|
| Grey Gardens - The Musical | 
enlarge | Creators: Scott Frankel, Lawrence Yurman, Grey Gardens Pit Orchestra, Audrey Twitchell, Bob Stillman, Christine Ebersole, John Mcmartin, Mary Louise Wilson, Matt Cavanaugh, Michael Potts, Sara Gettelfinger, Sarah Hyland Label: P.S. Classics Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $11.00 You Save: $7.98 (42%)
New (25) Used (12) from $8.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 60 reviews Sales Rank: 4619
Format: Cast Recording Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.6
MPN: 642 UPC: 803607064228 EAN: 0803607064228 ASIN: B000G75A9I
Release Date: August 22, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW AND FACTORY SEALED
|
| Tracks:
| • | Toyland | | • | The Five-Fifteen | | • | Body Beautiful Beale | | • | Mother Darling | | • | Better Fall Out of Love | | • | Being Bouvier | | • | Hominy Grits | | • | Peas in a Pod | | • | Drit Away | | • | The Five-Fifteen (reprise)/Miss Porter's Anthem | | • | Tomorrow's Woman | | • | Daddy's Girl | | • | Will You? | | • | The Revolutionary Costume for Today | | • | The Cake I Had | | • | Entering Grey Gardens | | • | The House We Live In | | • | Jerry Likes My Corn | | • | Around the World | | • | Choose to be Happy | | • | Around the World (reprise) | | • | Another Winter in a Summer Town | | • | Peas in a Pod (reprise) |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description GREY GARDENS proclaimed the #1 Show of the Year by Time Magazine is preserved here in its Original Broadway Cast Recording. The show had been previously recorded following its off-Broadway premiere in the spring of 2006 (and its cast album released by PS Classics in August of 2006), but this new recording features the new songs and new cast members that were added for its Broadway transfer last fall. The new GREY GARDENS opened on Broadway on November 2, 2006, to rave reviews, led by Ben Brantley in The New York Times, who called it an experience no passionate theatergoer should miss! Starring Tony Award winner Christine Ebersole and Tony Award nominee Mary Louise Wilson, it subsequently appeared on over 25 Best of 2006 lists, including #1 Show of the Year (Time), Best Musical of the Year (USA Today, Entertainment Weekly) and Performance of the Year (The New York Times, New York) for Ms. Ebersole. In addition to the new songs and new performances, this Original Broadway Cast Recording also features an all-new 32-page full-color booklet complete with lyrics and Broadway production photos.
Amazon.com Based on the Maysles brothers' cult 1975 documentary of the same name, this musical is an endearing-and sometimes genuinely heartwrenching-oddity propelled by Christine Ebersole's exceptional, for-the-history-books performance. The movie followed the kooky duo of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter, Little Edie Beale, as they lived with their 52 cats in a derelict East Hampton mansion. The show's first act, set in 1941, is a prologue of sorts, while the second act, set in 1973, follows the movie closely. Ebersole plays Edith in Act I (which she concludes in dazzling manner with "Will You?") and Little Edie in Act II (when Mary Louise Wilson comes in to play the mother). And while Wilson is superb, this is Ebersole's show. Technically, she is flawless-just listen to the way she changes her voice between the acts-but she also makes Little Edie a poignant eccentric, a lost soul stuck in a world of deluded, decaying grandeur. It all peaks in the poignant "Around the World," the show's best song and an Ebersole tour de force. Note that this recording documents the Off-Broadway production; the show transferred to Broadway in the fall of 2006 with a slightly altered first act. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 55 more reviews...
Fascinating musical makes for one of the year's best cast recordings August 22, 2006 49 out of 55 found this review helpful
I was debating between 4 and 5 stars for this recording of the new musical "Grey Gardens," and finally settled on 5. Not because the score has completely blown me away (though it's consistently enjoyable and of pretty high quality, which will probably only grow on me even more), but because as an album-- a cast recording-- this is a really satisfying experience.
I tend to judge cast recordings not just on the music, but on the level of craftsmanship and performance-- the acting, the orchestra, the snippets of dialogue included to give us a sense of the story, the mood, cohesiveness, etc. In other words, I prefer to come away with a feeling other than "those were some good songs." Like many collectors, I don't get to see every show for which I buy the recording, so my general philosophy is "the more the better." Keeping that in mind, this recording of "Grey Gardens" was obviously put together with great care, and all the little details add up to a great cast recording.
Plus, what an intriguing basis for a musical! Based on a true story, and expanded from the documentary of the same name, this is the story of Edie and Edith Bouvier, the cousin and aunt of Jackie Kennedy, who lived out their lives in a dilapidated mansion (the "Grey Gardens" of the title), misspending their wealth and social status to live in seclusion with "52 stray cats." It's a stranger than fiction story that is by turns funny, tragic, and touching. It's unique, smartly constructed (I like the way the general normality of Act I teases us with hints of the mother-daughter dysfunction and outright strangeness of Act II), and at 78 minutes, the recording is very full in a way that seems to be lacking of late. (I'm still a bit miffed at the 50 minute "Bernarda Alba"-- such a good score, but why not give us more on the disc?!)
Much has already been made of the performance of Christine Ebersole as both the older Edith in Act I and Edie in Act II, and she's great here, taking full advantage of those funny, tragic, and touching elements I mentioned. She's already won an off-Broadway award or two or three, so when the show moves to Broadway (which I believe is still the plan), I'm sure she'll be the Best Actress 2007 Tony Award winner. There is also fine supporting work by a strong cast, especially Mary Louise Wilson who takes over as the older Edith in Act II (Future Featured Actress winner, perhaps?).
And just when I thought I was getting sick of old fashioned sounding pastiche ("The Drowsy Chaperone" is back on the shelf where it'll probably stay for a long time), this one comes across as fresh-- not because of the way the music by Scott Frankel sounds (though don't get me wrong-- it's good, if not quite as distinctive as I'd like), but also because the music is used to tell such a weird, fascinating story with admirable skill (the strong lyrics are by Michael Korie). It all adds up to one of the best cast recordings of the year.
Note: this review was for the off-Broadway recording, which has since been supplanted by this Broadway version. This new one contains smart cuts and revisions, and is definitive. 5 stars.
the best new musical of the year November 10, 2006 23 out of 24 found this review helpful
GREY GARDENS is fast becoming the "cast album dujour" title for 2006, and features Christine Ebersole in what may be the greatest performance of her career. Based on the cult favourite documentary "Grey Gardens" by the Maysles brothers; and featuring a score by Scott Frankel and Michael Korie. The book is provided by Doug Wright ("I Am My Own Wife").
The story of Edith "Big Edie" Bouvier Beale, and her daughter "Little Edie" is by now very well-known, thanks to the documentary. They became unfortunate figures of ridicule for some, but most were captivated by their bittersweet tale. The theme of bittersweet, and lives half-lived, permeates through the musical GREY GARDENS. Quite simply, it's the best new musical I've come across in a long, long time.
The show opens in 1941, with Big Edie (played by Christine Ebersole) hosting a party at her elegant East Hampton estate Grey Gardens, where her daughter Little Edie (Sara Gettelfinger) hopes to announce her impending engagement to Joe Kennedy Jr., (Matt Cavenaugh). When her dreams are dashed, Little Edie sadly - and somewhat unknowingly - resigns herself to a life of spinsterhood at Grey Gardens... Their demented relationship is sealed by Big Edie's "Will You?".
In Act Two, the elegant mansion is transformed into a delapidated wreck circa 1973. Big Edie (now played by Mary Louise Wilson) is a bedridden, somewhat senile recluse, cared for by Little Edie (now played by Christine Ebersole) who has grown embittered by resentment and regret.
The overreaching theme of the piece is captured in "Around the World", in which Little Edie imagines finally walking away from her mother's shadow. Ebersole's 11 o'clock number "Another Winter in a Summer Town" is also heartbreaking. There are also funnier, lighter pieces like "The Revolutionary Costume for Today" and "Jerry Likes My Corn" for the two actresses to sink their teeth into.
It's about time that Christine Ebersole is finally receiving her due, following years of solid work on Broadway (most recently a Tony-winning performance as Dorothy Brock in the revival of "42nd Street"), but I doubt that Ebersole has ever had a musical that best captures all her colours than GREY GARDENS. It is indeed the role and the musical that Ebersole has been waiting for all her life. Ebersole and Mary Louise Wilson bookend each other beautifully in their dual-performance as Big Edie.
Sara Gettelfinger (who rose to fame replacing no-show Jenna Elfman in "Nine" and later won the coveted role of Jolene in "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels") plays Little Edie in Act One, and gives a delightful performance as the "Body Beautiful Beale" with tons of potential, later squandered in the name of duty. Matt Cavenaugh quietly plays down the role of Joe Jr., with John McMartin (as Edith's father "Major" Bouvier) also very fine.
This recording features the cast and music as heard during the show's Off-Broadway run at Playwrights Horizons. I heartily and wholly recommend GREY GARDENS, a musical that proudly wears it's wounded heart on it's sleeve.
[PS Classics/Image Entertainment 642]
POSTSCRIPT (11th June 2007): The PS Classics label has just released a new edition of the GREY GARDENS cast album to reflect the changes in cast and score since the musical transferred to Broadway. Erin Davie replaces Sara Gettelfinger as "Little Edie" in Act One; and Kelsey Fowler replaces Audrey Twitchell in the role of "Lee Bouvier".
New numbers added to the score are "The Girl Who Has Everything," "Goin' Places," "Marry Well", a new ending to replace "Peas in a Pod"; plus the unrecorded "Telegram". Most of the recorded performances from the original album session have been used here again, except for the songs that required Davie and Fowler, and those have been completely re-recorded.
The original Off-Broadway cast recording (which was the subject of my initial review above) has now been discontinued and replaced by this current recording. No doubt this will be a confusing subject for a few people, but I'm glad that such a rewarding musical like GREY GARDENS has already garnered two separate recordings.
Grey Gardens is Magnificent October 31, 2006 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
Grey Gardens is a gorgeous, haunting show. The creators have worked feverishly to revamp the show for Broadway. The changes are quite extensive, as anyone familiar with the Playwrights Horizons version can attest. For example, the song list in the current version is considerably different from that on the CD, particularly in Act 1. The following songs are no longer in the show, at least when I saw it in October:
ACT 1 "Toyland" "Body Beautiful Beale" "Better Fall Out of Love" "Being Bouvier" "Mrs. Porter's Anthem" "Tomorrow's Woman"
ACT 2 "Peas in a Pod" (reprise)
And the following songs have been added:
ACT 1 "The Girl Who Has Everything" "Goin' Places" "Marry Well"
All improvements, from where I sit. They've clarified the relationships and focused the dramatic tension by cutting out some extraneous numbers and recasting others in a more effective light. I doubt they'll release a new CD, but I do hope that they at least record the new numbers and release them on iTunes.
Act one is a very interesting and entertaining mix of old-fashioned musical comedy and modern-day drama. The story itself has a very modern feel, but the story-telling is like that of a Gershwin twenties show. It makes for a compelling and moving amalgam of sensibilities. There's something deliberately unsettled about the first act, as though it was designed to set you up for the emotional punch of the second act, which is exactly what it does: establish empathy for the characters to make the denouement all the more devastating.
The luminous Christine Ebersole is brilliant. She is intense, charming, and seemingly in control as Edith Bouvier Beale in Act 1, but later as Young Edie the seams have split, and we witness the ragged remains in Act 2. Mary Louise Wilson is equally effective in her second-act role as the older Edith. Overall, a pair of fascinating character studies, but also haunting and complex portraits of two unfinished lives.
The score is stunning, and reveals composer Scott Frankel and lyricist Michael Korie as a very promising team, indeed, perhaps our next Stephen Sondheims. Yes, it's really that good. Most of the stuff that remains from the Off-Broadway version is simply wonderful, particularly "Around the Word," "Will You?," "On the Five-Fifteen," "Mother Darling," "The Revolutionary Costume of Today," and what is quite possibly the most beautiful song written in the last 20 years, "Another Winter in a Summer Town."
See the show. Buy the CD.
Can' Wait For Broadway August 24, 2006 11 out of 13 found this review helpful
I was privileged to have seen Grey Gardens in its original off-Broadway production. It is a very exciting event, indeed, that it will now be opening for an open run on the real Broadway stage. Captured within this beautifully produced CD is a show of incredible wit, depth, intelligence and beauty. It is finally an adult musical which has been long surrounded by drivel, silliness, lack of originality and overproduction. This is a show that weaves a fascinating story together with haunting music and lyrics that twist and surprise and delight. Songs such as Another Winter in a Summer Town, Around the World, and the Fashion Revolution for Today are some of the best theatre pieces written in years. The show breaks my heart and it's a long time since that's happened on Broadway. And the extras with the CD including the lyrics and beautiful photos really make this a wonderful collection. Bravo!
consistently charming ... a few stellar tunes August 24, 2006 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
what more can we ask of a cast recording? we all have had the feeling of encountering time tested favorites .. for example, i grew up with many including the cast recordings of MY FAIR LADY and FUNNY GIRL ..and with stellar live recordings such as (sob) JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL .. all on vinyl. we knew which the 'big tunes' were and we went to them immediately.
as an adolescent i had the privilege of seeing my first broadway musicals, including A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC .. and my heart skipped a beat when i first heard that score and the soon to be done, redone, overdone 'send in the clowns' .. what a joy to hear such a tune for the first time. and CITY OF ANGELS some years later .. 'with every breath i take'? call them torch songs, call them whatever .. in the true, old fashioned broadway tradition, the best musicals give us great ballads.
this stunning recording gives us several. i loudly nominate one immediately. i received this recording in yesterday's mail .. and today i cannot stop listening to the fabulous Act I concluding masterpiece .. "Will You?" .. this song stands independent of the story's book .. and could become what these other tunes have become. part of the family of American Popular Song.
wow.
for this alone .. get this recording. now.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |