Make Me a Song (musical)

Make Me a Song is a musical revue, with lyrics and music by William Finn, which was conceived by Rob Ruggiero in 2006.[1]

Make Me a Song
The Music of William Finn
Logo for the off-Broadway production
MusicWilliam Finn
LyricsWilliam Finn
BookConcept by Rob Ruggiero
BasisMusic of William Finn
Productions2006 Hartford, Connecticut
2007 Off-Broadway
2008 London

The revue includes songs from Finn's musicals In Trousers, Falsettos, A New Brain, Elegies: A Song Cycle and Romance in Hard Times, songs written for The Royal Family of Broadway and Songs of Innocence and Experience, musicals that were never professionally produced, and other unpublished songs, notably the title song. There is no dialogue or plot connecting the songs.[2]

Productions

Make Me a Song premiered in April 2006 as a regional production at Hartford's TheaterWorks, where Rob Ruggiero, who conceived of and directed the show, served as associate artistic director. The cast featured four singers: Sandy Binion, Joe Cassidy, Adam Heller and Sally Wilfert, as well as an on-stage singing pianist, John DiPinto.[3]

A transfer to the off-Broadway Zipper Theater was announced for April that year, but was cancelled because of scheduling issues.[4][5] Instead, the off-Broadway production premiered on November 12, 2007, at New World Stages; the show was cut down to 90 minutes and played without an intermission.[2] Binion, Heller and Wilfert reprised their roles in the updated production, joined by D. B. Bonds and Darren R. Cohen as the pianist.[6] The off-Broadway run lasted 55 performances before closing on December 30, 2007.[7]

A London production ran from March 6 to April 6, 2008 at the New Players Theatre, directed by Andrew MacBean. The cast included Louise Dearman, Sally Ann Triplett, Frances Ruffelle, Simon Thomas and Ian "H" Watkins.[8][9]

Song List

  • "Make Me a Song" – Adam (written for Mandy Patinkin for a proposed concert of Finn's songs, but never performed)
  • "Heart and Music" (from A New Brain) – Company
  • "Hitchhiking Across America" – D. B. (written for an unfinished musical)
  • "Billy's Law of Genetics" (new arrangement of "Gordo's Law of Genetics" from A New Brain) – D. B. & Company
  • "Passover" (from Elegies: A Song Cycle) – Sally
  • "Republicans Part 1" (previously unpublished song written in the 80's or 90's) – Adam
  • "Only One" (from Elegies) – Sandy
  • "I'd Rather Be Sailing/Set Those Sails" (from A New Brain and In Trousers respectively) – D. B. & Sally
  • "Republicans Part 2" – Adam
  • "Change" (from A New Brain) – Sandy & Company
  • "I Have Found" (written for The Royal Family of Broadway) – Sally
  • "Republicans Part 3" – Adam
  • "You're Even Better Than You Think You Are" (written for Songs of Innocence and Experience) – Company
  • "Falsettos Suite: Four Jews in a Room Bitching/A Tight-Knit Family/Love Is Blind/My Father Is a Homo/Trina's Song/March of the Falsettos/The Year of the Child/The Baseball Game/Unlikely Lovers/Falsettoland" (new arrangement of songs from Falsettos) – Company
  • "All Fall Down" (from Romance in Hard Times) – Sandy
  • "Republicans Part 4" – Adam
  • "Stupid Things I Won't Do" (written for The Royal Family of Broadway) – Adam
  • "That's Enough for Me" (from Romance in Hard Times) – Sandy
  • "I Went Fishing With My Dad" (written while writing Songs of Innocence and Experience) – D.B.
  • "When the Earth Stopped Turning" (from Elegies) – Adam
  • "Anytime (I Am There)" (from Infinite Joy) – Sally
  • "Song of Innocence and Experience" (written for Songs of Innocence and Experience) – Company
  • "Finale" – Company

Notes: "Heart and Music" and "Billy's Law of Genetics" were arranged by Jason Robert Brown; "Hitchhiking Across America" was arranged by Vadim Feichtner; "I'd Rather Be Sailing/Set Those Sails" was arranged by Darren Cohen and Carmel Dean; "Change" was arranged by Michael Morris; "You're Even Better Than You Think You Are" and "Falsettos Suite" were arranged by Michael Starobin, Carmel Dean and Michael Morris; and "I Went Fishing With My Dad" and "Song of Innocence and Experience" were arranged by Carmel Dean. All the other songs used the original arrangements.

Recording

An original cast recording of the off-Broadway cast was released on April 29, 2008, by Ghostlight Records.[10] The double disc set includes live recordings of every song in the revue, liner notes written by theatre writer Steven Suskin, and a bonus track of William Finn singing "Mister, Make Me a Song," which was played from a recording to open the show before transitioning into Heller's live rendition.[11]

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Result
2007-2008 Drama Desk AwardsOutstanding RevueNominated
Outer Critics Circle AwardsOutstanding New Off-Broadway MusicalNominated

References

  1. Make Me a Song - Lortel Archives
  2. Jones, Kenneth. "Make Me a Song, Finn's Revue of 'Heart and Music', Opens in NYC", Playbill, November 12, 2007, accessed February 11, 2018
  3. Rizzo, Frank."Make Me a Song: The Music of William Finn", Variety, August 21, 2006, accessed February 11, 2018
  4. "Make Me a Song: The Music of William Finn Set for April Start at Zipper", Broadway.com, February 23, 2007, accessed February 11, 2018
  5. "William Finn Revue Make Me a Song Headed to New World Stages", Broadway.com, September 18, 2007, accessed February 12, 2018
  6. Midgette, Anne. "A Songwriter’s Gamut, Personal and Poignant With Notes in Between", The New York Times, November 21, 2007, accessed February 11, 2018
  7. Suskin, Steven (2010), Show Tunes: The Songs, Shows, and Careers of Broadway’s Major Composers, 4th ed., Oxford University Press, pp. 370
  8. Shenton, Mark. "Finn's Make Me a Song Opens in London March 6", Playbill, March 6, 2008, accessed February 11, 2018
  9. Make Me a Song, Guide to Musical Theatre, accessed February 11, 2018
  10. Ruhlmann, William. "Make Me a Song: The Music of William Finn Original Off-Broadway Cast Recording, AllMusic.com, accessed February 12, 2018
  11. Suskin, Steven. ""On the Record: Finn's Make Me a Song, Plus Studio Discs of South Pacific and Kiss Me, Kate", Playbill, April 28, 2008, accessed February 12, 2018
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