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Into the Woods - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Into the Woods

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Into The Woods
Original Broadway Production

Original Broadway Cast Recording
Music Stephen Sondheim
Lyrics Stephen Sondheim
Book James Lapine
Theatre Martin Beck Theatre
Opened November 5, 1987
Closed September 3, 1989
Producer(s) Old Globe Theatre
Director James Lapine
Choreographer Lar Lubovitch
Scenic designer Tony Straiges
Costume designer Ann Hould-Ward
Lighting designer Richard Nelson

Into the Woods is an award-winning musical featuring a score by Stephen Sondheim and book by James Lapine. It debuted in San Diego at the Old Globe Theatre in 1986, and premiered on Broadway in 1987. Bernadette Peters' performance as the Witch, and Joanna Gleason's portrayal of the Baker's Wife, brought acclaim to the production during its original Broadway run. Into the Woods won several Tony awards, including Best Score, in a year dominated by The Phantom of the Opera. The Witch has attracted numerous "name" actresses in major productions, including Ellen Foley, Phylicia Rashad, Nancy Dussault, and Vanessa Williams.

Inspired by Bruno Bettelheim's The Uses of Enchantment, the musical intertwines a collection of uncensored versions of 18th century Brothers Grimm fairy tales. An original story involving a Baker and his Wife's quest to begin a family ties together the stories of Little Red Ridinghood, Jack of Jack and the Beanstalk, Rapunzel, and Cinderella.

Act I opens with a wish, a witch, and a curse. Each separate tale intertwines throughout the story, each depending on a weakness or strength of another. The play's conflicts are motivated by selfish wishes, made for the betterment of individual characters.

Act II explores what happens after "happily ever after," when these wishes have come true. The land is ravaged by a giantess, whose husband was killed when Jack chopped down the beanstalk. The show explores the consequences of actions taken in the first act, and the need for community in order to survive "the Woods". Among the many messages expressed in the musical, one of the strongest is that unless people are gathering for one mission, the mission cannot be accomplished, as long as each is egocentric.

Notable songs in the musical include "Into the Woods", "Hello, Little Girl", "I Know Things Now", "Giants in the Sky", "It Takes Two", "Agony", "Stay With Me", "On the Steps of the Palace", "Ever After", "Happy", "Moments in the Woods", "Your Fault", "The Last Midnight", "No More", "No One Is Alone", and "Children Will Listen".

The musical makes heavy use of syncopated speech. In many instances, the characters' lines are delivered with a fixed beat that follows natural speech rhythms, but is also purposely composed in eighth, sixteenth, and quarter note rhythms as part of a spoken song. Like many Sondheim/Lapine productions, the songs contain thought-process narrative, where characters converse or think aloud. See Lyric Examples for detail.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

[edit] Act I

In Act I, the major characters are introduced by the Narrator, along with their respective wishes. Cinderella wishes to attend the King's festival, Jack wishes for his pet cow, Milky-White, to give milk, and the Baker and his Wife wish for a child. Cinderella's Stepsisters mock her desire to attend the ball, and Jack's Mother insists that Jack must sell his beloved cow. The Baker and his Wife are visited by Little Red Ridinghood, who purchases bread to bring to her Granny in the woods. Shortly after, the Witch from next door appears, and informs the Baker and his Wife that she has cursed his lineage with infertility in retaliation for the Baker's father having stolen "greens" from her garden many years ago. The Witch reveals that the Baker's father was fetching greens to satisfy his pregnant wife's cravings. The Witch punished the Baker's parents by claiming the child for her own, a girl who is later revealed to be Rapunzel. The Baker's father also stole magic beans from the Witch's garden, and it is for this crime that she cursed his lineage. The Witch grants them a way to reverse their barren fate, sending them into the forest to fetch four ingredients for a certain potion: "The cow as white as milk, the cape as red as blood, the hair as yellow as corn, and the slipper as pure as gold". They spend the rest of Act I on a quest to locate these items.

Meanwhile, Cinderella and Rapunzel are each pursued by a Prince; a Mysterious Man roams the woods, harassing Jack and the Baker; and Little Red Ridinghood encounters a seemingly-friendly Wolf on the path to Granny's. The Wolf persuades Little Red Ridinghood to tarry on her way, and he races ahead to her Granny's house. The Baker and his Wife encounter Jack, and persuade him to trade his cow in exchange for the magic beans stolen from the Witch. The Baker also encounters Little Red Ridinghood, and after she refuses to give him her cape, he attempts to steal it, but is rebuffed by her loud tantrum. Little Red Ridinghood reaches her destination to find her Granny has been replaced and devoured by the Wolf, who then eats her. Fortunately, the Baker is at hand, and kills the wolf, freeing Little Red Ridinghood and her Granny. In exchange for rescuing her, Little Red Ridinghood gives the Baker her red cloak. Jack's Mother throws away the magic beans, which grow into a large beanstalk. Jack then climbs the beanstalk, retrieving many riches from the home of the Giants. Eventually he cuts down the beanstalk, killing the Giant. The Baker's Wife encounters Cinderella, who is attempting to escape from the Prince. She notices Cinderella's golden slippers, eventually persuading Cinderella to part with them. She also encounters Rapunzel's Prince visiting her tower, and by observing him, learns the secret of retrieving Rapunzel's corn-yellow hair. After escaping with a section of the hair, she reunites with her husband, and with some difficulty the potion is created, the spell is lifted. The Mysterious Man is revealed to be the Baker's father, who then dies, and the Witch regains the youth and beauty that she lost on the night that the beans were stolen from her, but at the cost of losing her powers. Cinderella and Rapunzel eventually get their Princes, Jack gets his cow back, and the Act ends with everyone elated at the granting of their wishes, with the exception of Cinderella's Stepsisters, who have been blinded by birds.

[edit] Act II

In Act II, sheer fairy-tale chaos ensues. The wife of the slain Giant is rampaging the land, searching for Jack. She storms through the Baker's village, destroying the Witch's garden. Little Red Ridinghood arrives at the Baker's house shortly thereafter, announcing that her mother was killed when their house was destroyed. The Witch, young and beautiful again, but lacking her former powers, joins with them to search the forest and stop the Giantess. Jack, too, sets off, as he feels responsible for the onset of terror. Cinderella, who has found contentment with the Prince, learns from the birds that something has happened to her mother's grave, and she goes to investigate. All the characters are once again out in the woods, but for a different purpose: this journey is motivated by a desire to repair damage done by the original, selfish wishes. Gradually, each character realizes that wishes made for one's own purpose and benefit quickly turn against expectations.

Lack of unity amongst the characters causes several violent and unexpected deaths. Rapunzel is crushed by the Giantess after she runs towards her in hysterics of postpartum depression after bearing twins to her Prince. Jack's Mother is killed by a blow to the head from the royal Steward, who is attempting to stop her from further angering and antagonizing the Giantess. Even the Narrator is pulled into the story and thrown to the Giantess. Cinderella's Father, Stepmother, Stepsisters, and the Steward, Little Red Ridinghood, Jack, the Witch, the Baker, and his Wife huddle together for safety. The royal family leaves, claiming to know a far away kingdom to escape to. Meanwhile, the two Princes, who seemingly should be working to save everyone, are instead singing of two new women whom they wish to pursue, Snow White and Sleeping Beauty.

The survivors consider their options, deciding to split up in order to search for Jack. The Baker's Wife encounters Cinderella's Prince, who seduces her. Shortly after he leaves, she is crushed to death by a falling tree knocked astray by the Giantess. All reconvene, quickly discovering their diminishing numbers. A fight ensues, each attempting to place blame on anyone but themselves. Eventually, they decide that the Witch is to blame, for raising the beans that grew the beanstalk to the Giants' world. The Witch, after chastising them for being unable to accept that they are all responsible, disappears in a puff of smoke, and leaves them alone as her final curse. The Baker, overcome with grief, leaves Little Red, Cinderella, and Jack and tries to run away from the woes of the Woods. He encounters the ghost of his father, who explains how life becomes even harder when you run. With renewed resolve, the Baker finds the rest of the group again.

With only Jack, Little Red Ridinghood, Cinderella, the Baker, and his child left alive, they concoct a scheme to slay the Giantess, using what they have learned in their journey. Little Red Riding Hood spreads pitch on the ground to trap the Giantess, as the Prince had done to Cinderella on the stairs at the ball. Jack waits with the Baker in a tree with a club, as he had done to kill the Giantess's husband. While waiting for the Giantess to return, Little Red and Jack realize that they are alone; their mothers are both dead. The Baker and Cinderella comfort the two children with the essential thesis of the show: no one is alone. When the Giantess comes looking for Jack, Little Red Ridinghood calls attention to herself, sending the Giantess toward Jack's supposed hiding place. Cinderella stands by with the Baker's child and calls to her bird friends, who peck out the Giantess's eyes, and Jack slays her. In the end, they resolve to make a new life, void of violence and selfishness, but remain haunted by the memories of their loved ones. It seems that everyone has learned that wishes can be dangerous. However, after the very last note, Cinderella steps forward from the ensemble and sings "I Wish!", indicating that humanity may be unable to exist apart from its dreams and wishes.

[edit] Dramatics

In most productions of Into the Woods, including the original Broadway production, Cinderella's Prince and the Wolf, who share the characteristic of being unable to control their appetites, are played by the same actor. Similarly, the Narrator and the Mysterious Man, who share the characteristic of commenting on the story while avoiding any personal involvement or responsibility, are played by the same actor. The Wolf and the Mysterious Man are more primal exemplars of these attributes, while the Prince and the Narrator put a more respectable face on them. This technique was also featured in theatrical productions of Peter Pan (in which Mr. Darling and Captain Hook are traditionally played by the same actor, highlighting the similarities and differences in the central role each plays in the children's lives). It's also seen in The Wizard of Oz.

[edit] Broadway Productions

Into the Woods opened on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on November 5, 1987, and played 804 performances. It starred Bernadette Peters, Joanna Gleason, Chip Zien, Kim Crosby, Ben Wright, Danielle Ferland, and Robert Westenberg. The original production won the 1988 Drama Critic's Circle Award and the Drama Desk Award for Best Musical, and the Original Cast Recording won a Grammy Award.

The show was revived on Broadway in 2002 with Vanessa Williams as the Witch, the recorded voice of Judi Dench as the Giant, and other cast members including John McMartin, Stephen DeRosa, Gregg Edelman, and Christopher Sieber. The plot was retooled, with a subplot added involving The Three Little Pigs restored from the earlier San Diego production. Critics were kind to the show, but loyal fans put it down, stressing that the important adult messages of the original production were now undermined with a seeming sense of flippancy. The revival had a 280-performance run.

[edit] London Production

The original London Production opened on September 25, 1990 at the Phoenix Theatre.

Both some story aspects and one song that were cut from the original production were added to the London Production. The song Our Little World was added. This song was a duet sung between the Witch and Rapunzel giving further insight into the care the Witch has for her self-proclaimed daughter and the desire Rapunzel has to see the world outside of her tower.


[edit] Australian productions

Brisbane Harvest Rain Theatre (Tim O'Connor)2005

[edit] Cast lists

Original Broadway Cast

2002 Broadway Revival Cast

[edit] Musical numbers

Act I

  • Act One Prologue: Into the Woods - Narrator & Company
  • Cinderella At the Grave - Cinderella & Cinderella's Mother
  • Hello, Little Girl - Wolf & Little Red Riding Hood
  • I Guess This Is Goodbye - Jack
  • Maybe They're Magic - Baker's Wife
  • Our Little World - Witch & Rapunzel
  • I Know Things Now - Little Red Riding Hood
  • A Very Nice Prince - Cinderella & The Baker's Wife
  • First Midnight - Company
  • Giants In the Sky - Jack
  • Agony - Cinderella's Prince & Rapunzel's Prince
  • It Takes Two - Baker & Baker's Wife
  • Stay With Me - Rapunzel & Witch
  • On The Steps of the Palace - Cinderella (with Jack & Little Red Riding Hood in 2002 Revival)
  • Ever After - Narrator, Witch, Florinda, Lucinda & Company

Act 2

  • Act Two Prologue: So Happy - Narrator & Company
  • Agony (Reprise) - Cinderella's Prince & Rapunzel's Prince
  • Lament - Witch
  • Any Moment - Cinderella's Prince & Baker's Wife
  • Moments in the Woods - Baker's Wife
  • Your Fault - Jack, Baker, Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood & Witch
  • Last Midnight - Witch
  • No More - Baker & Mysterious Man
  • No One is Alone - Cinderella, Baker, Little Red Riding Hood & Jack
  • Finale: Children Will Listen - Witch & Company

[edit] Lyric examples

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
  • "On the Steps of the Palace" (Cinderella)

He's a very smart prince
He's a prince who prepares
Knowing this time I'd run from him
He spread pitch on the stairs
I was caught unawares
And I thought, 'Well, he cares,
This is more than just malice
Better stop and take stock While you're standing here stuck to the steps of the palace.

  • "Moments in the Woods" (Baker's Wife)

Oh if life were made of moments,
Even now and then a bad one,
But if life were only moments,
Then you'd never know you'd had one!

  • "I Know Things Now" (Little Red Ridinghood)

And I know things now, many valuable things
That I hadn't known before
Do not put your faith in a cape and a hood
They will not protect you the way that they should
And take extra care with strangers
Even flowers have their dangers
And though scary is exciting
Nice is different than good.

  • "No One Is Alone" (Cinderella)

Sometimes people leave you halfway through the woods.
Do not let it grieve you, no one leaves for good.
You are not alone, believe me.
No one is alone.

  • "Giants in the Sky" (Jack)

Only just when you've made a friend and all
And you know she's big but you don't feel small
Someone bigger than her comes along the hall
To swallow you for lunch.

[edit] Samples


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