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Rudolf Friml

 
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Source: www.rhapsody.com --- 95 days ago
The Firefly: Act One - Scene "Geraldine, what is the trouble?" - Rudolf Friml ...
Source: www.rhapsody.com --- 87 days ago
The Firefly: Act One - Scene "Jenkins, we can sail immediately" - Rudolf Friml ...
Source: www.rhapsody.com --- 87 days ago
The Firefly: Act One - Dialogue "So, who do all these" - Rudolf Friml ...
Source: www.hezzer19.org --- 36 days ago
1661 - Composer George Bohm was born. 1814 - The composer Mihaly Mosonyi was born. 1862 - Composer Alphons Diepenbrock was born. 1917 - Composer Laurindo Almeida was born. 1924 - The operetta “Rose Marie”, by Rudolf Friml, opened on Broadway. 1927 - Sophie Tucker recorded her song “Some of These Days.” 1931 - The [...] ...
Source: www.broadwayworld.com --- 83 days ago
On the night when baseball's all-stars were blasting dingers into the bleachers of Yankee Stadium, the cast of Scott Siegel's A Night At The Operetta, was having their own home run derby on the stage of Town Hall, knocking melodies by Victor Herbert, Sigmund Romberg and Rudolf Friml out of the park.� And in both cases, the crowd frequently went nuts. As it did last year, A Night At The Operetta kicked off Town Hall's Second Annual Summer Broadway Festival, a no-brainer choice when Siegel noticed the wild enthusiasm that always greeted operetta selections during his ultra-popular Broadway By The Year concerts.� As a regular at Siegel's shows I'll confirm the rock star reception that follows whenever a well-trained singer sinks his or her vocal chops into these rich and demanding melodies that were a staple of Broadway for the first three decades of the 20th Century. Scott Siegel, as usual, provided introductions and illuminating information from his stage left podium (Like how the "Students Marching Song" from The Student Prince was also known as "Let's All Be Gay Boys.") and Dan Foster directed the swift and entertaining evening.� Music director Fred Barton was at piano, leading a four piece ensemble in his excellent arrangements. Most of the evening's selections were performed in the acoustically friendly auditorium without microphones ("Sound design by God," as Siegel likes to say).� Certainly such assistance isn't necessary when yo ...

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