Cinderella (TV)
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Cinderella is the name of a musical written for television by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein based upon the fairy tale, Cinderella. It was broadcast on television three times. The first broadcast, starring Julie Andrews, appeared on television in 1957. The second broadcast, starring Lesley Ann Warren, appeared on television in 1965. The third broadcast, starring Brandy and Whitney Houston, appeared on television in 1997.
It was adapted for the stage in 2005.
List of songs
- Overture
- In My Own Little Corner
- The Prince Is Giving A Ball
- In My Own Little Corner (Reprise)
- Impossible; It's Possible
- Gavotte
- Ten Minutes Ago
- Stepsisters' Lament
- Do I Love You Because You're Beautiful?
- When You're Driving Through Moonlight
- A Lovely Night
- The Search
- The Wedding
- Mother And Daughter March
- Waltz For A Ball
- Never In a Thousand Years
1957 television version
The 1957 version is directed by Ralph Nelson.Cast
- Julie Andrews - Cinderella
- Howard Lindsay - King
- Dorothy Stickney - Queen
- Edie Adams - Fairy Godmother
- Kaye Ballard - Stepsister Portia
- Alice Ghostley - Stepsister Joy
- Ilka Chase - Stepmother
- Jon Cypher - The Prince
Production and broadcast
This version appeared as a U.S. live broadcast (except on the west coast) on March 31, 1957. It was written specifically for CBS television, enticed (as Rodgers wrote in his autobiography) by the opportunity to write for Julie Andrews, who was to play the title role. It also included a 28-piece orchestra, 20 dancers, and seven ensemble singers.It was produced for $375,000 (very expensive for its time), and heavily promoted by its sponsors, Pepsi-Cola and the Shulton Company, maker of Old Spice). The promotion and an appearance by Rodgers and Hammerstein on The Ed Sullivan Show the week before helped to give the telecast an audience of 107 million people, the largest achieved by that time (and more than any subsequent television series episode as of 2004).
Reviews
A New York Times review by Jack Gould on April 7, 1957 characterized it as "a pleasant Cinderella that lacked the magic touch." He said that the broadcast received an "extraordinary range of reactions; it was either unreservedly enjoyed, rather angrily rejected or generally approved, subject to significant reservations."He praised Andrews as a "beguiling vision" in "lovely color video." But he complained about the book ("What possessed Mr. Hammerstein to turn the stepsisters into distasteful vaudeville clowns?"); about errors in "the most elementary kind of showmanship;" about costume ("couldn't Cinderella have been dressed in a dreamlike ball gown of fantasy rather than a chic, form-fitting number?"); about the songs ("not top-drawer Rodgers and Hammerstein"); and the staging ("cramped... excellent depth, but limited width marred the ballroom scene.") He judged the songs "reminiscent and derivative of some of their earlier successes," but praised four of them and said "In television, where original music is virtually nonexistent, these add up to quite a treat... some current [Broadway] musicals cannot boast as much melodically."
2004 broadcast
A black-and-white kinescope recording of the color telecast was re-broadcast on PBS in December 2004 as part of its Great Performances series. It was subsequently released on DVD, with a documentary including most of its original players, as well as a tape or kinescope of R & H's appearance on the Sullivan show the preceding Sunday, featuring Oscar Hammerstein reciting one of the songs to orchestral accompaniment.1965 television version
The 1965 re-make of the musical is directed by Charles S. Dubin.Cast
- Ginger Rogers- Queen
- Lesley Ann Warren - Cinderella
- Walter Pidgeon - King
- Celeste Holm - Fairy Godmother
- Stuart Damon - Prince
1997 television version
The 1997 re-make of the musical is directed by Robert Iscove and produced by Whitney Houston and Debra Martin Chase for Walt Disney Productions.
Cast
- Brandy - Cinderella
- Whitney Houston - Fairy Godmother
- Bernadette Peters - Cinderella's Stepmother
- Jason Alexander - Lionel
- Whoopi Goldberg - Queen Constantina
- Victor Garber - King Maximillian
- Paolo Montalban - The Prince
Awards
- 1998: Art Directors Guild -Excellence in Production Design Award
- 1998: Emmy Award - Outstanding Art Direction for a Variety or Music Program
External links
- (1957 version)
- (1965 version)
- (1997 version)
- [Summary] and [Background information on the production] from The Rodgers & Hammerstein Theatre Library
- [Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella], from the PBS Great Performances website
- [The First "Cinderella" Returns] from Playbill
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