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Platinum is a stage musical with a book by Will Holt and Bruce Vilanch, music by Gary William Friedman, and lyrics by Holt.

Set in a Hollywood recording studio, it centers on Lila Halliday, a star of 1940s and 1950s movie musicals who is attempting a comeback. In the process, she falls for a young rock star named Dan Danger.

Background

Platinum was originally titled Sunset when it had its world premiere in 1977 at the Studio Arena Theater in Buffalo, New York. The production, with a book by Louis LaRusso II, was directed by Tommy Tune.[1] When the musical evolved into Platinum and moved to Broadway, only the songwriters, Alexis Smith, Lisa Mordente, and ensemble member Christine Faith remained with the production.

Original cast and characters

Character Broadway (1978)[2]
Lila Halliday Alexis Smith
Dan Danger Richard Cox
Crystal Mason Lisa Mordente
Robin Robin Grean
Damita Damita Jo Freeman
Avery Avery Sommers
Jeff Leff Stanley Kamel
Shultz Tony Shultz
Wenndy Wenndy Leigh Mackenzie
Boris John Hammil
Christine Christine Faith
Alan Fairmont / Mink Jonathan Freeman

Songs

  • 1977 world premiere production
  • 1978 Broadway production
  • 1984 Village Gate NYC production

Production history

Directed and choreographed by Joe Layton, the Broadway production of Platinum opened on November 12, 1978, at the Mark Hellinger Theatre, where it closed on December 10, 1978, after 33 performances and 12 previews. Despite its short run, it garnered Tony Award nominations for Smith and Richard Cox and Drama Desk Award nominations for Cox and Mordente. (A revised version of the original Sunset was presented off-Broadway at the Village Gate in November 1983. Starring Tammy Grimes and directed by Andre Ernotte it closed after one performance and 13 previews.)[3]

In August 2010, a revised version of Platinum developed by UnsungMusicalsCo. Inc. played the New York International Fringe Festival. It was directed by Ben West with choreography by Rommy Sandhu.[4]

Critical reception

Douglas Watt, reviewing in the New York Daily News said the musical was "full of electricity and sends you into the night charged up." Platinum was "the first big fat hit" of the Broadway season, and Smith was "vibrant and smashing looking." He singled out the songs "Destiny" and "Movie Star Mansion." In all, the show was "a triumphant piece of musical staging" that achieved "pure excitement."[5]

Martin Gottfried called Friedman's music, "excellent - melodic, ambitious, ingenious, and decidedly theatrical", and Holt's lyrics "clean and crafty."[6]

On the flip side, Walter Kerr said, "I have a feeling that if Platinum could just get rid of its book, its songs, its microphones and its almost arrogantly messy setting, it would be light miles ahead."[7]

In his 2015 reference compilation The Complete Book Of 1970's Broadway Musicals, author Dan Dietz said that the lyrics by Will Holt and the Music by Gary William Friedman "offered an array of clever and melodic songs, and their Platinum score is one of the most underrated of the era."[8]

Awards and nominations

1978 Tony Award nominations
  • Best Actress – Alexis Smith
  • Best Featured Actor – Richard Cox
1978 Drama Desk Award nominations
  • Best Featured Actress – Lisa Mordente
  • Best Featured Actor – Richard Cox

Notes

  1. ^ "'Platinum'/'Sunset production notes" garywilliamfriedman.com, retrieved June 5, 2010
  2. ^ Playbill 1978 Bio Cast Listaccessed 07/15/2023
  3. ^ "'Sunset,' at Village Gate, Closes After First Night"The New York Times, November 9, 1983
  4. ^ Bacalzo, Dan."FringeNYC Announces 2010 Line-Up" theatermania.com, June 2, 2010
  5. ^ Dietz, Dan, The Complete Book of 1970's Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2015. ISBN 978-1442251656 , p. 416
  6. ^ Dietz, Dan, The Complete Book of 1970's Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2015. ISBN 978-1442251656 , p. 416
  7. ^ Lewis, David H, Broadway Musicals: A Hundred Year History. McFarland 2002. ISBN 0-7864-1269-0, p. 106
  8. ^ Dietz, Dan, The Complete Book of 1970's Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2015. ISBN 978-1442251656 , p. 416

References

  • Mandelbaum, Ken, Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops. St. Martin's Press 1991. ISBN 0-312-08273-8
  • Suskin, Steven, More Opening Nights on Broadway: A Critical Quotebook Of The Musical Theatre from 1965 Through 1981. Schirmer Books 1997. ISBN 0-02-864571-5
  • Mordden, Ethan, One More Kiss: The Broadway Musical in the 1970s. Palgrave Macmillan 2004. ISBN 0-312-23953-X
  • Sunset Playbill, Studio Arena Theatre, Buffalo, New York, 1977

External links