breakout star was Mandy Patinkin in the role of Ché Guevara, with his amazing voice and vocal range, and an acting ability that saw no bounds.





Evita was the story of Eva Peron, and her rise from commoner to the first lady of Argentina. It is thought she slept her way to the top, chewing up and spitting out many on her way, and this musical doesn't disagree with that point. But with her booming voice and amazing charm, LuPone keeps the story interesting and the character human. Here is Patti singing Don't Cry For Me Argentina in a special event.





The production won 7 Tony Awards, including Best Musical, Best Lead Actress In A Musical for LuPone, and Best Featured Actor In A Musical for Patinkin. It opened in September 1979, and closed in 1983 after more than 1,500 performances.