Vancouver Sun

BROADWAY REVUE PUTS THE SONGS FIRST

Concert format combines classics, modern material

- SHAWN CONNER

Ever wanted to see and hear some Broadway hits but without all that narrative foofaraw? From Broadway With Love brings together local vocal talent and a 14-piece orchestra (11 soloists and a choir) to perform songs from the Great White Way. The selections date from classics (West Side Story, 1957) to contempora­ry (Dear Evan Hansen, 2016). Postmedia News talked to musical director Christophe­r King about the show, which is the inaugural production of Circle Bright, a recently formed Vancouver performing arts company.

Q Is there a theme to From Broadway With Love?

A The idea is to give a snippet of Broadway to audiences through the concert format as opposed to a fully staged show.

Q Ten of the 20 songs in the show were chosen through Circle Bright’s social media channels. Were there any surprises?

A There were a lot of modern shows, staples of musical theatre

like Phantom and Les Miz. But I was surprised by how much modern material people wanted to hear, like songs from Waitress (2016), Dear Evan Hansen, and The Book of Mormon (2011).

Q Where did you find the singers?

A We had open auditions. They’re all pros who have worked in theatres across Vancouver, some across Canada. They’re all musical theatre types with different background­s.

Q How did you match the singer with the song ?

A When I looked at that list from the online poll and the talent we had, I paired people up. A couple of people who had auditioned for me, I knew what they were capable of, so I assigned them what I thought was what was most appropriat­e for their vocal type or personalit­y.

Q Were there any absolute must-haves for you, song-wise?

A I really thought it was important to make sure we gave a selection of Broadway material that people could grab onto, songs that were popular but also ones people hadn’t heard. I think we did a pretty good job of spreading out the material. What was really the most important thing for me was that people have a good time, and they experience a small bit of Broadway storytelli­ng in one evening.

Q Did you find that these songs all had something in common, whether in arrangemen­ts or the way the lyrics told a story?

A The important thing was that the songs could stand on their own, and that they encapsulat­e the story of the show in some way. But we also give introducti­ons to the song, where somebody gives a synopsis of what’s happening in the moment.

For example, there’s a song from a musical called Violet (1997; Broadway opening, 2014). It’s about a woman who was disfigured by an accident. As a kid she goes on a bus journey in the southern United States to see an evangelica­l minister to be healed. What’s cool about the context is that, though we never see the disfigurat­ion, the other actors do. So we only react to her through how other people see her. The song is a beautiful Southern revival, gospel-y number. But without that context we wouldn’t know what’s happening.

 ?? KATE WHYTE ?? Brandyn Eddy and Lindsay Warnock perform in From Broadway With Love, a revue of showtunes at Gateway Theatre April 26-28.
KATE WHYTE Brandyn Eddy and Lindsay Warnock perform in From Broadway With Love, a revue of showtunes at Gateway Theatre April 26-28.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada