As “A Chorus Line” celebrates its 50th anniversary, a Hamptons home once owned by the groundbreaking musical’s famed composer, the late Marvin Hamlisch, has hit the market for $3.99 million, Gimme ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Marvin Hamlisch, the award-winning composer of "A Chorus Line" and "The Way We Were", has died suddenly at the age of 68, prompting warm tributes from Barbra Streisand, Liza ...
REUTERS - Marvin Hamlisch, the award-winning composer of Broadway show "A Chorus Line" and more than 40 movie scores including "The Way We Were" and "The Sting", has died in Los Angeles at the age of ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... It shouldn’t be a shocker that the Phamaly Theatre Company is mounting “A Chorus Line,” the multi-Tony Award-winning 1975 musical about a group of hopefuls ...
Watching a new Broadway musical early on, you can always tell when one is going to be really big. The standing ovation is physically involuntary — not out of politeness or a ploy to be first in line ...
NEW YORK - Marvin Hamlisch was blessed with perfect pitch and an infallible ear. "I heard sounds that other children didn't hear," he wrote in his autobiography. He turned that skill into writing and ...
A Chorus Line marks its 50th anniversary at Goodspeed Musicals, showcasing the intense journey of 17 dancers competing for spots in a Broadway chorus. Directed by Rob Ruggiero and choreographed by ...
Seventeen stories. Eight chances. One singular sensation. New York City. 1975. On an empty Broadway stage, seventeen performers are put through their paces in the final, gruelling audition for a new ...
Marvin Hamlisch is one of the most decorated musical figures in history. Winner of three Oscars, three Golden Globes, four Emmy’s, four Grammy’s, a Tony and a Pulitzer Prize, the late ...
A Chorus Line took its first bows in 1975, 25-years before the reality television phenomenon took hold, 31-years before American Idol ever trended on Twitter, and 34-years before Glee took the ...
The 24 dancers going through the “step, kick, kick, leap, kick, touch” combination in the iconic opening moments of A Chorus Line are such nobodies they’re referred to not by name but by number.