Pimpernel Cast Confirmed: Bohmer, Carmello & Kudisch to Sing on Tour & Bway | Playbill

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News Pimpernel Cast Confirmed: Bohmer, Carmello & Kudisch to Sing on Tour & Bway Ron Bohmer, Carolee Carmello and Marc Kudisch will be the menage a trois of the leaner, reconsidered version of The Scarlet Pimpernel, beginning performances Sept. 8 at the Neil Simon Theatre.

Ron Bohmer, Carolee Carmello and Marc Kudisch will be the menage a trois of the leaner, reconsidered version of The Scarlet Pimpernel, beginning performances Sept. 8 at the Neil Simon Theatre.

Officially, the show is "resuming performances," not starting over. Although director Robert Longbottom is reapproaching the physical staging and casting with a fresh eye, and the cast of 29 is smaller than the version of the show that closed May 30 at the Minskoff Theatre, no major song sequences are being added or subtracted, according to a spokesperson for the show.

The new production will tour to Dallas, Atlanta and Houston in the summer before coming back to New York.

Ron Bohmer is a onetime Broadway Enjolras in Les Miserables, Kudsich appeared in High Society and as Birdie in a Tommy Tune tour of Bye Bye Birdie and Carmello is a 1999 Tony Award nominee for playing Lucille Frank in Parade.

The musical is based on the romantic adventure novel by Baroness Orczy, which told of the British nobleman who, with his friends, travels to Revolution-era France to save the innocent. *

The second Broadway version of The Scarlet Pimpernel, at the Minskoff, buckled its last swash May 30, making way for the London musical, Saturday Night Fever, but it's only a matter of months before the Frank Wildhorn musical returns to New York in a third and scaled-back incarnation.

Originally directed by Peter Hunt, the "musical adventure" opened at the Minskoff in fall 1997 to unenthusiastic reviews and ran a year. Radio City Entertainment, which had bought the production during its 1997-98 run, invested dough in having composer Wildhorn and lyricist-librettist Nan Knighton, along with new director-choreographer Longbottom, reimagine the piece.

The show was recast (keeping Tony Award-nominated Douglas Sills in the title role, adding Rachel York as the love interest Marguerite and Rex Smith as the villain, Chauvelin), remarketed and reopened at the Minskoff Oct. 10, 1998, earning better reviews from critics and audiences.

With Saturday Night Fever in the wings for a Sept. 28 first previews at the Minskoff, Radio City went back to the drawing board to again rethink the future of the Pimpernel property. It was decided to scale it to a more intimate size that would fit into the Neil Simon, where it will roost beginning Sept. 10.

*

Actors' Equity Association played a big role in the summer reconfiguration. The producers of Pimpernel desired to cut the musical's cast from 41 to 29, eliminating 20 of the current players and adding eight new ones, according to Alan Eisenberg, president of Actors' Equity. The show would then be restaged as a smaller version of itself, designed to fit the Neil Simon.

The difficulty lay in an Equity rule which protects such terminated performers. Unless six weeks pass between the shuttering and reopening of a production, explained Eisenberg, actors dismissed from the previous incarnation must be paid. The producers wished to avoid this expense.

"The producers said we would prefer to stay in New York to the end of May," Eisenberg told Playbill On-Line. "They asked for a concession on the rule. They were prepared to work out an agreement, and they said they would close the show in April if they couldn't prepare a deal."

Equity asked but failed to secure severance pay for the unemployed actors. Instead, the producers offered to pay the remaining cast lucrative Broadway salaries -- instead of considerably lesser stock company pay -- during the new staging's rehearsal period, as well as on the road.

"We thought this was a good arrangement," observed Eisenberg, "because otherwise the producers would have closed in April and the company would have gotten nothing." He added that the decision had been made by a national committee of actors.

For tickets to the Neil Simon Pimpernel, call (212) 307-4100.

 
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