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...Little Light Music. Colonial Theater. A new Stephen Sondheim musical, based on Ingmar Bergman's Smiles of a Summer Night. Producer Harold Prince says it's nostalgic but erotic, whatever that means...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the stage | 1/31/1973 | See Source »

...this pastime the up-coming week will bring three heavy-duty openings. Little Godfather A1 Pacino comes to the Loeb as Richard III. Pacino, who played in the Basic Training of Pavle Hummel downtown last spring, has a terrific stage presence that will soon become justifiably renowned. Stephen Sondheim and Hal Prince do Bergman in A Little Night Music, a new musical comedy. Previews start Saturday: Vogue Magazine predicts. "It's a winner." No, No Nanette is also in town. Since this dreary musical spectacle originally glorified New York and Atlantic City back in 1925 it's been straight downhill...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the stage | 1/18/1973 | See Source »

Company. Stephen Sondheim's brilliant, sophisticated musical at a Framingham dinner theater. Although it could be disaster, it might just be suitable to see the "Ladies Who Lunch" with the suburbanites who dine...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the Stage | 10/26/1972 | See Source »

...Funny Thing (music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim) was first performed on Broadway ten years ago, and is right now enjoying a deleriously successful revival in New York. A light-hearted, bawdy affair, replete with slapstick routines and terrible puns, you know it works if you have to strain to hear the dialogue under the audience guffaws. The production at Leverett House is a mixed bag, but the book and the performances generate a lot of laughs...

Author: By Elizabeth Samuels, | Title: A Funny Thing... | 4/22/1972 | See Source »

WINSOME, The Wrongway Inn is not. Although the show is a bit too long episodic, director-choreographer Voight Kempson has injected a good deal of energy and brought off some splendid dance routines. The second-act kickline ("The Don't Tread-on-Me-Blues"--composer Stephen Sondheim seem's to have been the evening's guiding light) is a harlequin-outfitted Busby Berkely spectacular which has nothing at all to do with the plot and is probably all the better for it. As proper compliment to the direction, Franco Colavecchia has done a swell job of set design--his complicated...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: The Wrongway Inn | 3/4/1972 | See Source »

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