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Bye Bye Birdie select one of the following:
Book by Michael Stewart
Music by Charles Strouse
Lyrics by Lee Adams
Originally Produced by Edward Padula
BYE BYE BIRDIE is one of the most captivating musical shows of our
time. It is a satire done with the fondest affection, and tells the
story of a rock and roll singer who is about to be inducted into the
army. An English Teacher, What Did I Ever See in Him?, Put on a Happy
Face, One Boy, A Lot of Livin' to Do, Kids, Rosie and Spanish
Rose are musical theatre classics. This is the tops in imagination
and good old fashion fun.
4 Tony Awards for Musical, Director, Choreography and Supporting or Featured Actor
The Outer Critics Circle Award for Musical
BYE BYE BIRDIE played on Broadway for 607 performances at the Martin
Beck Theatre and 268 performances in London at Her Majesty's Theatre.
BYE BYE BIRDIE is one of the most captivating
musical shows of our time. It tells the story of a rock and roll singer
who is about to be inducted into the army. The singer, Conrad Birdie,
an Elvis Presley type, has a pompadour and thick sideburns; he wears
gaudy gold costumes and speaks in a rugged voice. Albert Peterson, his
agent, is a very pleasant mild mannered young man. Albert's faithful
secretary Rose Alvarez keeps him and Birdie moving forward in the world.
Rosie concocts one final national publicity plan before Conrad's induction.
Conrad will bid a typical American teen-age
girl goodbye with an all-American kiss. Kim MacAfee in Sweet Apple,
Ohio wins the honor. All of the phones in her town are already busy
during The Telephone Hour as Kim has just been pinned to Hugo,
a local boy. She is a pretty girl of fifteen and sings with springlike
ardor How Lovely to Be a Woman, as she pulls on the plaid woolen
socks and the baggy mustard colored sweater considered stylish and popular
among young ladies.
The arrival of Birdie in Sweet Apple causes
people of all ages to swoon. Birdie says that his success is due to
the fact that he is Honestly Sincere when he sings, and the quiet
little town goes into a spin. The MacAfee household is completely upset
by the visiting celebrity. It is decided that Birdie will give his One
Last Kiss on the Ed Sullivan show. Kim's father who laments the
whole uproar, tries to break into the act and behaves like a ham on
the TV show. Hymn for a Sunday Evening is a salute to the greater
glory of Ed Sullivan.
Birdie becomes disgusted with his life
and goes out on the town with the teenagers. He feels tense with Albert
and is tired of being supervised. The parents of Sweet Apple cannot
understand the new generation and express this in Kids. Rosie,
still waiting for that band of gold from Albert after eight years, invades
a Shriners' meeting. An extremely hilarious ballet ensues. She then
decides to become the Latin American spitfire that she is painted as,
by Albert's lead-footed catastrophe-ridden mother. She is determined
to become Spanish Rose. Kim is reunited with Hugo, and Rose with
Albert in the lovely number Rosie. Other hit numbers include
A Lot of Livin' to Do and Put on a Happy Face.
BYE BYE BIRDIE is a satire done with the
fondest affection. It gives an insight into the everyday life that is
very much part of us all. It is the tops in imagination and frivolity;
a show that will be enjoyed by the cast as much as the audience.
| 3 |
Violins |
| 2 |
Cellos |
| 1 |
Bass |
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| 1 |
Reed I: Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute & Piccolo |
| 1 |
Reed II: Alto Saxophone & Clarinet |
| 1 |
Reed III: Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet |
| 1 |
Reed IV: Clarinet, Bass Clarinet & Baritone Saxophone |
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| 1 |
Horn |
| 1 |
Trumpets I & II |
| 1 |
Trumpet III |
| 1 |
Trombone I |
| 1 |
Trombone II |
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| 1 |
Piano |
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| 2 |
Percussion I & II: (trap drum set & mallet instruments)
- Percussion I:
- Bells (Glockenspiel)
- Vibraphone
- Xylophone
- Chimes
- Timpani (2 drums)
- Tambourine
- Timbales
- Gran Cassa
- Snare Drum Case
- Suspended Cymbal
- Castanets
- Gourd
- Cowbell
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- Percussion II:
- Trap drum set-
- Bass Drum
- Snare Drum & Rack Tom
- Floor Tom
- various Cymbals
- Wood Blocks (2)
- Bongos
- Large Military Snare Drum
- Gong
- Gunshot
- Kazoo (or Ratchet)
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Both players use Piatti, Triangle and Ratchet |
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| 1 |
Guitar-Banjo (Banjo for "Overture A"; Electric Bass for
"Telephone Hour" and "One Hundred Ways - Ballet" only) |
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Piano-Conductor's Score sent with rehearsal material. |
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A special Keyboard Synthesizer part is available, when the complete orchestration is used, at an additional charge. It may be substituted for the 3 violin and 2 cello parts. |
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Also available, at an additional charge: Full Orchestra Score (Partitur) in 4 volumes. |
Stage Manager's Guide
3 Optional Additional Songs, from the 1995 television presentation:
Spanish Rose (Revised)
Let's Settle Down
A Mother Doesn't Matter Anymore
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