This article needs additional citations for
verification. (March 2011) |
{{Infobox musical
| name = Burn The Floor
| image = LesMisLogo.png
| image_size = 290px
| Producer =
Delfont Macintosh
Sir Cameron Macintosh
| music = Multiple
| lyrics =
| book = None
| basis = Dance
| productions = 2008? Broadway
2009 West End
2010 National tour
| awards = Unknown
Burn The Floor is a musical dance composed in 2008.
Originally released as a French-language concept album, the first musical-stage adaptation of Les Misérables was presented at a Paris sports arena in 1980. However, the first production closed after three months when the booking contract expired.
The Broadway production opened 12 March 1989, and ran until 18 May 2003, closing after 6,680 performances. It is the third longest running Broadway show in history and was the second-longest at the time. [1] A fully re-orchestrated Broadway revival opened on 9 November 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre.
Sung through, Les Misérables opens in Bagne prison in Toulon, France, in 1815, where the prisoners work at hard labour ("Work Song"). After nineteen years of imprisonment (five for stealing bread for his starving sister and her family, and the r
|
|
Listed in the order in which they appear.
Character [2] | Voice [3] | Description |
---|---|---|
Jean Valjean | dramatic tenor | Valjean is released from jail after serving nineteen years (five for stealing a loaf of bread and fourteen for multiple escape attempts). He breaks his parole and changes his identity, becoming the wealthy mayor of a small town. He later adopts Cosette, the daughter of Fantine. |
Inspector Javert | bass-baritone or baritone | Respecting the law above all else, Javert relentlessly pursues Valjean, hoping to bring the escaped convict to justice. |
The Bishop of Digne | baritone | The bishop houses Valjean after his release from jail and gives him gifts of silver and absolution. |
Fantine | mezzo-soprano or alto | A worker who loses her job and becomes a prostitute in order to pay the Thénardiers for the welfare of her daughter. She later dies of a disease. |
Bamatabois | baritone or tenor | A young gentleman who tries to buy Fantine's services and is responsible for her arrest. |
Fauchelevent | baritone or tenor | In a role reduced from the novel, Fauchelevent appears only in the Cart Crash scene, where he is trapped under the cart and rescued by Valjean. He is an elderly man who has fallen upon hard times. |
Young Cosette | treble | The daughter of Fantine, the Thénardiers force eight-year-old Cosette to work. |
Madame Thénardier | contralto | Thénardier's unscrupulous wife. |
Young Éponine | silent | Eight-year-old Éponine is the pampered daughter of the Thénardiers. She grows up with Cosette and is unkind to her. |
Thénardier | baritone or tenor | A second-rate thief, Thénardier runs a small inn. |
Gavroche | boy soprano | Gavroche is a streetwise urchin who dies on the barricade helping the revolutionaries. He is the abandoned son of the Thénardiers. |
Enjolras | baritone or tenor | Enjolras leads Marius and the rest of the student revolutionaries. |
Marius Pontmercy | tenor | Marius, a student revolutionary, is friends with Éponine, but loves Cosette. |
Éponine | mezzo-soprano (can be played by Soprano with solid sound) | Daughter of the Thénardiers, Éponine, now ragged and a waif, secretly loves Marius. She is killed while returning to the barricades to see Marius. |
Cosette | soprano | Cosette, the daughter of Fantine, has become beautiful under Valjean's care. She falls in love with Marius, and he returns her love. |
Brujon | baritone or tenor | The brutish and cowardly but dissatisfied member of Thénardier's Gang. His role in the musical expands to cover Gueulemer. |
Babet | baritone or tenor | A foreboding member of Thénardier's Gang. |
Claquesous | baritone or tenor | Quiet and masked, expert at evading the police, Claquesous might in fact be working for the law. |
Montparnasse | baritone or tenor | A young member of Thénardier's Gang—a handsome man who wishes to be close to Éponine. |
Friends of the ABC | baritone or tenor | Student revolutionaries who lead a revolution and die in the process, becoming martyrs for the rights of citizens. (See Members listed below) |
Combeferre | baritone or tenor | The philosopher of the ABC group. |
Feuilly | baritone or tenor | Feuilly is the only member of the Friends of the ABC who is not a student; he is a workingman. An optimist who stands as a sort of ambassador for the "outside," while the rest of the men stand for France. |
Courfeyrac | baritone or tenor | Friendly and open, Courfeyrac introduces Marius to the ABC society in the novel. |
Joly | baritone or tenor | A medical student and a hypochondriac; best friends with Lesgles. |
Grantaire | baritone or tenor | Grantaire is a member of the Friends of the ABC. He is the opposite of Enjolras and believes in nothing other than his worship of Enjolras. |
Jean Prouvaire | baritone or tenor | Prouvaire is the youngest student member of the Friends. |
Lesgles | baritone or tenor | Enjolras' second-in-command. Best friends with Joly. |
Character | Original French Cast | Original London Cast | Original Broadway Cast | 1995 The Dream Cast | 2006 Broadway Cast | 2010 O2 Arena Cast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jean Valjean | Maurice Barrier | Colm Wilkinson | Alexander Gemignani, replaced by Drew Sarich | Alfie Boe | ||
Javert | Jean Vallée | Roger Allam | Terrence Mann | Philip Quast | Norm Lewis | |
Fantine | Rose Laurens | Patti LuPone | Randy Graff | Ruthie Henshall | Daphne Rubin-Vega | Lea Salonga |
Thenardier | Yvan Dautin | Alun Armstrong | Leo Burmester | Alun Armstrong | Gary Beach | Matt Lucas |
Madame Thenardier | Marie-France Roussel | Susan Jane Tanner | Jennifer Butt | Jenny Galloway | ||
Marius | Gilles Buhlmann | Michael Ball | David Bryant | Michael Ball | Adam Jacobs | Nick Jonas |
Eponine | Marianne Mille | Frances Ruffelle | Lea Salonga | Celia Keenan-Bolger | Samantha Barks | |
Cosette | Fabienne Guyon | Rebecca Caine | Judy Kuhn | Ali Ewoldt | Katie Hall | |
Enjolras | Christian Ratellin | David Burt | Michael Maguire | Aaron Lazar | Ramin Karimloo |
The English language version, with lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer and additional material by James Fenton, was substantially expanded and reworked from a literal translation by Siobhan Bracke of the original Paris version, in particular adding a prologue to tell Jean Valjean's backstory. Kretzmer's work is not a direct "translation" of the French, a term that Kretzmer refused to use. A third of the English lyrics were a "rough" translation, another third were adapted from the French lyrics and the final third consisted of new material.
The musical had its out-of-town tryout at the Kennedy Center's Opera House in Washington D.C., in December 1986 for eight weeks, through 14 February 1987. [4]
The show had three national touring productions in the U.S., all of which shared the Broadway producer and manager, cast, creative teams, sets, costumes, and lighting. While the touring production and the New York production were running simultaneously, the staff, cast members, crew, and musicians of the two productions interchanged often, which contributed to keeping both companies of the show in form. When the New York production closed in 2003, the Third National Tour continued for another three years, and enjoyed the influx of many members from the original and subsequent New York companies.
|}
{{
cite web}}
: Check date values in: |date=
(
help)
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
Category:1980 musicals Category:Broadway musicals Category:West End musicals
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (March 2011) |
{{Infobox musical
| name = Burn The Floor
| image = LesMisLogo.png
| image_size = 290px
| Producer =
Delfont Macintosh
Sir Cameron Macintosh
| music = Multiple
| lyrics =
| book = None
| basis = Dance
| productions = 2008? Broadway
2009 West End
2010 National tour
| awards = Unknown
Burn The Floor is a musical dance composed in 2008.
Originally released as a French-language concept album, the first musical-stage adaptation of Les Misérables was presented at a Paris sports arena in 1980. However, the first production closed after three months when the booking contract expired.
The Broadway production opened 12 March 1989, and ran until 18 May 2003, closing after 6,680 performances. It is the third longest running Broadway show in history and was the second-longest at the time. [1] A fully re-orchestrated Broadway revival opened on 9 November 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre.
Sung through, Les Misérables opens in Bagne prison in Toulon, France, in 1815, where the prisoners work at hard labour ("Work Song"). After nineteen years of imprisonment (five for stealing bread for his starving sister and her family, and the r
|
|
Listed in the order in which they appear.
Character [2] | Voice [3] | Description |
---|---|---|
Jean Valjean | dramatic tenor | Valjean is released from jail after serving nineteen years (five for stealing a loaf of bread and fourteen for multiple escape attempts). He breaks his parole and changes his identity, becoming the wealthy mayor of a small town. He later adopts Cosette, the daughter of Fantine. |
Inspector Javert | bass-baritone or baritone | Respecting the law above all else, Javert relentlessly pursues Valjean, hoping to bring the escaped convict to justice. |
The Bishop of Digne | baritone | The bishop houses Valjean after his release from jail and gives him gifts of silver and absolution. |
Fantine | mezzo-soprano or alto | A worker who loses her job and becomes a prostitute in order to pay the Thénardiers for the welfare of her daughter. She later dies of a disease. |
Bamatabois | baritone or tenor | A young gentleman who tries to buy Fantine's services and is responsible for her arrest. |
Fauchelevent | baritone or tenor | In a role reduced from the novel, Fauchelevent appears only in the Cart Crash scene, where he is trapped under the cart and rescued by Valjean. He is an elderly man who has fallen upon hard times. |
Young Cosette | treble | The daughter of Fantine, the Thénardiers force eight-year-old Cosette to work. |
Madame Thénardier | contralto | Thénardier's unscrupulous wife. |
Young Éponine | silent | Eight-year-old Éponine is the pampered daughter of the Thénardiers. She grows up with Cosette and is unkind to her. |
Thénardier | baritone or tenor | A second-rate thief, Thénardier runs a small inn. |
Gavroche | boy soprano | Gavroche is a streetwise urchin who dies on the barricade helping the revolutionaries. He is the abandoned son of the Thénardiers. |
Enjolras | baritone or tenor | Enjolras leads Marius and the rest of the student revolutionaries. |
Marius Pontmercy | tenor | Marius, a student revolutionary, is friends with Éponine, but loves Cosette. |
Éponine | mezzo-soprano (can be played by Soprano with solid sound) | Daughter of the Thénardiers, Éponine, now ragged and a waif, secretly loves Marius. She is killed while returning to the barricades to see Marius. |
Cosette | soprano | Cosette, the daughter of Fantine, has become beautiful under Valjean's care. She falls in love with Marius, and he returns her love. |
Brujon | baritone or tenor | The brutish and cowardly but dissatisfied member of Thénardier's Gang. His role in the musical expands to cover Gueulemer. |
Babet | baritone or tenor | A foreboding member of Thénardier's Gang. |
Claquesous | baritone or tenor | Quiet and masked, expert at evading the police, Claquesous might in fact be working for the law. |
Montparnasse | baritone or tenor | A young member of Thénardier's Gang—a handsome man who wishes to be close to Éponine. |
Friends of the ABC | baritone or tenor | Student revolutionaries who lead a revolution and die in the process, becoming martyrs for the rights of citizens. (See Members listed below) |
Combeferre | baritone or tenor | The philosopher of the ABC group. |
Feuilly | baritone or tenor | Feuilly is the only member of the Friends of the ABC who is not a student; he is a workingman. An optimist who stands as a sort of ambassador for the "outside," while the rest of the men stand for France. |
Courfeyrac | baritone or tenor | Friendly and open, Courfeyrac introduces Marius to the ABC society in the novel. |
Joly | baritone or tenor | A medical student and a hypochondriac; best friends with Lesgles. |
Grantaire | baritone or tenor | Grantaire is a member of the Friends of the ABC. He is the opposite of Enjolras and believes in nothing other than his worship of Enjolras. |
Jean Prouvaire | baritone or tenor | Prouvaire is the youngest student member of the Friends. |
Lesgles | baritone or tenor | Enjolras' second-in-command. Best friends with Joly. |
Character | Original French Cast | Original London Cast | Original Broadway Cast | 1995 The Dream Cast | 2006 Broadway Cast | 2010 O2 Arena Cast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jean Valjean | Maurice Barrier | Colm Wilkinson | Alexander Gemignani, replaced by Drew Sarich | Alfie Boe | ||
Javert | Jean Vallée | Roger Allam | Terrence Mann | Philip Quast | Norm Lewis | |
Fantine | Rose Laurens | Patti LuPone | Randy Graff | Ruthie Henshall | Daphne Rubin-Vega | Lea Salonga |
Thenardier | Yvan Dautin | Alun Armstrong | Leo Burmester | Alun Armstrong | Gary Beach | Matt Lucas |
Madame Thenardier | Marie-France Roussel | Susan Jane Tanner | Jennifer Butt | Jenny Galloway | ||
Marius | Gilles Buhlmann | Michael Ball | David Bryant | Michael Ball | Adam Jacobs | Nick Jonas |
Eponine | Marianne Mille | Frances Ruffelle | Lea Salonga | Celia Keenan-Bolger | Samantha Barks | |
Cosette | Fabienne Guyon | Rebecca Caine | Judy Kuhn | Ali Ewoldt | Katie Hall | |
Enjolras | Christian Ratellin | David Burt | Michael Maguire | Aaron Lazar | Ramin Karimloo |
The English language version, with lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer and additional material by James Fenton, was substantially expanded and reworked from a literal translation by Siobhan Bracke of the original Paris version, in particular adding a prologue to tell Jean Valjean's backstory. Kretzmer's work is not a direct "translation" of the French, a term that Kretzmer refused to use. A third of the English lyrics were a "rough" translation, another third were adapted from the French lyrics and the final third consisted of new material.
The musical had its out-of-town tryout at the Kennedy Center's Opera House in Washington D.C., in December 1986 for eight weeks, through 14 February 1987. [4]
The show had three national touring productions in the U.S., all of which shared the Broadway producer and manager, cast, creative teams, sets, costumes, and lighting. While the touring production and the New York production were running simultaneously, the staff, cast members, crew, and musicians of the two productions interchanged often, which contributed to keeping both companies of the show in form. When the New York production closed in 2003, the Third National Tour continued for another three years, and enjoyed the influx of many members from the original and subsequent New York companies.
|}
{{
cite web}}
: Check date values in: |date=
(
help)
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
Category:1980 musicals Category:Broadway musicals Category:West End musicals