Gypsy Play Guide - Theater Latte Da
Transcription
Gypsy Play Guide - Theater Latte Da
THEATER LATTÉ DA and HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST present A Musical Fable, Book by ARTHUR LAURENTS Music by JULE STYNE Lyrics by STEPHEN SONDHEIM Directed by PETER ROTHSTEIN Musical Direction by DENISE PROSEK Choreography by MICHAEL MATTHEW FERRELL PLAY GUIDE FEBRUARY 13 - MARCH 13, 2016 RITZ THEATER THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 1 GYPSY TABLE OF CONTENTS 3 A note from the Director 4 On The Road: The Road Travelled - Literally and Metaphorically - By Gypsy 7 Vaudeville History 11 Pantages Theatre History 12 In Their Own Words 17 Bibliography 18 About Theater Latté Da and Hennepin Theatre Trust GYPSY is being produced by Theater Latté Da and Hennepin Theatare Trust at the Pantages Theater. Book by Arthur Laurents. Music by Jule Styne Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Directed by Peter Rothstein Music Direction by Denise Prosek Choreography by Michael Matthew Ferrell February 13 - March 13, 2016 Previews on February 13, 14, 17, 18 and 19 Opening Night on February 20, 2016 at 8:00 p.m. THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 2 GYPSY A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR PETER ROTHSTEIN Welcome to Broadway Reimagined and Gypsy. As a director, I seldom return to a work I have done before, but Gypsy is an exception. Theater Latté Da first produced the musical at the intimate Loring Playhouse nearly a decade ago, but the opportunity to direct this particular musical at the historic Pantges Theatre was just too good. Also, my respect for this show has only grown with time. Ben Brantley of The New York Times calls Gypsy “perhaps the greatest of all American Musicals.” The score is superb, with one hit song after another. So many of these tunes have become standards, thriving outside the context of the musical, yet they are each perfectly aligned to the dramatic moment for which they were intended. Broadway veteran Jule Styne knew how to write a catchy tune and evoke the world of a story. And the young Stephen Sondheim was clearly destined to become one of the greatest lyricists of the American Theater. Arthur Laurents’ book is as good as it gets, with richly drawn characters and a story that is both singular and universal. the American Dream. Gypsy, born Louise Hovick, grew up in vaudeville theaters across the country. Her family—like thousands of others—lived on the edge, traveling from city to city by train with their life’s possessions in suitcases, and their theatrical scenery in old steamer trunks. They slept in dumpy hotels, ate in the cheapest restaurants, and then went to work in the city’s most luxurious buildings— vaudeville theaters. Their acts were a far cry from the world in which they lived; it was escapist entertainment and Americans flocked to it. Our own Hennepin Avenue was home to 35 vaudeville theaters at the height of the art form (only four of them remain). In fact, Louise Hovick and her baby sister June performed in the Twin Cities while touring the Pantages and Orpheum circuits. Perhaps their ghosts still haunt this place. As a director, my primary job is to get to the truth of a story. It has been fascinating to uncover the real-life history of these characters and thrilling to tell their tale in this theater where they actually performed. Rose Hovick once said, “Just think of the girls who would give anything to have shared your childhood, the music, the lights, the applause, the people you’ve met, the excitement—you’ve had a real fairytale childhood.” Our production tries to capture both that fairytale and their grim reality, a complex and rich dichotomy that makes me agree with Mr. Brantley. Yes, Gypsy is “perhaps the greatest of all American musicals.” Director Peter Rothstein with Tyler Michaels (Tulsa) and Cat Brindisi (Gypsy Rose Lee) Gypsy is based on the memoir of the same title by the burlesque megastar Gypsy Rose Lee. Her mother was Rose Hovick, a woman who— depending on your perspective—was either a certifiable narcissist obsessed with fame and fortune, or an opportunistic mother in search of THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 3 GYPSY ON THE ROAD MATT WOLF ON THE ROAD TRAVELEDLITERALLY AND METAPHORICALLYBY GYPSY “Together, wherever we go,” or so goes the title Lyric to one of the Jauntier numbers in Gypsy, a second-act song that in the context of a musical as harrowing as it is thrilling could be described as the lull before the familial storm that follows. Positioned in the show prior to the face-off between the mother of all stage mothers, Rose, and the older of her two daughters, Louise, who went on to be the stripper Gypsy Rose Lee, the song describes a life spent peripatetically on the road, hurtling from gig to gig, venue to venue, dream to ever more improbable dream. Indeed, it’s not too much of a stretch to regard Rose Hovick and her motley crew as a showbiz version of John Steinbeck’s itinerant Joads, another iconic American brood with a matriarch (Ma Joad) at the centre who were following their own distinct star. But what was that life actually like, as distinct from the version of it depicted in a landmark show that after all does carry with it the subtitle, “a musical fable”? (The musical isn’t a documentary, nor need to be, since any creative team headed by Jule Styne, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents was clearly interested in shaping life’s actuality into the separate realm of art.) Rose Hovick, c. 1937 the hotelier or proprietor of your most recent stop before he had twigged that various possessions had made it out the door along with the guests; on that front, Gypsy is unabashed about Rose’s kleptomaniacal tendencies. Vaudeville itself operated via ‘circuits’ (the oncevaunted Orpheum circuit is referenced in Rose’s brainstorming opening song, ‘Some People’), which meant an array of affiliated theatres that would share acts between them; think of it as the equivalent then to what is referred to in contemporary showbiz parlance as ‘the road’ except with so-called family entertainment in the place of the musical behemoths one might find today. Some of these venues were more glamourous than others but they penetrated deep into the American heartland and to that extent were a piece of Rose herself, a woman born not into the landscape of urban sophisticates to which she aspired but in the plains of North Dakota. Seattle (where Gypsy was born, through the year of her birth varies), San Francisco and New Work all came Later. But some investigation into the real-life terrain traversed by the musical is fascinating not least for the glimpse it offers into one art for that is all but dead (vaudeville, an entertainment done in first by radio and then by the movies) and another (burlesque) that seems to be making the kind of resurgence of which the late Gypsy Rose Leethe musical’s namesake who died in 1970- would surely be proud. Chances are, though, that today’s ecdysiasts- to cite the million-dollar synonym for ‘stripper’ that gets joyously incorporated into the stage show’s discourse- never endured quite the hard- scrabble conditions that defined an earlier, now- vanished era: a rough-and-tumble existence marked out by stamina, quick wittedness and being always on the run; running, on the one hand, toward the next opportunity and, on the other, from THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST To that end, one can imagine Rose very much knowing the terrain as she schlepped her troupe 4 GYPSY time, which may be why the birth dates of several of the individuals involved seem so opaque- best to leave room for elasticity so you could be whatever number of years old best suited the moment. As the kids in the act got older, they inevitably fled the nest- a phenomenon bitingly explored within Gypsy the show. Far trickier, though, was the pairing of children with material deemed unsuitable for their young eyes and ears, though Gypsy Rose Lee’s own exposure to the incipiently louche served her in good stead when she later broke out on her own. There were equally times when Rose wanted her daughters to seem young- the more precocious the better for film work, were there to be any- and many more when older was better, given that the minimum working age at the time was 14. The daily routine was demanding- some would say punishing, not least in an age such as our own where there are four little girls who alternate in the title role of Matilda- The Musical in the West End. The bubbly, perky peroxide blonde that was Rose’s Canadian- born younger daughter (and who went on to write two memoirs, drolly entitled Early Havoc and More Havoc) was for some years a salary of $1500 a week at a time when most children her age might have been getting a weekly allowance of 25 cents. But the protean tyke surely earned it, as the eventual moniker Dainty June and Company to describe the act as a whole went on to prove. And having first started dancing age 2 and a ½, June was most likely wise beyond her years by the time she got to headlining a repertoire that saw her performing as many as 35 numbers a day across three or four shows. And without electronic amplification as well, a feat that makes it even more fitting that Rose onstage was originated by Ethel Merman- perhaps the performer most enduringly associated with the clarion lungs that her tyro, attention-grabbing daughter must have had. Rather aptly, June Havoc later went on to appear in the 1940 Broadway premiere of the Rogers and Hart musical Pal Joey, playing a character Gladys Bumps, whose name might have brought a smile to her wittily-minded mother’s lips had mother and daughter not by that point been long-estranged, in marked contrast to the scene of reconciliation that brings Gypsy to a close (albeit involving Rose’s other daughter). Baby Louise and Baby June, along with their dog, performing their vaudeville act, c. 1925 hither and yon, from the wonderfully named Jayhawk Theatre in Topeka, Kansas (very much still going, by the way) to the Teatro Colón in El Paso Texas (which became a movie palace and is now a retail establishment) and most palaces in-between. If the destinations meant reworking or even translating some of the kids’ routines, Rose-the ever enterprising manager of an evermutable act- was up to the task, though there was reportedly some hilarity during the El Paso stop when Louise’s time-honoured number, ‘I’m a HardBoiled Rose’ was translated into the Spanish for ‘I’m a Hooker’. Life in vaudeville required living by one’s wits, and Rose was nothing if not resourceful. It was while on tour in upstate New York in 1923- a veritable planet away from the New York where Rose would later set her Upper West Side apartment up as a lesbian compound of her own devisingthat Rose’s act was raided amid-performance by authorities who were not exactly overjoyed to find a stage full of prepubescents singing material with titles like ‘Won’t You Be My Husband?’. (Another by the name of ‘I Want to Be a Janitor’s Child’ sounds even odder, having to do apparently with the joy of being able to make a mess.) Rose’s riposte was to say that she would send the children at once to a Manhattan drama academy for theatrically minded kids, the reality being that she scooped them up to rejoin the vaudeville trailthe relevant officialdom presumably none the wiser. Age remained a tricky issue throughout this THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST Gypsy speaks to vaudeville in its day as a family business, the missing equation being the stabilizing figure of a man, since Rose’s fate was to fall foul of the various men in her life and then 5 GYPSY by all accounts to decide that she preferred the company of women in any case. But whereas burlesque was generally a singular endeavor, practiced by a single performer whose task it was to tease and tantalize the audience, vaudeville made the family the act- a showbiz gambit that has of course found multiple equivalents since (from the von Trapp Family to the Jackson Five and onwards) but that was rooted in Rose’s day in such divergent ventures as the Seven Little Boys, who were celebrated for being cute, and the Cherry Sisters who were cheered for being awful. The musical gives us a glimpse of Rose’s so-called Toreadorables in action, and there are glimpses of the often random terrain encompassed by the sketches themselves: farm scenarios were popular as were those involving newsboys or (the distaff equivalent) girls who were at once guileless and knowing; one of Jane’s numbers, ‘Powder Puff Vamp’, wouldn’t have taken much tweaking to be right at home in the more soigné hands of the adult Gypsy. one another’s company by a life spent so fully in transit? Most likely, through the enduring power of Gypsy that its larger concerns transcend the specifics of this or that ‘circuit’, however much Louise’s first-act solo ‘Little Lamb’ may reflect the solace that her little sister June was said to have found in the company of pets that she didn’t get as a child from people. (Reading around in the period, one can also intuit the real-life equivalents of Herbie and Tulsa, the men who figure however fleetingly in the Hovic women’s lives.) Nor is it surprising in this particular instance to note that the current production’s director, Jonathan Kent, has among his resume a production of Mother Courage and Her Children for the National Theater. Truth to tell, it’s not a million miles from that play’s survivalist heroine with her omnipresent cart to Rose, whose daughters functioned as a sort of human cart who could be wheeled this way and that until such a time as they wanted out and rebelled, leaving Rose alone in a spotlight of her own ferocious imaginings. The physical journey traced by Rose’s life is an astonishing one, and it sheds light on various forms of entertainment that may seem comparatively remote to us today. But the emotional trajectory that her story relates resonates far and wide. In its lasting and ongoing power, one might say that it remains with us together, wherever we go. Were June and Louise starting in showbiz now, they might have well been pushed towards reality TV, Rose pacing nervously in some green room or other. But the stage musical is in every way rooted in a distant but surely recognizable past before television, where the way to engage your public was to take your act directly to that public. Was that to merge the professional and the personal too closely within a family forced even more into Matt Wolf is the London Theatre critic of the International New York Times. He gratefully acknowledges Carolyn Quinn’s book, Mama Rose’s Turn as an important source for this essay. June, Louise and the ‘Newsboys’ THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 6 GYPSY VAUDEVILLE HISTORY BY RICK EASTIN American Vaudeville, more so than any other mass entertainment, grew out of the culture of incorporation that defined American life after the Civil War. The development of vaudeville marked the beginning of popular entertainment as big business, dependent on the organizational efforts of a growing number of white-collar workers and the increased leisure time, spending power, and changing tastes of an urban middle class audience. Business savvy showmen utilized improved transportation and communication technologies, creating and controlling vast networks of theatre circuits standardizing, professionalizing, and institutionalizing American popular entertainment. along with their tonics, salves, and miracle elixirs, while Wild West Shows provided romantic vistas of the disappearing frontier complete with trick riding, music, and drama. Vaudeville incorporated these various itinerant amusements into a stable, institutionalized form centered in America’s growing urban hubs. Problematically, the term “vaudeville,” itself, referring specifically to American variety entertainment, came into common usage after 1871 with the formation of “Sargent’s Great Vaudeville Company” of Louisville, Kentucky, and had little if anything to do with the “vaudeville” of the French theatre. Variety showman, M.B. Leavitt claimed the word originated from the French “vaux de ville” (“worth of the city, or worthy of the city’s patronage”), but in all likelihood, as Albert McLean suggests, the name was merely selected “for its vagueness, its faint, but harmless exoticism, and perhaps its connotation of gentility.” Leavitt and Sargent’s shows differed little from the coarser material presented in earlier itinerant entertainments, although their use of the term to provide a veneer of respectability points to an early effort to cater variety amusements to the growing middle class. In the years before the war, entertainment existed on a different scale. Certainly, variety theatre existed before 1860. Europeans enjoyed types of variety performances years before anyone even had conceived of the United States. On American soil, as early as the first decades of the nineteenth century, theatre goers could enjoy a performance of Shakespeare, acrobats, singers, presentations of dance, and comedy all in the same evening. As the years progressed, seekers of diversified amusements found an increasing number to choose from. A handful of circuses regularly toured the country, dime-museums appealed to the curious, amusement parks, riverboats, and town halls often featured “cleaner” presentations of variety entertainment, while saloons, musichalls, and burlesque houses catered to those with a taste for the risqué. In the 1840’s, minstrel shows, another type of variety performance, and “the first emanation of a pervasive and purely American mass culture,” grew to enormous popularity and formed as Nick Tosches writes, “the heart of nineteenth-century show business.” Medicine shows traveled the countryside offering programs of comedy, music, jugglers and other novelties THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST In the early 1880’s, Tony Pastor, a former ringmaster with the circus turned theatre manager, capitalized on middle class sensibilities and spending power when he began to feature “polite” variety programs in several of his New York theatres. Hoping to draw a potential audience from female and family-based shopping traffic uptown, Pastor barred the sale of liquor in his theatres, eliminated questionable material from his shows, and offered gifts of coal 7 GYPSY Keith’s triumph as a showman lay chiefly in his ability to bridge the gulf between notions of “high” and “low” entertainments that grew increasingly wider in the years following the Civil War. He reinforced his theatres’ image of gentility by including acts from the “legitimate” stage, drawing an audience previously unavailable to variety amusements. Simultaneously, he maintained a number of acts whose forms would have been familiar to fans of the earlier variety stage without alienating either constituency. As his partner Edward F. Albee would later write, the programs at Keith’s theatres ensured “there is something for everybody.” Keith’s appeal to the growing middle class sense of refinement not only won him the business of women and children, but attracted the notice of Boston’s powerful Catholic Church as well. The Church amply funded the expansion of the Keith enterprise on the promise of more clean entertainment. Keith and Albee built even more elaborate theatres in Boston with help from the Church and they duplicated their success in other Northeastern cities. 1875 Variety Show Poster and hams to attendees. Pastor’s experiment proved successful and other managers soon followed suit. Benjamin Franklin Keith, however, earns the distinction of “the father” of American Vaudeville. Keith began his career in show business working variously as a grifter and barker with traveling circuses in the 1870’s, and for dime museums in New York. He returned to his home state of Massachusetts and in 1883 established his own museum in Boston featuring “Baby Alice the Midget Wonder” and other acts. His success in this endeavor allowed Keith to build the Bijou Theatre. The Bijou, a lavishly appointed, stateof-the-art, fireproof theatre, set the standard for the shape of things to come. At the Bijou, Keith established a “fixed policy of cleanliness and order.” He strictly forbade the use of vulgarity or coarse material in his acts “so the that the house and the entertainment would directly appeal to the support of women and children. . .” Keith strictly enforced his policies at the Bijou as he would in all his subsequent theatres. He ruled with an iron fist, censuring and censoring performers whose acts fell below his standards of decency. Keith posted signs backstage ordering performers to eliminate “vulgarity and suggestiveness in words, action, and costume” while performing in his theatre “under fine of instant discharge.” As an added measure, Keith invited (with publicity) “a Sunday School dignitary to judge propriety at rehearsals.” THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST Within a few short years, imitators sprung up around the country. Managers like S. Z. Poli, Klaw and Erlanger, F.F. Proctor, Marcus Loew, and Martin Beck began their own profitable enterprises, following the lead of Keith and Albee. By the B.F. Keith 8 GYPSY 1890’s vast theatre circuits spanned the country and “comprehensive networks of booking offices” handled promotion and production. Subscribing to a business acumen that mirrored the policies of captains of industry, Keith and Albee consolidated their control of vaudeville, first through the United Booking Artists and later through the establishment of the Vaudeville Manager’s Association, establishing a virtual monopoly that lasted well past Keith’s death in 1914. inviting.” Keith’s comments point to his recognition of the importance of managed spectacle to attract urban audiences. Alan Trachtenberg writes: “[that] Of all city spectacles, none surpassed the giant department store, the emporium of consumption born and nurtured in these years.” Arguably, Trachtenberg did not fully consider the vaudeville theatre as spectacle. Vaudeville theatres, often known as “palaces,” fiercely competed trying to outdistance each other in luxury, elegance, and grandiosity. As one journalist wrote at the opening of B.F. Keith’s New Theatre in Boston in 1894: While in Boston, Keith also developed the policy of the continuous performance that dominated vaudeville for almost two decades before the bigtime theatres returned to the two-a-day in the early twentieth century. The continuous ran up to twelve hours, in which scheduled acts would appear two or three times. The continuous provided the illusion of a constant and thriving business, eliminating what Keith saw as “hesitancy” on the part of patrons to enter the theatre until they were “reassured by numbers.” Keith’s idea revolutionized variety entertainment and tailored it perfectly to the conditions of life in the surrounding metropolis. A continuous twelve hours of performances opened vaudeville to wider audiences than previously possible. It caught as, Tony Pastor had hoped in New York, the overflow of uptown shopping traffic, and catered to both a middle class population with unprecedented leisure time and workers constrained by shift work. According to Keith it didn’t matter “what time of day you visit, the theatre is always occupied by more or less people, the show is in full swing, everything is bright, cheerful, and “The age of luxury seems to have reached its ultima thule. The truth of this has never been impressed upon one so forcibly as in a visit to Keith’s dream palace of a theatre . . . .It is almost incredible that all this elegance should be placed at the disposal of the public, the poor as well as the rich.” Keith’s New Theatre, like F.F. Proctor’s Pleasure Palace and many other vaudeville theatres to come, adapted the excessive and opulent architectural styles of Southern European palaces to create buildings with few precedents in American cities. The front of Keith’s New Theatre featured a wealth of decorative detail. Wrought iron decorations, stained glass, incandescent lighting, gargoyles, arches, and marble pillars proclaimed an emphatic message of gentility, elegance, and success to all passersby. Keith’s display continued inside the theatre. He filled the lobby and foyer with white and green marble, burnished brass, leather upholstered furniture, large plate mirrors, and enormous panel paintings by the “eminent artist Tojetti.” Keith commissioned Tojetti to create more panel paintings above the huge and heavily gilded proscenium arch inside the auditorium, complimenting the ornate white and gold balconies, twelve private boxes, and walls of green and “rich” rose “in a brocaded silk effect.”15The design of Keith’s New Theatre overlooked nothing. From the elaborate hand-painted ceiling to “the finest toilet and retiring rooms in the country” to the number oft “fragrant floral displays,” the offering of “the purest artesian well water” and the “writing materials furnished free--gold pens, sterling silver handles, monogrammed paper and envelopes,” Grand Theatre in Buffalo, NY around 1900 THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 9 GYPSY Keith’s New Theatre conveyed a feeling of lavish abundance coupled with an inescapable air of refinement.16Reportedly, even the boiler room featured a thick carpets and a whitewashed coal bin. acts on the stage. A vigilant army of ushers and uniformed attendants handed customers printed cards from silver trays. As Keith would explain, “Our rule was to have the party approached by the usher first, second by the assistant head usher, then by the head usher, and lastly by the management who would request the party to leave . . .”19Keith’s theatres and their policies informed his audiences about changing standards of behavior acceptable for the middle class. As he would later note, “The public needed to be educated in these matters.” Other theatres in the Keith-Albee circuit, as well as those of their competitors, followed along similar standards of luxury. Like the department stores of the era as discussed by Trachtenberg, vaudeville palaces were “lavishly designed palaces of consumption” using calculated spectacle to attract customers.17Vaudeville palaces offered entertainment, rather than strictly consumer goods per se, but they also hoped to encourage customers to purchase concessions and relied heavily on the advertisement of goods in their theatre programs. Prior to the Civil War, American audiences boisterously voiced their approval or disapproval at theatrical performances by screaming, hollering, stomping, throwing vegetables and other missiles, or in certain instances even rushing the stage to attack performers or plead for encores. As the century drew to a close, and the process of incorporation discussed by Alan Trachtenberg accelerated along with its related processes of industrialization and the formation of stricter cultural hierarchies, entertainment and audiences were forced to change. In creating and maintaining the air of refinement associated with his theatres, Keith successfully developed a form of variety amusements well-suited for the new middle class and their urban lifestyles. The sheer abundance, variety, and spectacle offered at Keith’s theatres helped to educate and transform American audiences in their new roles as passive spectators and consumers of experience and sensation. Source: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ma02/easton/vaudeville/ vaudevillemain.html Keith’s New Theatre, Boston 1894 Also like department stores, vaudeville theatres functioned as a type of educational institution. Certainly, the emphasis on the high moral character of his shows implied a set of ideals regarding appropriate behavior, but Keith’s theatres offered a more direct education to the audience as well. His “fixed policy of cleanliness and order” extended equally to the patrons of his theatres and the THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 10 GYPSY PANTAGES THEATRE HISTORY BY WEDO MINNEAPOLIS Seats: 1,014 Opens: 1916 Closes: 1984-1996 Reopens: 2002 of Music,” at the Mann in 1965. The showing was a terrific success, and “The Sound of Music” went on to become the longest running film in Twin Cities history at just under two years. The Mann operated sporadically from 1965 through 1984, continuing to show movies, including the last Twin Cities premiere of Annie in 1982. In 1984, the Mann Theatre closed, and remained shuttered until 1996. It was then that current Hennepin Theatre Trust President and CEO Tom Hoch, along with former Historic Theatre Group President Fred Krohn, started their five-year effort to save and restore the Pantages. The Pantages opened in 1916 as a vaudeville house, and part of Greek immigrant and impresario Alexander Pantages’ renowned collection of theaters. Designed by Minneapolis architects Kees and Colburn in the “Art Moderne/Beaux Arts” architectural style, the Pantages’ first show featured a vaudeville lineup that included singers, comedians and a banjo player. In 1922, renowned theater architect Marcus Priteca/RKO remodeled the theater, adding a new stained glass dome. Decades later, Edmond Ruben purchased the Pantages and renovated it by adding bird’s-eye maple for the theater’s 1946 grand reopening that featured a screening of “Gilda.” During the theater’s $9.5 million renovation, workers discovered architectural drawings that helped designers restore much of the Pantages’ decorative plasterwork and character. The stainedglass “monitor,” a false skylight in the center of the auditorium’s ceiling, was also uncovered following the removal of several layers of paint. In 1961, Ruben sold the Pantages to Ted Mann, who owned six other downtown Minneapolis theaters, including the Orpheum. Mann renovated the Pantages yet again, establishing the Mann Theatres as a top-notch movie house with the movie “Spartacus.” That same year, United Artists previewed “West Side Story” at the Mann, and the film went on to win 10 Academy Awards. Recalling his success with “West Side Story,” director Robert Wise decided to preview his new movie, “The Sound THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST In cooperation with the City of Minneapolis, the completely renovated Pantages re-opened in 2002. Since then, the intimate showhouse has presented artists including Mikhail Baryshnikov, Vince Gill, Feist, Todd Rundgren and The Blenders. It has also hosted collaborative productions with Twin Cities’ organizations including the Jungle Theater, the History Theatre, Chanhassen Dinner Theatres, Cantus and Theater Latté Da. 11 GYPSY IN THEIR OWN WORDS MAMA ROSE HOVICK AND GYPSY ROSE LEE “I lost their father when the baby was two and a half. June could dance on her toes almost before she could walk, so naturally when I was faced with having to earn a living, I thought of show business.” - Mama Rose Hovick “I had said good-by many times before in my life, but never as much as I hated saying good-by to Fanny Brice and the Ziegfeld Follies. I felt as though I were saying good-by to an era. Everything I knew and understood and loved seems to be bound up in the dressing room. This place I was leaving was a theatre, a place where I belonged. My mother was there, June was there, Gordon too, and the little boys in the act and all the countless chameleons and white mice and guinea pigs. I could close my eyes and see the glided guns, and the patent-leather dancing shoes. I could hear Mother telling me to be careful when I crossed the street and to pin my money to my underwear. And telling me again how lucky I was, ‘What a wonderful life you’ve had -- the music, lights, applause -- everything in the world a girl could ask for.’ ” M -Gypsy Rose Lee “Show business is my whole life. I’ve sacrifced everything for it.” - Mama Rose Hovick THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 12 GYPSY Dainty June and her Newsboys Songsters “We can’t expect to have friends. Not when we’re in the way up. Once we get there we’ll have all the friends we want.” Mumshay, Rose’s dog, worked in the act, too. - Mama Rose Hovick Orpheum Circuit when Louise was ten. THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 13 GYPSY “More than anything, though, was the big mirror on the wall. I couldn’t help looking at myself and I hated the person I saw. I hated my brown straight hair, my ugly crooked teeth, and most of all I hated the knickers and the boy’s clothes I wore.” B - Gypsy Rose Lee June Hovick “People stared at us when we walked down the street.” Louise Hovick -Gypsy Rose Lee “You just live by the Golden Rule, dear, and you won’t need church. Do unto others before they do you.” - Mama Rose Hovick THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 14 GYPSY h “Big eyes, dear,” Mother said. h THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 15 GYPSY zZ “She transformed herself from the rear end of a cow into a legend.” -Erik Lee Preminger, son of Gypsy Rose Lee THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 16 GYPSY BIBLIOGRAPHY Eastin, Rick. “Vaudeville, A History.” Vaudeville, A History. Virginia.edu, 2002. Web. 25 Feb. 2016. “Hennepin Theatre Trust History.” WeDo Minneapolis. WeDo, 2016. Web. 25 Feb. 2016. Lee, Gypsy Rose, and Erik Preminger. Gypsy: A Memoir. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1957. Print. Wolf, Matt. On The Road. N.d. The Road Travelled - Literally and Metaphorically - By Gypsy. London. Gypsy Rose Lee THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST 17 GYPSY Founded in 1998 by Peter Rothstein and Denise Prosek, Theater Latté Da is entering its 18th year of combining music and story to illuminate the breadth of the human condition. Peter and Denise began their successful collaboration in 1994 by privately producing five original cabarets to showcase Twin Cities talent. They discovered that by placing equal emphasis on music and storytelling, they could weave tapestries of engaging, challenging and often surprising narratives that resonated with people on many levels. Theater Latté Da officially Incorporated as a non-profit organization in 1998 and to this day remains committed to a rigorous experimentation with music and story that expands the art form and speaks to a contemporary audience. Hennepin Theatre Trust was established as a nonprofit organization in 2002. Since then, we quickly evolved into a recognized leader of arts and culture development in downtown Minneapolis. Today, we bring value to the community through our four theatres – the Orpheum, State, Pantages and New Century – and our growing portfolio of collaborative partnerships. Annually, our organization alone brings more than 500,000 people to the West Downtown MPLS Cultural District (WeDo™) to enjoy a range of activities and attractions. Hennepin Theatre Trust continues to operate, preserve and program these historic theatres. As the long term owner, operator and principal programmer of these amazing venues, the Trust is positioned to create a bright future for them, presenting a broad array of live entertainment that enriches our community. We have hired Historic Theatre Group, LLC to oversee the daily operation of our theatres. We also work with a variety of outside organizations, including a relationship with Broadway Across America, to assist us in securing the very best in touring Broadway engagements. The Trust has brought current works to our stages through valuable local partnerships with The Jungle Theater, The Loft Literary Center, Theater Lattè Da and Cantus, the History Theatre, Actors Theater, Chanhassen Dinner Theaters, the Guthrie Theater and National Geographic. The Trust will continue to foster a broad range of partnerships to ensure a diverse mix of programming for our patrons. In 1998, Theater Latté Da began performing at the intimate 120-seat Loring Playhouse. By 2007, Theater Latté Da Productions were playing to sold-out houses. At this time. The company began searching for spaces with different performance configurations to meet the unique needs of its productions. Since 2007, Theater Latté Da has produced shows at the Guthrie Theater, Ordway, Pantages Theatre, Southern Theater, History Theatre, Fitzgerald Theater, the Rarig Center Stoll Thrust Theatre and The Lab Theater. Matching its productions to appropriate performance venues has given Theater Latté Da audiences the opportunity to expirience a wide variety of spaces and neighborhoods throughout the Twin Cities. Theater Latté Da is now emerging as a leader in the musical theater art form. Theater Latté Da boasts an impressive history of work that has received significant popular and critical acclaim. Its world premieres include Passage of Dreams, All is Calm: The Christmas Truce of 1914, Steerage Song, and A Christmas Carol Petersen. Unique approaches to classics have resulted in boldy re-imagined productions of La Bohème, Cabaret and OLIVER!, among others. THEATER LATTÉ DA & HENNEPIN THEATRE TRUST The New Century Theatre will enable the Trust to extend its programming as a complement to its ongoing operation of the Orpheum, State and Pantages Theatres. It is a key part of the Trust’s work in continuing to revitalize Hennepin Avenue and increase its arts education and presenting activities. 18 GYPSY