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Sunset Blvd. (musical) : ウィキペディア英語版
Sunset Boulevard (musical)

''Sunset Boulevard'' is a musical with book and lyrics by Don Black and Christopher Hampton and music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Based on Billy Wilder's Academy Award-winning 1950 film of the same title, the plot revolves around Norma Desmond, a faded star of the silent screen era, living in the past in her decaying mansion on the fabled Los Angeles street. When young screenwriter Joe Gillis accidentally crosses her path, she sees in him an opportunity to make her comeback to the big screen. Romance and tragedy follow.
Opening first in London in 1993, the musical has had several long runs internationally and also enjoyed extensive tours, although the show, which has been the subject of several legal battles, lost money because of its extraordinary running costs.
==Background ==
From approximately 1952 to 1956, Gloria Swanson worked with actor Richard Stapley (aka Richard Wyler) and cabaret singer/pianist Dickson Hughes on a musical adaptation originally entitled ''Starring Norma Desmond'', then ''Boulevard!''〔Based on liner notes to ''Boulevard!'' CD release by Richard Stapley, Tim J. Hutton, and Steven M. Warner〕 It ended on a happier note than the film, with Norma allowing Joe to leave and pursue a happy ending with Betty. Paramount originally had given Swanson verbal permission to proceed with the musical, but there had been no formal legal arrangement. On 20 February 1957, Paramount executive Russell Holman wrote Swanson a letter in which he asked her to cease work on the project because "it would be damaging for the property to be offered to the entertainment public in another form as a stage musical."〔''The Bad and the Beautiful: Hollywood in the Fifties'' by Sam Kashner and Jennifer MacNair, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2002, ISBN 0-393-04321-5, pg. 346〕 In 1994, Hughes incorporated material from the production into ''Swanson on Sunset'', based on his and Stapley's experiences in writing ''Boulevard!''. A recording of the entire score, which had been housed in the Gloria Swanson archives at the University of Texas, was released on CD in 2008.
In the early 1960s, Stephen Sondheim outlined a musical stage adaptation and went so far as to compose the first scene with librettist Burt Shevelove. A chance encounter with Billy Wilder at a cocktail party gave Sondheim the opportunity to introduce himself and ask the original film's co-screenwriter and director his opinion of the project (which was to star Jeanette MacDonald). "You can't write a musical about ''Sunset Boulevard''," Wilder responded, "it has to be an opera. After all, it's about a dethroned queen." Sondheim immediately aborted his plans. A few years later, when he was invited by Hal Prince to write the score for a film remake starring Angela Lansbury as a fading musical comedienne rather than a silent film star, Sondheim declined, citing his conversation with Wilder.〔''On Sunset Boulevard: The Life and Times of Billy Wilder'' by Ed Sikov, Hyperion, New York, New York, 1998, pp. 467–468, ISBN 0-7868-6194-0〕
When Lloyd Webber saw the film in the early 1970s, he was inspired to write what he pictured as the title song for a theatrical adaptation, fragments of which he instead incorporated into ''Gumshoe''.〔('...Inspired by Sunset Boulevard' ) from Lloyd Webber's Really Useful Group website〕 In 1976, after a conversation with Hal Prince, who had the theatrical rights to ''Sunset'', Lloyd Webber wrote "an idea for the moment when Norma Desmond returns to Paramount Studios"; Lloyd Webber did no further work on the play until after 1989's ''Aspects of Love''.〔
At that point, Lloyd Webber "felt it was the subject () had to compose next",〔 though by February 1990 he had announced plans to turn Really Useful Group private so he could "make movies rather than musicals."〔(Lloyd Webber in Accord For Buyback of Company ), a February 1990 article from ''The New York Times''〕
In 1991, Lloyd Webber asked Amy Powers, a lawyer from New York with no professional lyric-writing experience, to write the lyrics for ''Sunset Boulevard''. Don Black was later brought in to work with Powers; the two wrote the version that was performed in 1991 at Lloyd Webber's Sydmonton Festival. This original version starred Ria Jones as Norma.〔Ansdell, Caroline. ("20 Questions With... Ria Jones (Ria Jones speaking to Caroline Ansdell)" ) whatsonstage.com, 5 March 2007〕 but it was not a success. A revised version, written by Black and Christopher Hampton had a complete performance at the 1992 Sydmonton Festival, now with Patti LuPone playing Norma,〔Snelson, John. (''Andrew Lloyd Webber'' ) ''Andrew Lloyd Webber'', Yale University Press, 2009, ISBN 0-300-15113-6, p.16〕 and "met with great success".〔 Lloyd Webber borrowed several of the tunes from his 1986 mini-musical ''Cricket'', written with Tim Rice, which had been performed at Windsor Castle and later at the Sydmonton Festival.〔("Sir Tim Rice – ''Cricket''" ) timrice.co.uk〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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