education guide - The Pasadena Playhouse
Transcription
education guide - The Pasadena Playhouse
EDUCATION GUIDE SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE EDUCATION GUIDE Prepared by Jacey Erwin, Dramaturg for The Pasadena Playhouse Graphic Design by Jessica Smith, Hive Creative Studio Contents ____________________________________________________________ Production History. ......................................................................................Page 3 Leiber And Stoller........................................................................................Page 4 Jukebox Musicals..........................................................................................Page 6 From “Race Music” To Rhythm And Blues To Rock ‘N’ Roll. ......................Page 7 Hound Dog(s).................................................................................................Page 8 The Brill Building. ........................................................................................Page 9 Selected Timeline...........................................................................................Page 10 Cast...............................................................................................................Page 14 Q&A With Smokey Joe’s Cafe Director, Jeffrey Polk..................................Page 16 The Creative And Design Team.......................................................................Page 17 After The Show…..........................................................................................Page 18 Resources And Suggestions For Further Reading.........................................Page 19 All photos are used for educational purposes only. They remain the property of their owners. For more information on Outreach, Education, and Audience Engagement at The Playhouse, please visit our website at www.pasadenaplayhouse.org or contact our Outreach & Education Manager/Artistic Associate Courtney Harper at [email protected] or 626-204-7388. The Pasadena Playhouse’s Outreach, Education, and Audience Engagement programs and events are supported in part by The Wells Fargo Theatrical Diversity Project and by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission. 2 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Production History ____________________________________________________ Smokey Joe’s Cafe had its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles in November 1994. The production opened on Broadway at the Virginia Theatre on March 2, 1995 and ran for a total of 2,036 performances. Directed by Jerry Zaks, the Broadway cast featured Ken Ard, Adrian Bailey, Brenda Braxton, Victor Trent Cook, B.J. Crosby, Pattie Darcy Jones, DeLee Lively, Frederick B. Owens, and Michael Park. The production was nominated for 7 Tony Awards including Best Musical and won a Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album in 1996. Did you know… that the first workshop of Smokey Joe’s Cafe was performed in a rehearsal room on Broadway with a cast of seven in the fall of 1993? Did you know… in workshops and early productions of the play that a book, or script, was used to tie the songs together? At that point Smokey Joe’s Cafe was titled Baby that’s Rock and Roll and the semblance of a story followed an old rock & roller and his memories. It was in June of 1994 that Jerry Zaks, Director of that production of Smokey Joe’s that continued onto Broadway, restructured the show to make conceptual sense and have a natural flow - without a book, script, or story! Questions in Context: 1. Why do you think there was such a long time between when this music originally hit the charts and the musical Smokey Joe’s Cafe? 2. Why is the title of the musical Smokey Joe’s Cafe – The Songs of Leiber and Stoller? Where does the name come from? 3 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Leiber and Stoller ____________________________________________________ Source: The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller have written some of the most spirited and enduring rock and roll songs: “Hound Dog” (originally cut by Big Mama Thornton in 1953 and covered by Elvis Presley three years later), “Love Potion No. 9” (the Clovers), “Kansas City” (Wilbert Harrison), “On Broadway” (the Drifters), “Ruby Baby” (Dion) and “Stand By Me” (Ben E. King). Their vast catalog includes virtually every major hit by the Coasters (e.g., “Searchin’,” “Young Blood,” “Charlie Brown,” “Yakety Yak” and “Poison Ivy”). They also worked their magic on Elvis Presley, writing “Jailhouse Rock,” “Treat Me Nice” and “You’re So Square (Baby I Don’t Care)” specifically for him. All totaled, Presley recorded more than 20 Leiber and Stoller songs. As pop auteurs who wrote, arranged and produced countless recordings by the above-mentioned artists and others, Leiber and Stoller advanced rock and roll to new heights of wit and musical sophistication. They were particularly influential during rock and roll’s first decade, beginning with the original recording of “Hound Dog” in 1953 and continuing through to the Drifters’ “On Broadway” in 1963. They brought a range of stylistic flavor to their story songs, which ranged from wisecracking, finger-popping hipster tunes to quieter love ballads. They even made a foray into country & western at Elvis Presley’s request, penning “Just Tell Her Jim Said Hello.” About all that their songs had in common was a fundamental grounding in rhythm & blues. Leiber, the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland, was born in 1933 and grew up on the edge of Baltimore’s black ghetto. Stoller, also born in 1933, was raised in Queens, learning the basics of blues and boogie-woogie from black kids at summer camp. The pair met in Los Angeles in 1950 and began writing right away. Leiber served as the sharp-witted lyricist, while the classically trained but jazz- and R&B-loving Stoller wrote the music. In 1951 one of the duo’s early songs, “That’s What the Good Book Says,” was recorded by the Robins (two members of the Robins later became original members of the Coasters) for Modern Records. In 1954, Leiber and Stoller formed their own label, Spark, which released classics like the Robins’ “Riot in Cell Block #9.” After a string of similarly gutsy, groundbreaking records, Atlantic Records signed Leiber and Stoller to one of the industry’s first independent production deals. 4 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE After enjoying a wildly successful run at Atlantic in the late Fifties and early Sixties, Leiber and Stoller made their final and most successful attempt at running their own record label in 1964. Red Bird Records spotlighted the girl-group sound. Their unerring eye for talent brought great young producers and songwriters into the Red Bird fold. The company’s second release - “Chapel of Love,” by the Dixie Cups - shot to #1. Of Red Bird’s first 30 singles, 10 made the Top Forty - an outstanding percentage in the music industry. Red Bird’s commercial success was equaled by the quality of the music, including such girl-group classics as the Shangri-La’s “Leader of the Pack.” Though the era of such timeless singles faded long ago, Leiber and Stoller have remained active in the music business to which they’ve contributed so substantially, up until Jerry Leiber’s death on August 22, 2011 in Los Angeles. Did you know… Mike Stoller is now a member of our Board of Directors at The Pasadena Playhouse along with his wife Corky Hale-Stoller? Questions in Context: 1. How does music express or define a period in your life? 2. What motivates you to pursue your dreams and goals? 3. If you could induct any artist or group into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, whom would you choose? Why? 5 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Jukebox Musicals ____________________________________________________ In the late 20th century, a type of musical revue known as the “jukebox musical” became popular on Broadway. According to the Cambridge Companion to the Musical, “the jukebox musical is an assemblage of pre-existing songs where the emphasis is clearly on the songs, not on plot and/ or character.” Some jukebox musicals use a narrative frame to structure the show. Jersey Boys features the songs of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons and is structured around the story of the rise and fall of the band. Mamma Mia departs from biography and instead, incorporates interwoven love stories set to the music of ABBA. In contrast, some shows, including Smokey Joe’s Cafe, are structured as musical revues where a variety of songs and/or sketches are presented without a plot. Another type of jukebox musical takes the form of a tribute concert. Let It Be: A Celebration of the Music of the Beatles is a recent example of this genre. Other well-known jukebox musicals include We Will Rock You, Steppin’ Out, and Rock of Ages. Questions in Context: 1. What attributes of a jukebox musical do you see in Smokey Joe’s Cafe? 2. Which other artists could have their music turned into a jukebox musical?er out of the house. A friend of her husband worked at Hill and Range publishers in New York, and he invited Florence to “hang around” the office and mayno background in music, but was fascinated. She began to frequent the restaurant downstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in the songwriting b 6 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE From “Race Music” to Rhythm and Blues to Rock ‘n’ Roll ____________________________________________________ Rhythm and Blues, often abbreviated to R&B, is a genre of African American music that evolved out of earlier forms of popular music including blues, and laid the foundation for rock and roll. However, before Rhythm and Blues appeared as a musical genre in the 1940s, the terms “race music” or “race records” were used to categorize many kinds of music recorded by and marketed to African-Americans. These recordings included a wide variety of musical styles including jazz, blues, gospel, string bands, jug-and-washboard bands, and oral performances like comic routines and sermons. During World War II, African-Americans flocked to major cities looking for work, and black radio stations and record labels were created to capitalize on this growing market. In the late 1940s,“Race Music” was re-classified “Rhythm and Blues.” R&B gained in popularity as white audiences tuned in to R&B stations and bought records of the music they heard. As the interest and the audience grew, songs that would have previously only landed on the R&B charts began to appear on the Top 40. The music crossed racial lines as white singers drew from black music, and African-American music and musicians got the attention of white audiences when deejays like Alan Freed began playing R&B on the radio. Freed is credited with coining the term “rock and roll” to describe the “rolling, surging beat of the music.” Questions in Context: 1. Is it surprising that in the early to mid-20th century, music was categorized and marketed along racial lines? Why or why not? 2. Why do you think R&B and Rock and Roll were able to appeal to both white and black audiences?downstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 7 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Hound Dog(s) ____________________________________________________ In 1952, Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton recorded her first and only hit song, “Hound Dog”, a song Leiber and Stoller wrote just for her. Thornton’s recording of “Hound Dog” would spend 14 weeks on Billboard’s R&B charts, and 7 weeks at #1. It was so popular that there were 10 cover versions before Elvis Presley recorded his famous version in 1956. When Leiber and Stoller heard the Elvis version, they realized that their lyrics had been changed. The original lyrics were: You ain’t nothing but a hound dog Quit snooping ‘round my door You can wag your tail, But I ain’t gonna feed you no more While Elvis sang: You ain’t nothing but a hound dog Crying all the time You ain’t never caught a rabbit And you ain’t no friend of mine In Hound Dog: The Leiber & Stoller Autobiography, Jerry Leiber wrote: “Elvis’s version makes no sense to me, and, even more irritatingly, it is not the song that Mike and I wrote. Of course, the fact that it sold more than seven million copies took the sting out of what seemed to be a capricious change of lyrics. But, lick for lick, there’s no comparison between the Presley version and the Big Mama original. Elvis played with the song; Big Mama nailed it” (Leiber & Stoller, 94). Did you know… that Alice Walker’s short story “1955” includes characters inspired by Big Mama Thornton and Elvis Presley? Questions in Context: 1. Were these songs influenced by the time period when they were written and recorded? 2. Were there barriers between artists and their audience in the early days of R&B and Rock and Roll? Do they still exist now? Or have they changed?downstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 8 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE The Brill Building ____________________________________________________ The Brill Building is located at 1619 Broadway in New York City and has long been associated with American popular music. In fact, the “Brill Building” has come to stand for the style and sound of much of the popular music of the 50s and 60s. The Brill Building housed publishers like Aldon Music as well as some of the most important Rock and Roll songwriting teams including Leiber and Stoller, Gerry Goffin and Carole King, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil. In addition to these writers, teen idols like Neil Sedaka, Bobby Darin, and Paul Anka and producer Phil Spector also had a hand in creating the Brill Building sound. According to Ken Bloom in Broadway: Its History, People, and Places: an Encyclopedia, the Brill Building’s “success was due in large part to what would eventually become known as vertical integration. A song could be written in the building, arranged by musicians renting space there, copied in the duplication office, sung by singers and musicians who prowled the halls, and made into a demo record in one of the building’s studios. The demo could then be peddled to one of the building’s publishers, who could approach managers and radio promoters—all in one spot” (81). The Brill Building publishers, writers, and musicians eventually expanded into adjacent buildings, but the “Brill Building” continued to be synonymous with a style and approach to creating hit music. Questions in Context: 1. Is there an equivalent to the Brill Building today? What might it be? 2. The “golden age” of the music associated with Brill Building left a lasting legacy. Can you think of contemporary musicians and singers that will leave such a legacy? Who are they?wnstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 9 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Selected Timeline ____________________________________________________ 1952 • A movie ticket costs 55 cents • Big Mama Thornton records “Hound Dog” • United States continued involvement in Korean War • Elizabeth II ascends to the British throne • Dwight D. Eisenhower elected President of the United States • First issue of “Mad” magazine • The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank is published 1956 • A gallon of gas is 22 cents; the average cost of a movie ticket is 50 cents • Grace Kelly marries Prince Rainier of Monaco • Alabama bus segregation laws are declared illegal by the U.S Supreme Court; the Montgomery Bus Boycott ends • Suez Canal Crisis begins • The Drifters record “Ruby Baby” • Elvis performs “Love Me” and “Hound Dog” on the Ed 10 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE 1957 • • • • Federal troops enforce anti-segregation laws in Arkansas USSR launches Sputnik 1 satellite Toyota begins selling cars in the United States The Coasters’ recordings of “Searchin’” and “Youngblood” released • Jailhouse Rock starring Elvis Presley hits theatres, the single “Jailhouse Rock” is released at the same time • “Fools Fall in Love” by The Drifters is released 1958 • • • • • • Nikita Khrushchev becomes Premier of the Soviet Union Bobby Fischer wins US Chess Championship Sir Edmund Hillary reaches the South Pole Elvis sings “Trouble” in King Creole The Coasters’ recording of “Yakety Yak” spends 7 weeks at #1 Elvis inducted into the Army 11 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE 1959 • The Barbie doll is invented • Alaska becomes the 49th State and Hawaii becomes the 50th • “Ben Hur” opens in theatres • NASA introduces the first astronauts to the press • “Love Potion No. 9” recorded by The Clovers is released • The Coasters have chart-topping hits with “Charlie Brown” and “Poison Ivy” • Wilbert Harrison’s recording of “Kansas City” is a #1 hit. 1960 • John F. Kennedy elected 35th President of the United States • Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) wins a gold medal at the Olympic Games in Rome • Psycho directed by Alfred Hitchcock hits theatres • The Flintstones premieres on television • Ben E. King records “Stand By Me” and “Spanish 12 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE 1962 • • • • The average cost of a movie ticket is 70 cents Cuban Missile Crisis Death of Marilyn Monroe John Glenn becomes the first American to orbit the Earth • Peggy Lee records “I’m A Woman” • The Coasters record “Little Egypt” • The Beatles record “Love Me Do” paving the way for the “British Invasion” in pop music 13 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Cast ____________________________________________________ LaVance Colley as “Victor” Kyra DaCosta as “Brenda” Thomas Hobson as “Ken” Stu James as “Adrian” Adrianna Rose Lyons as “Delee” Monique L. Midgette as “BJ” Robert Neary as “Michael” Michael A. Shepperd as “Fred” Carly Thomas Smith as “Patti” 14 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Did you know… that the character names in the published script are the names of the original cast members? In subsequent productions the character names reflect the actors currently playing the role. For example, you will not see DeLee in this show but Adrianna! Mike Stoller with (l to r) Monique L. Midgette, Carly Thomas Smith, Adrianna Rose Lyons and Kyra Little DaCosta Questions in Context: 1. Who was your favorite performer? 2. Is this who you pictured singing the songs? Who would you cast in this show? wnstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 15 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Q&A with Smokey Joe’s Cafe Director, Jeffrey Polk ____________________________________________________ How did you approach your work on this production? Usually I pick my cast with people who have done the show, or just trust friends’ talents that I know. With this production, we held a open call and an agents call. The people who came out were phenomenal and very surprising. Because it’s such a small cast, I would do a little one on one with everyone who we thought was a possibility. I ended up with a Spectacular Cast. 3 of which had performed the show before, and 1 of those (Robert Neary) on Broadway. I always respected the original concept of this show, with the intent of giving all 9 of the performers their own strength and talent. Making it look effortless to the audience, while giving them precision. Every show is different, with 9 very talented people who can hold the stage on their own. So I have to approach this show with the freshness of its first time on Broadway. Tell us a little about your collaboration with the creative team on this show. It was like a dream come true. I have either worked with them before or always wanted to work with them. To be at ease with such talent, with the performing talent, makes you work even harder. We have not yet had a designer run. But when we do, I’m sure will be on the same page. The musical director and I have worked together before. I was on stage then with FIVE GUYS NAMED MOE (Broadway and the USA tour) and SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE (National tour). I took a wild guess to see if he was interested and he was! What makes your job fun, or what’s something no one would guess your job includes? Playing and discovering new friends. Rehearsals should always be fun! Full of love, laughter and light. I get to be with some of the most talented people on this planet. And it’s free! You get to sing and dance all day! Life is a musical! What do you want audience members to come away with after seeing Smokey Joe’s Cafe? A history lesson, remembering the good old times, a first time experience. A lot of people will remember the first time they heard that song. Some will be hearing it for the first time. Some people would never think or thought this music came from Leiber and Stoller. But most of all, I want them to feel like they were part of the show, and the feel good experience. It’s all America!stairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 16 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE The Creative and Design Team ____________________________________________________ Jeffrey Polk - Director Theatre directors are responsible for creating a vision of a playwright’s script; they lead the cast and crew in the process from the page to the stage. They direct the actors in the rehearsal process and oversee the other creative elements of the play. Jill Gold - Stage Manager and Phil Gold - Assistant Stage Manager The stage manager of a production is involved with every part of the production process. He or she schedules and runs rehearsals, coordinates the stage crew, calls cues and entrances during a performance, and oversees the whole show each time the play is performed. Gary Wissman – Scenic Designer A scenic designer designs the overall look of the set of a play to reflect the original script and the director’s vision for the specific production. Steve Young – Lighting and Projection Designer Collaborates with the set designer, director and the rest of the creative team to create the “look,” and help tell the story of the play using the lighting and projections. Theatrical projections, whether of still photos or filmed footage, increase the potential of what can be shown onstage. In some cases, projections have replaced free-standing sets. Jon Gotlieb and Phil Allen – Sound Designers Design the “soundscape” of the play, including sound effects and music required in the script. Sharell Martin – Costume Designer Designs the clothes and accessories of each character in the play to faithfully reflect the script and the director’s vision of the characters. Questions in Context: 1. Which design job would you like to do? 2. Write a letter to your favorite design team member. Did you like the lighting design the best? The set? Let that person know what you liked, ask them how they did it, and what you would have done.nstairs from Hill and Range to meet the folks in th 17 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE After the Show... ____________________________________________________ 1. What makes a song timeless? 2. What is the relationship between songwriters and the artists that interpret and perform their music? 3. How should you approach material that is familiar and beloved? Should performers remain faithful to the original interpretation or put their own stamps on it? 4. How does the trajectory of “Hound Dog” from the Big Mama Thornton original, through the Elvis Presley interpretation, to tonight’s performance in Smokey Joe’s Cafe make you think differently about the song? Is one version more “authentic” than another? Why or why not? 5. Did this production of Smokey Joe’s Cafe have a unifying theme? Describe how the different elements of performance (directing, choreography, music, acting, design elements, etc.) were or were not unified. 6. Smokey Joe’s Cafe doesn’t have a traditional plot or storyline. Did the music tell a story? How so? How did the songs relate to each other? 7. How would you describe this show to a friend? What would be the three most important things you think you should mention? 8. Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller began their storied collaboration as teenagers. What are the advantages of working so closely with someone? Who would be your ideal partner? What qualities would they have? 18 SMOKEY JOE’S CAFE EDUCATION GUIDE Resources and Suggestions for Further Reading ____________________________________________________ Bloom, Ken. Broadway: Its History, People, and Places: an Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge, 2004. Blumenfeld, Robert. Blumenfeld’s Dictionary of Musical Theater. Milwaukee: Limelight, 2010. Everett, William A. and Paul R. Laird, Eds. The Cambridge Companion to the Musical. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Gaar, Gillian G. She’s a Rebel: The History of Women in Rock & Roll, 2nd Ed. New York: Seal Press, 2002. Leiber, Jerry and Mike Stoller with David Ritz. Hound Dog: The Leiber & Stoller Autobiography. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2009. Pendergast, Sara and Tom Pendergast. St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture. Detroit: Gale Group, 2000. Ripani, Richard. The New Blue Music: Changes in Rhythm & Blues, 1950-1999. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2006. Starr, Larry and Christopher Waterman. American Popular Music: From Minstrelsy to MP3. New York: Oxford University Press USA: 2009. http://www.boxofficemojo.com http://www.rockhall.com http://www.thepeoplehistory.com TDF Stages 19