The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hal Prince, producer of Broadway’s ‘Evita’, ‘Phantom’ dies at 91

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HAROLD “Hal” Prince, who won a record 21 Tony Awards as producer and director of some of Broadway’s biggest hits of the second half of the 20th century including “The Phantom of the Opera,” “West Side Story,” “Fiddler on the Roof,” “Cabaret” and “Evita,” died on Wednesday at age 91.

Prince died after a brief illness in Reykjavik, Iceland, his publicist said.

Prince was famed for his dynamic collaborat­ions with two composers, American Stephen Sondheim and Briton Andrew Lloyd Webber and had been a protege of legendary Broadway showman George Abbott.

Prince became a wunderkind producer in the 1950s with hits including “West Side Story,” the groundbrea­king re-imagining of Shakespear­e’s “Romeo and Juliet.”

He turned to directing in the 1960s with hits including “Cabaret,” set in decadent Berlin amid the rise of the Nazis, for which he won the first of eight Tonys as best director.

He joined with Sondheim to create a series of sophistica­ted musicals in the 1970s, then teamed with Lloyd Webber for the blockbuste­rs “Evita” and “The Phantom of the Opera,” which became the longest-running show in Broadway history.

“He’s the best director of musicals around by far,” Sondheim, whose work with Prince included the 1970s musicals “Company,” “Follies,” “A Little Night Music,” “Pacific Overtures” and “Sweeney Todd,” said in a 1984 interview with Prince biographer Carol Ilson.

“He has a more acute ear than most producers. He takes it seriously and is more daring, imaginativ­e and endlessly creative. He likes to take chances,” Sondheim said.

In March, “Sweeney Todd” — the macabre tale of a murderous barber set to Sondheim’s music — made its debut. In September, Prince brought “Evita” to New York from London, where it had opened the previous year, telling the story of Eva Peron, the magnetic wife of Argentine strongman Juan Peron, with Lloyd Webber’s music.

Prince rebounded from a handful of 1980s misfires with his biggest hit. “The Phantom of the Opera” — the story of a disfigured musical genius obsessed with a young operatic soprano — opened in London in 1986, then took Broadway by storm in 1988.

“There is not a single scene in the show that does not have a surprise in it,” Prince told Playbill in 2011 of “Phantom.”

“Sometimes it’s fire that you don’t know is going to be there, sometimes it’s a voice, sometimes it’s a piano playing by itself, but there’s always something. And sometimes it’s a piece of scenery almost falling on a diva,” Prince said.

‘I wouldn’t have a career’

Prince, who sported a neatly trimmed white beard, balding head and dark-rimmed glasses usually perched precarious­ly high on his forehead, hung a bulletin board in his Rockefelle­r Center office in New York adorned with notes he wrote to himself. One seemed to underscore his willingnes­s to take risks: “I wouldn’t have a career if I’d taken a lot of advice.”

He generally eschewed the time-tested Broadway practice of casting stars to carry a musical. As a director, he pioneered the “concept musical” with Sondheim, with shows presenting themes in place of a narrative plot. “Follies,” for example, used a reunion of chorus girls to explore growing older.

Prince was born in New York on Jan 30, 1928. His parents divorced when he was young and he was raised by his mother and stepfather, a stockbroke­r. His family frequented the theatre, and he was dazzled at age eight by a performanc­e by Orson Welles.

Along with Robert Griffith, Prince decided to try his hand as a producer. At age 26, he opened “The Pajama Game” in 1954. The peppy show about romance in a pajama factory was a hit and won the Tony Award as best musical.

In 1955, they opened their second show, “Damn Yankees,” a tale of a baseball fan who sells his soul to the devil to help his favorite team win. It also won a Tony as best musical.

Prince and Griffith produced 1957’s “West Side Story,” a love story set among gangs in contempora­ry New York City and put to music by Leonard Bernstein. It became one of the most influentia­l musicals in Broadway history.

Prince produced shows on his own after Griffith’s death in 1961. He had hits with two shows starring Zero Mostel.

“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” opening in 1962, was a musical romp sent in ancient Rome. “Fiddler on the Roof,” about Jewish villagers in early 20th century Russia, opened in 1964 and became the longest-running show in Broadway history to date.

In 1966, he produced and directed “Cabaret,” energised by a leering, electric performanc­e by Joel Grey. In 1993, he directed “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” featuring Chita Rivera, who had appeared 36 years earlier in “West Side Story.”

Prince also was in demand as an opera director. He twice directed films, but neither “Something for Everyone” (1970) with Angela Lansbury nor the film version of “A Little Night Music” (1977) with Elizabeth Taylor became a success.

Prince was active well into his 80s including directing Bernstein’s “Candide” in 2017.

Prince is survived by his two children and his wife of 56 years, Judith Chaplin, the daughter of composer Saul Chaplin. — Reuters

He’s the best director of musicals around by far . He has a more acute ear than most producers. He takes it seriously and is more daring, imaginativ­e and endlessly creative. He likes to take chances. Stephen Sondheim

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 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? Director Prince (left) applauds during the curtain call of ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ in New York City on Jan 9, 2006.
— Reuters file photo Director Prince (left) applauds during the curtain call of ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ in New York City on Jan 9, 2006.

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