ABSTRACT

    ‘The Woods are just Trees. The Trees are just Wood.’ – All together

     

    In 1987, Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine combined several classic fairy tales including Little Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, and Jack and the Beanstalk to create Into the Woods. Funny and heartfelt, this musical explores what it might mean to act responsibly in society, both as a parent and as a child.

    Situating the work within Sondheim’s oeuvre and the Broadway canon, Olaf Jubin first offers a detailed reading of the show itself, before discussing key productions in New York and London, and 2014’s Oscar-nominated screen adaptation. The radically different approaches to staging Into the Woods are testament to how open the musical is to re-interpretation for new audiences.

    A combination of critical explication with performance and film analysis, as well as an overview of popular and critical reception, this book is meant for anyone who has enjoyed Into the Woods, be it as a musical theatre fan, an enchanted audience member, a student or a dedicated theatre professional.

    chapter |6 pages

    Introduction or 'Once upon a time'

    A fairy tale musical like no other

    chapter 1|5 pages

    'You're back again only different than before'

    The show's place in Sondheim's oeuvre

    chapter 2|39 pages

    'There are rights and wrongs and in-betweens'

    Selfish aims giving way to considerate cooperation

    chapter 3|12 pages

    'Valuable things that I hadn't thought to explore'

    Interpreting Into the Woods on stage

    chapter 4|12 pages

    'Nice is different than good'

    Rob Marshall's 2014 movie adaptation