Tour of R&H's Cinderella, With Sigler, Kitt and Quinton, Lands in NYC May 3-13 | Playbill

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News Tour of R&H's Cinderella, With Sigler, Kitt and Quinton, Lands in NYC May 3-13 Jamie-Lynn Sigler, known to some as the mob daughter Meadow Soprano in the adult TV series, "The Sopranos," makes a family-friendly appearance in Manhattan as the title character in Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, the national tour of which visits The Theatre at Madison Square Garden, May 3-13.
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Eartha Kitt in Cinderella. Photo by Photo by Carol Rosegg

Jamie-Lynn Sigler, known to some as the mob daughter Meadow Soprano in the adult TV series, "The Sopranos," makes a family-friendly appearance in Manhattan as the title character in Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, the national tour of which visits The Theatre at Madison Square Garden, May 3-13.

Sigler joined the Gabriel Barre-directed production March 6 in Kentucky. Pop star Deborah Gibson created the role in this tour, beginning in Nov. 29, 2000. Sigler will sing about life "In My Own Little Corner" at least through late July.

The rest of the company remains the same. Sigler will dance at a grand ball with Paolo Montalban, as the Prince. Nightclub siren and Broadway star Eartha Kitt (Timbuktu, The Wild Party) is the Fairy Godmother and Mystery of Irma Vep star Everett Quinton (a New York favorite) crossdresses as the evil Stepmother in the stage version of the popular TV musical. The tour is produced by NETworks Presentations LLC.

Director Barre directs the newly-constructed stage version, drawing on elements of past TV and stage versions. Montalban (as the Prince) repeats the role he played in the hit Disney TV version of the R&H musical that gave the world "Ten Minutes Ago," "Impossible" and "In My Own Little Corner."

* The famed TV musical — there have been three small-screen versions — was adapted for the stage this time by Tom Briggs. Barre helmed Off Broadway's The Wild Party. In a recent issue of The Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization's newsletter, "Happy Talk," Briggs revealed that two Rodgers songs from other sources have been interpolated (as they were in the 1997 telepic): "The Sweetest Sounds" (with music and lyrics by Rodgers, from No Strings) and "There's Music in You" (by Rodgers and Hammerstein, from an obscure motion picture called "Main Street to Broadway").

The book for the new stage show draws on the original teleplay by Oscar Hammerstein II but the cast concept is inspired by the multicultural cast of the 1997 "Wonderful World of Disney" version, which starred pop singers Brandy and Whitney Houston.

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Eartha Kitt, known for playing the musical vamp through her stage and concert career, will be the leggy Fairy Godmother. The recent Tony Award nominee for Broadway's The Wild Party stepped into Cinderella when previously announced Diahann Carroll pulled out.

Ken Roberson choreographs. He was assistant choreographer on Jelly's Last Jam. Designers are James Youmans (set), Pamela Scofield (costumes) and Tim Hunter (lighting), Duncan Edwards (sound), Bernie Ardia (hair) and Greg Meeh (special effects). Musical arrangements and supervision are by Barre collaborator Andrew Lippa, who wrote the score of The Wild Party for Manhattan Theatre Club and jon and jen, Off-Broadway.

The cast for the new Cinderella includes Leslie Becker (Queen), Joanne Borts, Victor Trent Cook (Lionel), Natalie Cortez, Kip Driver, Kevin Duda, Alexandra Kolb (Stepsister Joy), Jason Ma, Christy Morton, Monica Patton, Lyn Philistine, Ken Prymus (King), Christeena Michelle Riggs, Jason Robinson, Jessica Rush, Todd L. Underwood, Andre Ward, Patrick Wetzel and Natasha Williams (Stepsister Grace).

Quinton, a longtime collaborator with the late Charles Ludlam, won Obie and Drama Desk Awards for his revival of The Mystery of Irma Vep in 1999.

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The 1997 TV movie had a multicultural cast — an African American Queen, a white King, a Filipino Prince — and a script and score (with several new interpolations, including "Falling in Love With Love") that were somewhat different from the classic 1957 and 1965 TV productions of the tuner. "Cinderella" was the only show R&H wrote for the small screen.

The "Wonderful World of Disney" broadcast is also different from the Hammerstein script that is licensed to stock and amateur groups several hundred times a year (itself using different interpolations).

The standout songs of the now-classic score will be intact. Several generations of musical fans grew up with such tunes as "Ten Minutes Ago," "Impossible," "The Stepsisters' Lament" and "In My Own Little Corner."

There have been changes over the years to each version of the R&H "Cinderella" project: The 1965 version included an interpolated song ("The Loneliness of Evening," cut from South Pacific) and subsequent stage versions for stock and amateur stagings have added "Boys and Girls Like You and Me," cut from Oklahoma!

The flashier 1997 version starred Whitney Houston as the Fairy Godmother and Brandy in the title role (a part previous played by Julie Andrews in 1957 and Lesley Ann Warren in 1965). A new teleplay and interpolations of "The Sweetest Sounds" (with music and lyrics by Rodgers, from No Strings), "Falling in Love With Love" (with lyrics by Lorenz Hart, from The Boys From Syracuse), "There's Music in You" (from the film, "Main Street to Broadway") and "Your Majesties/The Prince is Giving a Ball" (with new lyrics by Fred Ebb) were included in the new movie, which was seen by 60 million people.

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Cinderella will play the following dates in 2001:

May 15-20 Heinz Hall, Pittsburgh, PA
May 29-June 3 Civic Auditorium, San Diego, CA
June 5-10 Orange County PAC, Costa Mesa, CA
June 12-17 Paramount Theatre, Seattle, WA
June 19-24 Civic Auditorium, Portland, OR
June 26-July 1 Gammage Auditorium, Tempe, AZ
July 10-22 Music Hall, Dallas, TX
July 24-29 Jones Hall, Houston, TX
July 31-Aug. 12 Buell Auditorium, Denver, CO
Aug. 15-19 Wang Center, Boston, MA

— By Kenneth Jones

 
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