Shuffle Along, or, the Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All That Followed

Shuffle Along, or, the Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All That Followed

Playbill cover of the original Broadway production
Music Eubie Blake, Noble Sissle
Lyrics Eubie Blake, Noble Sissle
Book George C. Wolfe, Flournoy Miller, Aubrey Lyles
Basis Shuffle Along
Premiere April 28, 2016 (2016-04-28): Music Box Theatre
Productions 2016 Broadway
Awards 2016 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical
2016 New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Musical

Shuffle Along, or, the Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All That Followed is a musical with a score by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle and a libretto by George C. Wolfe, based on the original book of the 1921 musical revue Shuffle Along, by Flournoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles. The story focuses on the challenges of mounting the original production of Shuffle Along and its effect on Broadway and race relations.

The musical played on Broadway in 2016 and starred Audra McDonald, Brian Stokes Mitchell and Billy Porter. The initial critical response was mostly positive, with special praise from many critics for McDonald's performance. The production was nominated for ten Tony Awards but did not win any; it won four Drama Desk Awards, including Outstanding Musical. Shuffle Along closed on July 24, 2016 after 38 previews and 100 regular performances.[1]

Background

When Blake, Sissle, Miller and Lyles decided to collaborate on Shuffle Along, they were all Vaudeville veterans, but none of them had ever written a musical or appeared on Broadway.[2] After finding a small source of funding, Shuffle Along toured through New Jersey and Pennsylvania. However, with little funding, it was difficult to meet travel and production expenses, and the cast rarely got paid. The show came back to New York about a year later, during the Depression of 1920–21. The production owed $18,000 and faced strong competition in a Broadway season full of spectacles, such as Sally – a Ziegfeld musical – and another edition of George White's Scandals. It was only able to book a remote theater on West 63rd Street.[2][3]

Nevertheless, Shuffle Along was a surprise hit, running for 504 performances, turning a substantial profit and spawning tours and spin-offs.[2][3][4] The show introduced several innovations;[5] launched or greatly boosted the career of cast members including Josephine Baker, Paul Robeson, Florence Mills, Fredi Washington and Adelaide Hall; and the song "I'm Just Wild About Harry" became a popular standard.[6] The show's energetic dancing and catchy jazz score drew enthusiastic repeat audiences of all races, and celebrities such as George Gershwin, Fanny Brice, Al Jolson, Langston Hughes and critic George Jean Nathan, helping to unite the white Broadway and black jazz communities and improve race relations in America.[2][3][7]

Wolfe's book includes a white character who embodies the comments by white critics and other outsiders on Shuffle Along.[4]

Synopsis

F. E. Miller and his vaudeville partner Aubrey Lyles conceive the show that was to become Shuffle Along. They meet fellow vaudevillians Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake and decide to team up to create the all-black production. They tour the show, playing one-night stands in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania, packing the cast into cheap motels and selling their personal possessions to pay for train fare. A romance develops between the married Eubie Blake and the show's leading lady, Lottie Gee, a veteran vaudeville performer who finally got her chance to star in the show. The creatives discuss whether or not to include a love song and embrace between the two black leads, a controversial experiment that had been received with tar and feathers in the few instances where it had been tried before; fortunately, the audiences accept it. Arriving in New York during the Depression of 1920–21, Shuffle Along is deep in debt and struggles to raise money. It faces stiff competition on Broadway in a season that includes surefire hits from Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. and George White, and it was relegated to a remote theater on West 63rd Street with no orchestra pit. Opening night is a hit!

Shuffle Along becomes a long-running success, with popular songs like "I'm Just Wild About Harry".[6][8] The partners do not have the same success during the following years and argue about royalties. Lyles announces that he is moving to Africa, and the creators go their separate ways. The romance between Blake and Gee ends. Everyone wants to be remembered for having done something important, but over the decades, the show fades into obscurity.

Musical numbers

Act I[9]
  • "Broadway Blues" – Company
  • "Affectionate Dan" – Noble, Eubie
  • "Sellin' the Show" – Eubie, Noble, F.E., Aubrey
  • "Introducing Sam" – Sam, Eubie, Noble, F.E., Aubrey
  • "Makin' a Show" – Company
  • "I’m Simply Full of Jazz" – Gertrude, Jimtown Flappers
  • "Honeysuckle Time" – Lottie, Eubie
  • "Swing Along" – F.E., Company
  • "Campaign Songs" – Company
  • "Bandana Days" – Jazz Jasmines
  • "Love Will Find a Way" – Lottie
  • "If You’ve Never Been Vamped by a Brownskin" – Harmony Kings
  • "You Got to Git the Gittin' While the Gittin's Good" – Noble, Noble's Shadows
  • "Ain't It a Shame" – Company
  • "Pennsylvania Graveyard Shuffle" – Dancin' Kids
  • "Daddy, Won’t You Please Come Home" – Lottie
  • "(I'm Just) Wild About Harry" – Lottie, Gertrude, Li'l Baby C
  • "Act One Finale" – Company

Act II[9]
  • "Dance Around the One" – Dancin' Kids, Harmony Kings
  • "Shuffle Along" – Lottie, Dancing Waiters
  • "Struttin'" – Noble, Eubie, F.E., Aubrey
  • "I’m Cravin' That Kind of Love" – Florence, Lottie
  • "Till Georgie Took 'Em Away" – Harmony Kings, William Grant Still
  • "The Broadway Buzz" – Izzy, Company
  • "Rang Tang/Chocolate Dandies" – The Dancin' Kids
  • "It’s Getting Dark on Old Broadway" – Mr. Broadway, Mr. Broadway's Girls
  • "The Comedy Chorus Gal" – Freda, Baker Boys
  • "Uptown Noir" – Harmony Kings
  • "You're Lucky to Me" – Lottie, Eubie
  • "Low Down Blues" – Aubrey
  • "Shuffle Along" (reprise) – F.E.
  • "Musical Selections with Sissle and Blake" – Eubie, Noble, Harriet, Avis
  • "Memories of You" – Lottie
  • "The Original Broadway Rag" – Carlo, Company
  • "Shuffle Off" – Florence, Lottie, F.E., Aubrey, Eubie, Noble

Productions

The show was given two workshops in the fall 2015; there was no out-of-town tryout.[10] The production began previews on Broadway on March 15 and opened officially on April 28, 2016, at the Music Box Theatre, directed by Wolfe, with choreography by Savion Glover.[11] The two worked together two decades earlier, with great success, on Bring in 'da Noise, Bring in 'da Funk.[4] Shuffle Along closed on Broadway on July 24, 2016, after 38 previews and 100 regular performances.[1][12]

Characters and original cast

Character Cast[13][14]
Lottie Gee Audra McDonald
F. E. Miller Brian Stokes Mitchell
Aubrey Lyles Billy Porter
Eubie Blake Brandon Victor Dixon
Noble Sissle Joshua Henry
Al, Izzy, Mr. Broadway, Carlo Brooks Ashmanskas
Gertrude Saunders, Florence Mills Adrienne Warren

Critical response

Opening night reviews were mostly positive, especially with respect to the songs and dancing, with nearly all reviewers giving Audra McDonald rave notices. Ben Brantley of The New York Times calls it an "intoxicating and sobering concoction", writing: "Often you sense that Mr. Wolfe has a checklist of historic points he must, but must, cover. ... The clunky, shoehorned-in exposition doesn't overwhelm the sweeping grace of "Shuffle Along" whenever it sings or dances."[15]

Terry Teachout, reviewing for The Wall Street Journal, wrote: "The first half of ... Shuffle Along is to 2016 what Hamilton was to 2015: It's the musical you’ve got to see. ... The cast, led by Audra McDonald, Brian Stokes Mitchell and Billy Porter, is as charismatic as you’d expect, and Savion Glover's near-nonstop choreography explodes off the stage with the unrelenting impact of a flamethrower. But then comes intermission, and what had looked like a masterpiece goes flat and stays that way."[16]

In her review for Variety, Marilyn Stasio wrote that the show "is to die for" and is "ebullient", and that an "incoherent book" is a "small price to pay for the joy of watching Audra McDonald cut loose."[17]

Major awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2016 Tony Award[18] Best Musical Nominated
Best Book of a Musical George C. Wolfe Nominated
Best Featured Actor in a Musical Brandon Victor Dixon Nominated
Best Featured Actress in a Musical Adrienne Warren Nominated
Best Scenic Design of a Musical Santo Loquasto Nominated
Best Costume Design of a Musical Ann Roth Nominated
Best Lighting Design of a Musical Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer Nominated
Best Direction of a Musical George C. Wolfe Nominated
Best Choreography Savion Glover Nominated
Best Orchestrations Daryl Waters Nominated
Drama Desk Award[19] Outstanding Musical Won
Outstanding Costume Design for a Musical Ann Roth Won
Outstanding Lighting Design for a Musical Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer Nominated
Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical Scott Lehrer Nominated
Outstanding Wigs and Hair Mia M. Neal Won
Outstanding Choreography Savion Glover Won
New York Drama Critics Circle Award[20] Best Musical Won
Fred and Adele Astaire Awards Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show Adrienne Warren Nominated
Outstanding Male Dancer in a Broadway Show Phillip Attmore Won
Curtis Holland Nominated
Kendrick Jones Nominated
Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show Savion Glover Won
Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show Won

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Hetrick, Adam and Robert Viagas. "Shuffle Along Sets July Broadway Closing", Playbill, June 23, 2016
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Stage Tube: Shuffle Along Songwriter Eubie Blake Sings Title Song on Original LP", BroadwayWorld.com, February 7, 2016
  3. 1 2 3 Glass, pp. 176–179
  4. 1 2 3 Sullivan, John Jeremiah. "Shuffle Along and the Lost History of Black Performance in America", The New York Times Magazine, March 24, 2016
  5. Zoglin, Richard. "Broadway Shuffle", Time magazine, May 23, 2016 issue, pp. 42–45
  6. 1 2 McBride, Walter. "Up on the Marquee: Shuffle Along", BroadwayWorld, February 4, 2016
  7. Chary, EllaRose. "Black History Month – Innovative Musical Contributions: Eubie Blake", Music Theatre International, February 27, 2012, accessed March 22, 2016
  8. Cox, Gordon. "Audra McDonald to Star in Broadway Musical Produced by Scott Rudin", Variety, March 12, 2015
  9. 1 2 Opening night theatre program, Music Box Theatre, March 15, 2016
  10. Viagas, Robert. "The Verdict: Critics Review Broadway’s Shuffle Along", Playbill, April 28, 2016
  11. Ali, Rahim. "Audra McDonald to Star in New Broadway Musical With Savion Glover", bet.com, March 13, 2015, accessed June 7, 2015
  12. Paulson, Michael. "‘Shuffle Along’ Decides It Can’t Go on Without Audra McDonald", The New York Times, June 26, 2016
  13. "Onstage", ShuffleAlongBroadway.com, accessed March 14, 2016
  14. Purcell, Carey. "Brian Stokes Mitchell and Audra McDonald Will Reunite on Broadway in Shuffle Along, Billy Porter Joins Them", Playbill.com, August 9, 2015
  15. "Review Roundup: Shuffle Along Opens on Broadway – All the Reviews!", BroadwayWorld.com, April 28, 2016
  16. Teachout, Terry. "Shuffle Along Review: Half of Perfection", The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2016
  17. Stasio, Marilyn. "Broadway Review: Shuffle Along", Variety, April 28, 2016
  18. "See Full List of 2016 Tony Award Nominations", Playbill, May 3, 2016
  19. Viagas, Robert. "'She Loves Me' Leads Drama Desk Nominations", Playbill, April 28, 2016
  20. "Shuffle Along and The Humans Win NY Drama Critics’ Circle Awards", Playbill, May 5, 2016

Sources

Further reading

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