Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Cabin in the Sky (musical)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Lyrics
  
John Latouche

Playwright
  
Lynn Root

Lyricist
  
John La Touche

Book
  
Lynn Root

Composer
  
Vernon Duke


Productions
  
1940 Martin Beck Theatre

Characters
  
Little Joe Jackson, Petunia Jackson, Domino Johnson, Lucifer Junior, Georgia Brown, The Lawd's General

Similar
  
Vernon Duke plays, Musicals

Take a first look at encores production of cabin in the sky


Cabin in the Sky is a musical with music by Vernon Duke, book by Lynn Root, and lyrics by John Latouche. The musical opened on Broadway in 1940. The show is described as a "parable of Southern Negro Life with echoes of Ferenc Molnár's Liliom (which would be turned into the musical Carousel) and Marc Connelly's The Green Pastures."

Contents

The orchestra of the film obertura of cabin in the sky


History

Lynn Root wrote the libretto and brought it to George Balanchine, "who was anxious to do it as his first assignment as director of an entire Broadway production." Balanchine took the script to Vernon Duke to compose the music. "On reading the script, my first impulse was to turn it down because as much as I admired the Negro race and its musical gifts, I didn't think myself sufficiently attuned to Negro folklore." However, Duke ended up taking up the project but insisted on "a lyricist with some direct contact with Southern Negroes." Duke talked to Ira Gershwin and E.Y. Harburg but they both turned it down. (Gershwin was working on Lady in the Dark and Harburg thought the composer was "incapable of writing the kind of score the play required.)

Duke ended up picking John Latouche as his lyricist and the two began work in Virginia Beach. The two wanted to absorb aspects of the local Black culture but "decided to stay away from pedantic authenticity and write our own kind of 'colored' songs."

The rehearsals for the show were rather interesting between the Russian trio (Duke, Balanchine and Boris Aronson - the designer) and the all-black cast. In his book Passport to Paris, Duke quotes George Ross' description from the Telegram: "Pit a threesome of turbulent Russians against a tempestuous cast of Negro players from Harlem and what have you got? Well, in this instance the result is a lingual ruckus approaching bedlam. At least half a dozen times at the rehearsal of Cabin in the Sky, Ethel Waters, Todd Duncan, Rex Ingram, J. Rosamond Johnson, Katherine Dunham and her dancers have paused in puzzlement while the argumentative trio of Muscovites disputed a difference of opinion in their native tongue. The Russian vowels and consonants fly as thick as borsht. After ten minutes of such alien harangue and retort, Miss Waters asks what it is all about. ‘George,’ Duke generally interprets, ‘just said the answer is yes!' and then rehearsals are resumed under the flag of truce until the next vocal flare-up."

Three days before the opening, Duke decided to replace the song "We'll Live All Over Again" after Waters expressed dissatisfaction with it. It was replaced with the showstopper "Taking a Chance on Love." The song was originally "Foolin' Around with Love" which he wrote with Ted Fetter. Latouche retitled it and wrote the reprises.

J. Rosamond Johnson, besides taking a small role, trained the singing chorus. Katherine Dunham led her dancers through their slithering paces, assisted in the choreography by George Balanchine.

Productions

The musical premiered on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on October 25, 1940 and closed on March 8, 1941 after 156 performances. The musical is based on the story Little Joe by Lynn Root.

Musicals Tonight! presented a staged concert of the musical at the 14th Street YMHA, New York City in October 2003.

The musical was presented in a staged concert by Encores! in February 2016, starring Chuck Cooper, Norm Lewis, and LaChanze.

Musical numbers

Source: Internet Broadway Database

ACT 1:

  • "The General's Song" - Lawd's General and Saints
  • "Pay Heed" - Lawd's General and Saints
  • "Taking a Chance on Love" - Petunia
  • "Cabin in the Sky" - Petunia and Little Joe
  • "Holy Unto the Lord" - Petunia, Little Joe, Brother Green, and Churchmembers
  • "Dem Bones" - Petunia, J. Rosamond Johnson Singer, and Churchmembers
  • "Do What You Wanna Do" - Lucifier Jr and Imps
  • "Taking a Chance on Love (reprise)" - Petunia and Little Joe
  • ACT 2:

  • "Fugue" - Lawd's General and Saints
  • "My Old Virginia Home on the Nile" - Petunia and Little Joe
  • "Egyptian Ballet" - The Dunham Dancers
  • "It's Not So Good To Be Bad" - Lawd's General
  • "Love Me Tomorrow" - Georgia Brown and Little Joe
  • "Love Turned the Light Out" - Petunia
  • "Lazy Steps" - The Dunham Dancers
  • "Boogy Woogy" - The Dunham Dancers
  • "Honey in the Honeycomb" - Georgia Brown and Boys
  • "Savannah" - Petunia
  • Characters and original cast

    The original Broadway characters and cast:

    Critical reception

    The musical was very well received. Gerald Bordman wrote "Wisely, everyone involved in the show rejected the easy excesses and crassness so many musicals resorted to. Certainly they avoided turning the evening into a black minstrel show. Throughout the production a tasteful restraint, a sense of what as appropriate to the story, was maintained. This rare display of integrity made Cabin in the Sky an attractive enough evening to keep ticket buyers coming for 20 weeks."

    Thomas S. Hischak wrote, "With enthusiastic reviews, an outstanding score, and a powerhouse cast of some of the finest African Americans in the business, it was surprising the musical did not run longer than twenty weeks."

    However, not everyone liked the show. Critic Richard Watts, Jr. wrote in his review that the show was "merely a white man's self-conscious attempt to write a pseudo-folk fable of another race."

    Cabin in the Sky proved to be the last major success of Duke's career.

    The show was made into the 1943 film Cabin in the Sky, but as Denny Flinn stated in his book, "It is noble that Hollywood made a black musical at all, but there are too many interpolations to the John Latouche-Vernon Duke score."

    References

    Cabin in the Sky (musical) Wikipedia