ABSTRACT

Stephen Sondheim is an artist with many contradictory facets: he is an avant-garde composer and lyricist working in the populist art form, an apparently dry and acerbic critic who captures all the ambivalent pain of passion, an intellectual whose work contains some of the funniest bawdy lines on the Broadway stage. He has chosen to confront an audience that is usually looking for escapist literature with the very issues it has fled to the theatre to avoid. This collection of original essays takes particular pains to present Sondheim's diversity in a chronological plan that illustrates how each new work grew out of the previous one. Some of the topics covered are the evolution of Sondheim's female characters, who take us far beyond the usual sweet ingenues; the Roman farce antecedents of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and the resemblances between Sondheim's chorus and the chorus in ancient Greek drama; Sondheim and the concept musical; and Sondheim's maturing philosophy. All students of the modern theatre and the modern musical will want to read this book.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter |3 pages

Chronology

chapter |21 pages

Broadway Babies

Images of Women in the Musicals of Stephen Sondheim

chapter |11 pages

Comedy Tonight!

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum

chapter |16 pages

Nixon's America and Follies

Reappraising a Musical Theater Classic

chapter |7 pages

The Last of Sheila

Sondheim as Master Games-Player

chapter |14 pages

On Performing Sondheim

A Little Night Music Revisited

chapter |17 pages

“Let the Pupil Show the Master”

Stephen Sondheim and Oscar Hammerstein II

chapter |16 pages

Portraits of the Artist':

Sunday in the Park with George as “Postmodern” Drama

chapter |18 pages

Passion

Not Just Another Simple Love Story

chapter |27 pages

Revisiting Greece

The Sondheim Chorus