They Seek Him, But Theatregoers Won’t Find Sick Sills in Oct. 13 Pimpernel | Playbill

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News They Seek Him, But Theatregoers Won’t Find Sick Sills in Oct. 13 Pimpernel Scarlet Pimpernel star Douglas Sills is still on “voice rest” and will miss the Oct. 13 performance of the recently revamped musical adventure at Broadway’s Minskoff Theatre. His standby, Nat Chandler, will go on in his place.

Scarlet Pimpernel star Douglas Sills is still on “voice rest” and will miss the Oct. 13 performance of the recently revamped musical adventure at Broadway’s Minskoff Theatre. His standby, Nat Chandler, will go on in his place.

Sills’ laryngitis --- he’s been described as hoarse and tired -- prompted the cancellation of the Oct. 11 evening performance, too. Spokesman Adrian Bryan-Brown told Playbill On-Line Oct. 13 that because of the hectic process of rehearsing the new show while performing the old show at night, understudy Chandler had not yet had an opportunity to rehearse the role.

The production had not scheduled an understudy rehearsal in the days leading up to the revision’s Oct. 10 debut, which is the reason Chandler did not go on Sunday, Bryan-Brown said.

The company used the dark Sunday night (Oct. 11) to run an understudy rehearsal with Chandler.

Bryan-Brown said the company is looking at Sills’ condition day-by-day, although unofficial word from a source in the company is that Sills may miss the Wednesday Oct. 14 matinee, too. *
The show was shut down Oct. 2-9 to implement previously-rehearsed changes in the 1997 musical, a rare move for an already-running project. The “new” show premiered at the matinee Oct. 10 and Bryan-Brown confirmed Pimpernel is indeed in a preview period leading toward a new opening “probably not as late as Nov. 9,” which marks the one-year anniversary of the original opening.

New stars Rex Smith and Rachel York are now a part of the cast and a new ad campaign began over the summer. Robert Longbottom (Side Show) has been brought in to redirect and reshape material, with the help of librettist-lyricist Nan Knighton and composer Frank Wildhorn. Longbottom was not credited for his work in the Playbill on the first weekend of the rewrite’s performances. Peter Hunt, the original director, is working on other projects.

The new blood in the show is due to the commitment of new producers Cablevision’s Radio City Entertainment and Ted Forstmann, who bought the show’s rights in July.

 
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