The Washington Post - 01.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

C8 EZ SU THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2019


Prince had forged artistic alli-
ances with other major compos-
ers, including Lloyd Webber, who
idolized him. The composer told
me in a 2016 interview that he
counted Prince as one of the most
influential people in his profes-
sional life. Prince’s observations
about what makes a great theater-
going experience — such as the
vital importance of visual design
— opened his own eyes, Lloyd
Webber said.
“I went round to meet him at
the Savoy Hotel, where he was
staying, and where Hal gave me a
piece of advice that has stayed
with me forever,” Lloyd Webber
recalled. “Which is, you can’t lis-
ten to a musical if you can’t look at
it. When you think of Hal’s best
productions, you understand
what’s behind that.”
Laypeople sometimes have dif-
ficulty understanding exactly
what producers and directors do.
That Prince was able to master so
many aspects of both of those
ever-evolving but essential jobs,
on so many varied projects, sug-
gests a man worthy of renaissance
status. But he was capable, too, of
wisdom about his own limits, as
when he chose to step away from
the development of “The Band’s
Visit,” which under his successor
director, David Cromer, would go
on to win 10 Tonys.
And that, theater lovers, marks
a man of not only manifold gifts,
but also of many graces.
[email protected]

of human flesh were baked.
Prince’s staging of Mrs. Lovett’s
demise shattered me. My wife and
I left the Uris in a daze. I felt
unsettled, sickened — and
thrilled. I sensed that I would be
playing that scene over and over
in my head for a long time.
Now that’s theater.
Like all great theater artists,
Prince had his disappointments:
For instance, “It’s a Bird... It’s a
Plane... It’s Superman” was a
flop in 1966, and “A Doll’s Life,” a
musical based on “A Doll’s House,”
opened at the Mark Hellinger
Theatre on Sept. 23, 1982, and
closed on Sept. 26, 1982. Along,
though, with the original musi-
cals he shepherded (and 21 Tonys
he earned), Prince can be credited
with some key musical revivals:
His revolutionary reworking of
“Candide” in 1974, which includ-
ed new lyrics by Sondheim and
others, showed the industry how
to transform a Broadway space
for a more immersive experience.
And his bravura, epic-scale “Show
Boat” in 1994 found a new way to
enlighten audiences about the
landmark 1927 musical, despite
its antiquated perspective on race
relations. It ran for almost 1,000
performances.
Prince’s musical-minting col-
laborations with Sondheim end-
ed with the failure of “Merrily We
Roll Along” in 1981; they reunited
briefly for the musical “Bounce,”
which was a critical bust at the
Kennedy Center in 2003. But

It is a bit heady, just tallying
Prince’s artistic and commercial
successes, for still to come was,
perhaps, his greatest artistic
achievement: directing Sond-
heim and Hugh Wheeler’s
“Sweeney Todd: The Demon Bar-
ber of Fleet Street” in 1979. And
wait! There was more! After
teaming up with Andrew Lloyd
Webber to direct “Evita” later that
same year, Prince and Lloyd Web-
ber would create what was des-
tined to become Broadway’s all-
time longest-running hit, a show
that recently marked its 13,110th
Broadway performance.
So, yes, it is absolutely accurate
to say that Prince’s survivors in-
clude wife Judy, children Daisy
and Charles, three grandchildren
and “The Phantom of the Opera.”
What accounts for such an as-
tonishing résumé? Genius? Pas-
sion? Luck? The answer is yes.
Add to these an insatiable appe-
tite and uncanny insight into the-
atergoing tastes, and you begin to
grasp the attributes shaping an
extraordinary theater man. Sev-
eral years ago, on the occasion of
his receiving the Stephen Sond-
heim Award, an honor bestowed
annually by Arlington’s Signature
Theatre, I sat down with him and
the subject of aging came up. He
was 85 and the numerical time
marker seemed a mere trifle.
“I hate it when I see 85, ” he
said. “Because, come on, I’m 40.”
My first Broadway contact with
Prince was back when he was
turning 40 for real, and I was a
kid, seeing his “Fiddler” with my
Tevye-adoring parents. Even then
I knew the production was an act
of meticulous craftsmanship; it
was well into the show’s Broad-
way run and the polish on the
performances felt fresh. As I
started going to more shows, tak-
ing the bus in on Saturdays from
New Jersey with my friend Neil, I
would have additional epiphanic
moments via Prince (and Sond-
heim): at “Company,” “Follies,”
“Night Music.” But the Hal Prince
memory that has stayed with me
most indelibly was born in a
scalding sequence in “Sweeney
Todd,” in what was then called the
Uris, now the Gershwin Theatre.
At the climax of the show, an
apoplectic Sweeney, portrayed by
Len Cariou, committed the musi-
cal’s most searing act of revenge:
pushing the eternally lovable An-
gela Lansbury, as Mrs. Lovett,
into the furnace in which the pies

APPRECIATION FROM C1

ACROSS
1 Digital unit
4 Play the part of
9 Paintball attire,
for short
13 Cry from a
card holder
14 Religious leader
16 Made man?
17 Home for the
holidays, say
18 World’s largest
lizard
19 Rooftop spinner
20 Court address
22 FDR job-
creating
program
23 -
25 -
27 Catchers with
pots
28 Like the
Avengers
31 Twice DVI
32 Z preceder
33 Pancake at a
seder
36 Longtime
Sweethearts
maker
40 Instructions for
fire safety ... or
for complet-
ing four puzzle
answers
43 Marx forte
44 Kim and
Kourtney’s
sister
45 Bundle of cash
46 Toy with a tail
48 “Spill it”
50 Bassett of
“American
Horror Story”
53 Percussion
piece
55 Shotgun type
56 Zing
57 -
61 Where
Georgia is
62 -
65 Mineral
resource
66 Move
67 Cocktail
garnishes
68 A long time
follower?
69 Scoundrel
70 “Aida” setting
71 Dawn
phenomenon


DOWN
1 Elevate
2 Scoop
3 Curds in cubes
4 “Oy!”
5 High-capacity
vehicle?
6 Record time?
7 Like noisy fans
8 Vicious on
stage
9 High-and-
mighty
10 Wise words
11 Regal home
12 Warning signs
15 Book form that
replaced the
scroll
21 Pi follower
24 Team in a
seasonal verse
26 Boring
contraption
28 Diner dish
29 Words to a
backstabber
30 Part of a Clue
accusation
31 “Iron Chef
America”
creation
34 Casino gratuity

35 Canadian
road sign
letters
37 Monk’s hood
38 Quahog or
geoduck
39 Renaissance
faire word
41 Sphere used
to capture a
Pikachu, say
42 “Zip it!”

47 Fitness
portmanteau
49 Was in
charge
50 Small recipe
amount
51 Long time
follower?
52 Chicanery
53 Rosemary
unit
54 Brazen

58 “Ice __
Truckers”:
TV reality
series
59 Impulse
60 Cry that may
mean “I’m out
of tuna!”
63 Microbrewery
output
64 WWII craft

LA TIMES CROSSWORD By Jack Murtagh

WEDNESDAY’S LA TIMES SOLUTION

© 2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC. 8/1/19

kidspost


Washington-area sports
fans may hear a lot of a
certain word during the
next few weeks:
quarterback.
That’s because the Washington
Redskins have to decide who will be the
quarterback for the 2019 National
Football League (NFL) season. Last
year’s quarterback, Alex Smith, has a
broken leg and will be out for the year.
The Redskins have three candidates
for what some have jokingly called the
most important job in Washington —
even more important than the U.S.
president.
Colt McCoy is a career backup who is
more likely to be carrying a clipboard on
the sidelines than playing in the game.
He has started in only a handful of
games since he began with the Redskins
in 2014. But McCoy knows head coach
Jay Gruden’s offense, so he may see
some action.
In March, the Redskins traded some
draft picks to get Case Keenum from the
Denver Broncos. Washington will be
Keenum’s sixth team in the past six
years. While he had a good season
leading the Minnesota Vikings to the
playoffs in 2017, you have to wonder why
so many teams have let Keenum go.
Dwayne Haskins is the Redskins’
Number 1 draft pick and the guy who
has everyone excited. But remember,
Haskins, who went to the Bullis School
in Potomac, is a rookie and played only
one full season at Ohio State University.
But what a season! Haskins completed
70 percent of his tosses and threw 50
touchdown passes.
Washington fans are hoping Haskins
(or maybe Keenum or McCoy) will
become a “franchise quarterback.”
That’s a quarterback, such as Tom Brady,
Drew Brees or Ben Roethlisberger, who
can lead a team to multiple winning
seasons and even a Super Bowl.
But sometimes I wonder whether all
this attention to the quarterbacks sends
the wrong message. Football, like a lot of
sports, is a team sport. I realize that


quarterbacks are important especially in
today’s pass-happy NFL. But they are
still only one position.
To be a good football team — and the
Redskins have not won a playoff game
since the 2005 season — you need
offensive linemen to protect the
quarterback, running backs and
receivers to make plays and a rock-solid
defense. Oh, and you need special team

players for punts and kickoffs.
It’s good for kids to remember this. In
team sports, not everyone can play the
“glamour” positions, such as
quarterback or pitcher, or be the high
scorer. Most kids just have to find a way
to help their team.
So maybe Washington fans shouldn’t
put all their hopes on finding that one
franchise quarterback who will save the

season.
The Redskins have a lot of places
where they have to improve. It’s not just
the quarterback.
[email protected]

Bowen writes the sports opinion column for
KidsPost. He is the author of 23 sports books
for kids, including “Touchdown Trouble,”
“Quarterback Season” and “Double Reverse.”

D.C. will fumble if it fields top quarterback without strong team


TODAY’S NEWS

A conservation organization in San
Diego, California, says it has achieved
the first successful artificial
insemination birth in North America
of a southern white rhino, an
important step in saving another
rhino subspecies from extinction.
San Diego Zoo Global announced
that Victoria gave birth Sunday to a
healthy southern white rhino male
calf. In the wild, the subspecies lives
in Africa.
Artificial insemination is a
technique used to allow a female to
reproduce without mating. Victoria’s
body received sperm from a southern
white rhino in March 2018.
“This birth is significant, as it also
represents a critical step in our effort
to save the northern white rhino from
the brink of extinction,” said Barbara
Durrant, director of reproductive
science at San Diego Zoo Global.
Only two documented northern
white rhinos remain on Earth. Both
are female, but sperm from now-
deceased males was preserved.
Scientists say the southern white
rhinos will eventually be surrogates
(carrying babies that are not theirs)
for northern white rhino embryos.
— Associated Press

KEN BOHN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
Scientists hope the birth of this
southern white rhino will help save
a rhino cousin from extinction.

The Score


FRED BOWEN


Birth of rare rhino


is reported by zoo


CHIP SAYS


On this day in 1993, Reggie Jackson was inducted


into the Baseball Hall of Fame. He helped lead the


Oakland Athletics to three World Series titles and the


New York Yankees to two.


TODAY
The summer continues with partly
cloudy skies, temperatures near
90 degrees and plenty of humidity.

KIDSPOST.COM
Looking for a boredom
buster? Draw August weather
for our daily forecast. Find out
ILLUSTRATION BY KATE WICKERSTY, 7, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA online how to send it to us.

JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
From left, Colt McCoy, Case Keenum or Dwayne Haskins could become a “franchise quarterback” to lead the Redskins, but a
quarterback can’t save the season without strong offensive linemen, running backs and receivers, and a rock-solid defense.

How Hal Prince broadened Broadway


MELANIE BURFORD/PRIME/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Hal Prince’s fan club includes musical theater giants such as
Stephen Sondheim and Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Free download pdf