Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Amour (musical)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Music
  
Michel Legrand

Book
  
Jeremy Sams

Playwright
  
Jeremy Sams

Adapted from
  
The passer-through-walls

Lyrics
  
Didier Van Cauwelaert

First performance
  
1997

Lyricist
  
Didier Van Cauwelaert

Composer
  
Michel Legrand

Amour (musical) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb5

Basis
  
1943 short story Le Passe-Muraille by Marcel Aymé

Productions
  
1997 Paris 2002 Broadway

Similar
  
One Touch of Venus, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, The Wizard of Oz, The Wind In The Willows, Ghetto

Amour original broadway cast with melissa errico malcolm gets norm lewis


Amour is a musical fantasy with an English book by Jeremy Sams, music by Michel Legrand, and lyrics by Didier Van Cauwelaert, who wrote the original French libretto.

Contents

The musical is adapted from the 1943 short story Le Passe-Muraille by Marcel Aymé and set in Paris shortly after World War II. It centers on a shy, unassuming clerk who develops the ability to walk through walls, and who challenges himself to stick to his moral center and change others' lives, and his own, as a result.

Melissa errico sings somebody from amour original broadway cast


Production

In 1997, Legrand, a noted film composer and jazz musician, and a newcomer to stage musicals at age 65, brought the musical (under its original title, Le Passe Muraille) to Paris where it won the Prix Molière for Best Musical.

The Broadway production, directed by James Lapine and presented without intermission, opened on October 20, 2002 at the Music Box Theatre. The show closed after 17 performances and 31 previews. The cast included Malcolm Gets and Melissa Errico.

The musical received mostly negative reviews in America, although Errico, Gets and the score were praised. Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times, wrote: "Even charming is too weighty a word to describe the wispy appeal of Amour" The Talkin' Broadway reviewer, however, wrote: "Broadway's Music Box Theatre may have found its most ideal tenant in quite a while. The delightful little jewel box of a musical, Amour, ...deserves a lengthy stay there, where it may enchant audiences for a long time to come." Cary Wong in filmscoremonthly wrote: "The lyrics are mostly pedestrian and uninvolving, and they make the already stock characters even more one-dimensional." He does note that "...while there is a lot to admire in this musical, it's too much of a chamber operetta to compete with the likes of 'Hairspray' and 'La Boheme'."

A "reconceived production" was produced by Goodspeed Musicals from August 11 through September 4, 2005, directed by Darko Tresnjak.

Characters

  • Dusoleil: a self-proclaimed "ordinary guy" who discovers he can walk through walls
  • Isabelle: an unhappily married woman and the object of Dusoleil's affections
  • Whore, Painter, Newsvendor: three street workers who support Dusoleil
  • Prosecutor: Isabelle's husband, a man with more than a few skeletons in his closet
  • Boss: Dusoleil's nasty boss
  • Doctor Roucefort: Dusoleil's doctor, who gives him the eventual cure to his intangibility
  • Madeleine, Claire, Charles, Bertrand: Dusoleil's co-workers. The women reveal feelings for Dusoleil when they discover he is the elusive "Monsieur Passepartout"
  • Policemen: "henchmen" hired by the prosecutor to keep the people of Montmartre in check
  • Monsieur le President: President of the tribunal that tries Dusoleil
  • Advocate: Dusoleil's lawyer, who appears on behalf of Dusoleil on his very first day in court
  • Plot

    In Paris after World War II, a shy, unassuming "invisible" civil servant, Dusoleil, lives alone and works in a dreary office under a tyrannical boss. His lazy co-workers are unhappy because Dusoleil is a hard worker who finishes his work early. To pass the time, he writes letters to his mother and daydreams about the beautiful Isabelle. Isabelle is kept locked away by her controlling husband, the prosecutor-general with an unsavory past. When Dusoleil miraculously gains the ability to walk through walls, he begins to steal from the rich and give to the poor. He also gains the self-confidence to woo Isabelle, who is intrigued by the news stories about Passepartout, a mysterious criminal who can walk through walls.

    Dusoleil's life, as well as Isabelle's and the other characters, takes a rich and, for a while, romantic turn. As Dusoleil admits to being Passepartout, he is put on trial in front of the prosecutor. Before the trial progresses, Isabelle reveals her husband's secret—that he was a Nazi collaborator. Dusoleil is pardoned and he spends one romantic night with Isabelle. When he takes pills that the doctor has given him, mistaking them for aspirin, he loses his magic power. He becomes stuck mid-leap in a wall, and his memory is carried on in story and song.

    Recording

    A recording of the musical was released by Ghostlight on July 8, 2003.

    Songs

    1Overture
    2Office Life
    3Going Home Alone

    References

    Amour (musical) Wikipedia