|
YAMAHA HELPS BRING "HORRORS" TO BROADWAY
BUENA PARK, CA (January 2, 2004)Suddenly, Seymour is back
on the New York stage-along with Audrey, Mr. Mushnik and, of course,
Audrey II, the man-eating plant that powers his rise from nebbishy
flower-shop clerk to
less nebbishy flower-shop clerk with
a girlfriend. Little Shop of Horrors is enjoying a hot revival
at Broadway's Virginia Theatre, more than 20 years after its off-Broadway
debut.
 |
|
Seymour
(Hunter Foster) and the dangerous Audrey II (voiced by Michael-Leon
Wooley) square off in the new Broadway version of the classic
camp musical.
|
At the request of composer Alan Menken, a Yamaha MPC3
Grand MIDIPiano is anchoring the show's orchestra. Musical director
Henry Aronson plays the instrument during performances, both as
a piano and as a MIDI controller for many of the other reed, string
and electric piano sounds that give Little Shop its signature
period sound.
"The issue was really the piano sound, primarily," Aronson
says. "Broadway pits are usually pretty crowded places, and
a lot of pits don't use a real piano. But Little Shop is
a really piano-centered show. The primary concern was getting a
really fine instrument in there, and on top of that, we wanted to
have the flexibility to do some MIDI stuff."
Perhaps best known for the 1986 Frank Oz film version starring
Rick Moranis, Ellen Greene, Vincent Gardenia and Steve Martin, Little
Shop first came to prominence in its 1982 off-Broadway staging.
But few recall that it began as a 1960 film that director Roger
Corman shot in only two days.
The new production, directed by Jerry Zaks, features Menken's music,
book and lyrics by Howard Ashman and puppet design by The Jim Henson
Workshop. Hunter Foster (Seymour) and Kerry Butler (Audrey) star
in the familiar lead roles, with Rob Bartlett as Mr. Mushnik, Douglas
Sills as demented dentist Orin Scrivello and Michael-Leon Wooley
as the voice of Audrey II.
"It's a great feeling for me to have a responsive piano there,"
says Aronson, who uses a Yamaha Clavinova digital piano at home
for composition and practice. "There's a fair amount of pounding
rock and roll stuff. But there are also some ballads in there. This
gives me a lot more responsiveness as a player, and I can get more
out of it."
According to David Obele, the show's assistant to the music contractor,
the orchestra pit had already been covered with a stage extension
by the time Menken brought in the Yamaha MIDIPiano, and technicians
actually had to dismantle part of the theater wall to get it in
place. But, he notes, it was worth it.
"I think this instrument in particular allows us a lot of
control to create the sound that has become attached to Little
Shop of Horrors," Obele says. "It's a rock score,
it's not a typical theatre score. People know what it sounds like
through the movie, and now that we've got it live, it allows us
to recreate that with minimum headaches."
For more information about Yamaha pianos, write Yamaha Corporation
of America, Piano Division, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622-6600;
email infostation@yamaha.com;
visit www.yamaha.com or telephone (714) 522-9011.
|