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Cool.

Last week we were too consumed by meat products to mark this momentous anniversary. On Sept. 26, 1957, West Side Story opened at the Winter Garden in New York, with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by a very young Stephen Sondheim. An item in the New York Times that day revealed that it dealt with "the timely subject of juvenile delinquency." They might as well have said "Oklahoma! it ain't." The next day Times reviewer Brooks Atkinson showed that he got it: a score that captures "the shrill beat of life in the streets;" "Everything contributes to the total impression of wildness, ecstasy and anguish;" "This is one of those occasions when theatre people...are all in top form."

The Mudd has the original cast recording, the full score, the 1961 film (on DVD) starring Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer, and the crazy, what-were-they-thinking 1985 studio recording with José Carreras as the Polish youth and Tatiana Troyanos as the Puerto Rican teenage girl. Give it a listen just to hear UW-Milwaukee's own Kurt Ollmann.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on October 2, 2007 9:25 AM.

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