Forever Dusty

Forever Dusty
The Dusty Springfield Musical
Music Various composers
Book Kirsten Holly Smith
Jonathan Vankin
Productions 2012, Off Broadway

Forever Dusty is a stage musical based on the life of British pop star Dusty Springfield. The musical numbers are all songs performed by Springfield during her career. The book of the musical was written by Kirsten Holly Smith, who also plays the lead role of Dusty Springfield in the originating production, and Jonathan Vankin. Forever Dusty opened on 18 November 2012 at New World Stages, an Off-Broadway venue in New York City.

History

Smith originated the project at the University of Southern California in 2006, where she performed a workshop version of the piece as a one-woman show after receiving a Spectrum Arts Grant from USC.

Smith has said that her interest in Springfield’s story was sparked by listening to the singer’s Dusty in Memphis album. "That soulful, sultry, passionate yet vulnerable voice. I immediately identified with her and knew that I needed to explore the roots of Dusty’s voice. I felt like I knew exactly what she was feeling when she sang her songs, that maybe it was the same feeling I had when I sang," Smith said.[1]

The one-woman musical moved in 2008 to the Renberg Theatre in West Hollywood, California. The theatre is part of the Lily Tomlin/Jane Wagner Cultural Arts Center at the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center. The L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center co-produced the show, then entitled Stay Forever: The Life and Music of Dusty Springfield, with actress Jorja Fox (best known for her work on the TV series, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ), Leslie Brockett and Jon Imparato as producers. Brockett was a producer of the USC workshop version as well.

The Off Broadway production of Forever Dusty is greatly expanded from the one-woman Stay Forever. The show became a full-scale book musical with the addition of co-writer Vankin. The cast now consists of five actors, each portraying multiple characters (with the exception of Smith, who plays Dusty Springfield only). The director of the production at New World Stages is Randal Myler, whose notable previous work includes the bio-musicals Love, Janis (about Janis Joplin) and Hank Williams: Lost Highway as well as the Tony and Drama Desk Award-nominated Broadway production It Ain’t Nothin’ But The Blues.

Fox and Brockett stayed on as producers, joined by Jane Gullong and Sandalphon Productions. Helga Olafsson and Lawrence D. Poster came on as associate producers. Eva Price of Maximum Entertainment became the production’s executive producer. Michael Thomas Murray served as musical director as well as associate producer.

On 13 February 2013, Forever Dusty played its 100th performance. The show marked the occasion with a "Sing Along Night," in which audience members were encouraged to sing along with the performers with lyrics being projected on the back wall of the set.[2]

Show Description

Forever Dusty runs approximately 90 minutes without an intermission and contains 20 songs.

An "Author’s Note" included in the Playbill program of the New World Stages production states that the story of Springfield’s life as told in Forever Dusty is true, but presented in "fictional form" for dramatic purposes, including composite characters and some alterations in "the time sequence of events."

The central plot line of the musical focuses on Dusty's relationship with "Claire," an African-American music journalist who becomes the singer's love interest. Events depicted in Forever Dusty include the origins of Springfield’s career with her brother’s group, The Springfields; her controversial arrest in and expulsion from apartheid South Africa for her refusal to perform to segregated audiences; her sponsorship of the first Motown revue in the United Kingdom; her troubled recording sessions for Dusty in Memphis; her public "coming out" as a lesbian; her comeback with The Pet Shop Boys; and her battle against breast cancer.

List of musical numbers

Cast

In order of appearance, for the Off Broadway production:

"Baby, It’s Cold Outside"

Though the song does not appear in the play itself, on 18 December 2012, Forever Dusty released a holiday video of Smith and Sajous performing the song "Baby, It's Cold Outside". The video was inspired by a 1978 television performance of the song by Springfield with Rod McKuen.

External links

References

  1. "Kirsten Holly Smith on Portraying 'Soulful, Sultry' Dusty Springfield in Forever Dusty". 11 December 2012. Retrieved 2012-12-18.
  2. "One Hundred Times Forever Dusty". The New York Times. 14 February 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-16.
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