Little Women Cast Album Recorded Feb. 28 by Ghostlight Records | Playbill

Related Articles
News Little Women Cast Album Recorded Feb. 28 by Ghostlight Records The score of Little Women, the new Broadway musical at the Virginia Theatre, will be preserved on a cast album by Ghostlight Records Feb. 28.

Sutton Foster, Maureen McGovern and the company of the show, with music by Jason Howland and lyrics by Mindi Dickstein, will be in a Manhattan recording studio preserving the score that brings audiences to tears. A release is expected in early April.

The new musical is based on the beloved Louisa May Alcott novel about the March sisters who come of age under the wing of their mother, Marmee (played by Maureen McGovern), in the Civil War era. Sutton Foster stars as Jo, the aspiring writer.

The libretto is by Allan Knee. Susan H. Schulman directs a cast that includes Megan McGinnis, Jenny Powers, Amy McAlexander, Danny Gurwin, Janet Carroll, Robert Stattel, Jim Weitzer and John Hickok.

For more information visit www.littlewomenonbroadway.com.

* According to the opening night Playbill, the Howland-Dickstein score includes the following titles: "An Operatic Tragedy," "Better," "Our Finest Dreams," "Here Alone," "Could You," "I'd Be Delighted," "Take a Chance on Me," "Better" (reprise), "Off to Massachusetts," "Five Forever," "More Than I Am," "Take a Chance on Me" (reprise), "Astonishing," "The Weekly Volcano Press," "Off to Massachusetts" (reprise), "How I Am," "Some Things Are Meant to Be," "The Most Amazing Thing," "Days of Plenty," "The Fire Within Me," "Small Umbrella in the Rain," "Sometimes When You Dream."

*

Echoing the still-contemporary themes of war, parenting and loss, is a new score that has a contemporary feel — Howland and Dickstein don't write dainty Stephen Foster pastiche, but a mix of traditional Broadway-style tunes with some flashes of pop arrangements.

"Well, we feel it's a contemporary story, without being overt about it," said Dickstein. "Just as there are contemporary qualities to the music and the characters and story and certainly the lyrics, I'm still conscious when I use a word or a phrase, I look it up and see if it was used at that time. I want to be true to the period. What we always say is that we're honoring its essence — the spirit of the story, yet also trying to bring out what's in it that is modern. [Alcott] was a modern woman."

Composer Jason Howland explained, "We've had people come to presentations in the past two years, and people have said, 'Somebody needs to talk to the composer — it's not period at all.' One of my strong influences is Richard Rodgers, who always managed to have the idea of the world he was operating in without ever being overt. Like with The King and I, he didn't write in the pentatonic scale all day long for that show."

Howland continued, "We have one overtly period number, 'Off to Massachusetts,' but otherwise, Jo is a contemporary heroine, so the contemporary sound of it makes sense. At the same time, there's no overt anthemic pop song from Chess and nothing electric in the pit. I hate synthesizers in the pit."

The 10-actor chamber musical, capitalized at $5.6 million, has 12 musicians and a conductor (Andrew Wilder, the music director and one of the arrangers) in the pit.

*

The musical is slice of Victorian family life that includes hardscrabble days, budding romance, Christmas joys and painful loss.

Sutton Foster won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical for Thoroughly Modern Millie.

McGovern is the actress and recording artist known for everything from "The Morning After" to studio recordings of Let 'Em Eat Cake and Of Thee I Sing, as well as appearances in Broadway shows (The Pirates of Penzance, 3 Penny Opera).

Director Susan H. Schulman is known for Violet, The Secret Garden and The Sound of Music.

Little Women is an American literary title so obvious that it's a surprise that a musical version hasn't hit big on Broadway yet. A search of the internet reveals a number of musical versions of the 1868 property, which is in the public domain and therefore ripe for free picking by playwrights and songwriters.

The Modern Library has reissued the novel, with a new introduction by Susan Cheever and cover art that echoes the logo of the musical.

Michael Lichtefeld is choreographer, orchestrations are by Kim Scharnberg. Vocal arrangements are by Lance Horne. Designers are Derek McLane (set), Catherine Zuber (costume), Kenneth Posner (lighting) and Peter Hylenski (sound).

The producers are Randall Wreghitt, Dani Davis, Ken Gentry, Chase Mishkin, Worldwide Entertainment, Ruben Brache, Lisa Vioni, Jana Robbins, Addiss Duke Associates in association with John & Danita Thomas, Thomas Keegan, Scott Freiman and Theatre Previews at Duke.

The Virginia Theatre is at 245 W. 52nd Street.

//assets.playbill.com/editorial/694c253ce1a6d239e55f181fd435ba9b-women2_1109358372.jpg
A scene from Little Women Photo by Joan Marcus
 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!