Les Misérables Los Angeles
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Les Misérables, commonly known as Les
Mis, is a musical based on the novel Les Miserables by Victor
Hugo. It tells the story of ex-convict Jean Valjean and his
attempts to start a new life and make the world a better place.
The musical's emblem is a picture of the waif Cosette, usually
shown cropped to a head-and-shoulders portrait with the French
national flag superimposed.
Well-known songs from the musical include "I Dreamed
a Dream", "Master of the House", "Do You
Hear the People Sing?", "On My Own", "Empty
Chairs at Empty Tables", "Stars", "At
the End of the Day", and "One Day More".
The musical was written by the composer Claude-Michel Schönberg
and the librettist Alain Boublil. It opened in September 1980
at the Palais des Sports in Paris for a projected eight-week
season; such was its success that it ran for sixteen weeks,
closing only because the venue was already committed to other
projects after that point. Les Misérables was a part
of the major European influence on Broadway in the 80's and
along with Cats, The Phantom of the Opera, and Miss Saigon,
they are often collectively known as the greatest musicals
in history.
In 1982, English producer Cameron Mackintosh began work on
an English language version, with lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer.
The first English production, produced by Mackintosh and directed
by Trevor Nunn, opened on October 8, 1985, in the Barbican
Theatre, London. It starred Colm Wilkinson as Valjean, Rebecca
Caine as Cosette, Patti LuPone as Fantine, Roger Allam as
the persistent Inspector Javert, and Alun Armstrong as the
villainous rogue Thenardier. On December 4, 1985, it transferred
to the Palace Theatre, and moved again on April 3, 2004 to
the Queen's Theatre. On October 8, 1995, the show's 10th anniversary
was celebrated with a concert at the Royal Albert Hall; one
of the finalés was a performance of "Do You Hear
the People Sing?" sung a line at a time by seventeen
Jean Valjeans, each from a different production in a different
country.
The Broadway production opened on March 12, 1987 at the Broadway
Theater. Colm Wilkinson and Frances Ruffelle (as Eponine)
reprised their roles from the London production. The musical
won the Tony Award for Best Musical in that year, and won
in five additional categories: Michael Maguire for Actor in
a Featured Role, Musical; Frances Ruffelle for Actress in
a Featured Role, Musical; Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel
Schönberg for Book, Musical; Trevor Nunn and John Caird
for Director, Musical; and David Hersey for Lighting Design.
The musical ran at the Broadway Theater through October 10,
1990, when it moved to the Imperial Theatre. It was scheduled
to close on March 15, 2003, but the closing was postponed
by a surge in public interest, probably as a result of the
announcement. After 6,680 performances in sixteen years, when
it closed on May 18, 2003, it was the third-longest-running
Broadway musical after Cats and The Phantom of the Opera.
In 2002, a student edition of the musical became available.
This is notable because it is unusual for a student edition
to be released while professional productions (London and
US touring productions) are still showing. However, all the
actors in the school edition must be students (under 19 and
unpaid), in order to prevent theatre companies from performing
the show. It is also shorter than the "official"
version, although no major scenes or songs have been removed
(some, however, are very substantially cut). The official
poster and cover art for the student edition features Cosette
wearing a letterman jacket and holding a textbook.
Les Miserables opened in 2000 in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
being the second version in Spanish after the 1993 Madrid
version. It ran for eight months at Teatro Ópera. The
Spanish-spoken version (Madrid, Buenos Aires, México)
is the only international version having changed its name
from "Les Misérables" to "Los Miserables".
No recording was made from the Buenos Aires production, the
Madrid production being the one and only Spanish recorded
version of the show. The official webpage of the show still
has a link to the Argentine production: http://www.lesmis.com/ag.htm
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