Last Chance: Bway's Kat Has Last Meow Jan. 2; Vienna Next | Playbill

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News Last Chance: Bway's Kat Has Last Meow Jan. 2; Vienna Next The Broadway musical Kat And The Kings will abdicate from the Cort Theatre, Jan. 2, after 15 previews and 157 regular performances. The musical will start a European tour in Vienna, Austria, Jan. 17, 2000, with an Asian trip likely to follow. No word yet on whether the Broadway cast will be part of that entourage.

The Broadway musical Kat And The Kings will abdicate from the Cort Theatre, Jan. 2, after 15 previews and 157 regular performances. The musical will start a European tour in Vienna, Austria, Jan. 17, 2000, with an Asian trip likely to follow. No word yet on whether the Broadway cast will be part of that entourage.

Kat and the Kings opened at the Cort Aug. 19. Previews began Aug. 6. The rock n' roll musical follows a fictional doo wop vocal group in Apartheid-era South Africa and ends with the cast whipping the audience into a participatory frenzy and then rushing to the lobby to shake hands, sign autographs and receive hugs and kisses. However, the exuberance inside the theatre did not translate to sustained ticket sales, and attendance generally hovered at the half-full mark throughout the run.

Producer Harriet Leve has not stopped fighting for respect for the show, however, and has asked the Tony Award Administration Committee to consider the six Kat performers as a single ensemble entity, rather than as individual performers. According to spokesperson Beth Stevens, Leve pointed out that the original The Sound of Music children were group-nominated for best supporting actress, and the cast of La Plume de Ma Tante won the Tony for Best Supporting Actor. (Also, in 1998, Alice Ripley and Emily Skinner were co-nominated as Best Actress for Side Show.)

The Administration Committee has yet to meet and decide on such matters, though some major details on the 1999-2000 Tony Awards are expected to be announced just after the New Year, according to a Keith Sherman office spokesperson.

The native South African group of the title styles itself on such American groups as the Platters, the Drifters and the Ink Spots, but finds its potential limited by white rule in South Africa. The cast includes Jody J. Abrahams, Luqmaan Adams, Junaid Booysen, Terry Hector, Alistair Izobell and Kim Louis.

The show won two London Olivier Awards (including Best New Musical and Best Performance ensemble honors) for its hit London engagement. The show has yet to prove a box office success in New York, however. Grosses have declined in recent weeks, with the show taking in only $132,604 (less than a third of potential) for the week ending Nov. 7. Houses have ranged from 40-50 percent of capacity.

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In August, the show's original London cast CD was released in the U.S. by First Night Records. Thirty-two cuts fill the CD, most of them in the 1950s pop, doo-wop and jazz tradition filtered through South African township music.

Among the songs on the CD are "Lucky Day," "Cavalla Kings," "If Your Shoes Don't Shine," "Josephine," "Only if you Have a Dream," "Stupid Boy," "Lonely Girl," "Taffelberg Hotel" and "Wild Time." Audience cheers can be heard on the CD, which was taken from a performance at London's Vaudeville Theatre, June 6, 1998.

David Kramer (pronounced "krah-mer") directs the Broadway staging. Kramer -- who also co-wrote the piece with Taliep Petersen -- co produces with Harriet Newman Leve, Richard Frankel and Marc Routh.

The year is 1957. The setting, District Six, the "New Orleans" of South Africa where the local teens bop to the sounds of Fats Domino, imported by American sailors docking at the Cape of Good Hope. Kat Diamond is 17 and convinced that he's the best singer and dancer in the whole district. He and his band hit the big time for awhile -- before crashing down. Forty years later, Kat, now a street shoeshine man, reflects on his youth and his moment in the spotlight.

Kat and the Kings had several successful runs in South Africa. It moved to the West End via acclaimed runs at the north west London fringe venue, the Tricycle Theatre. The award-winning West End production ran March 23-Aug. 1, 1998 at the Vaudeville Theatre. It was a shorter-than anticipated run; the cast's desire to visit their families back home, and a slew of big musicals in London at the time, weighed against extending the show into the fall of that year.

 
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