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Interview: Adam Guettel

Sondheim loves him — find out why

May 16, 2014 09:40
Adam Guettel: 'I don't write about perfect people or winners'

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

If you don't know Adam Guettel's name, that's not too surprising. His work has not been performed on a major stage in London. But among those who love their musical theatre in New York, there is no one whose talent is held in higher regard. Except that of the greatest living composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim. And even he counts himself as one of Guettel's admirers. So much so that Sondheim once cited a song from Guettel's first musical Floyd Collins (1994) among those he wished he had written. And as with Sondheim, Guettel also writes lyrics and music.

Guettel's reputation is in inverse proportion to the amount of his work that has reached the stage. There have been only a handful of shows. But feel the quality. In 2005 The Light in the Piazza won him two Tony Awards, one for the score, the other for the orchestrations. His work has some of New York's hardest-to-please critics grasping for superlatives. Some of it will be heard next week in London when he and Maria Friedman perform together for the London Festival of Cabaret.

Guettel has an illustrious forebear - his maternal grandfather Richard Rodgers, who with lyricists Lorenz Hart, and then Oscar Hammerstein, composed some of the greatest shows in the canon, among them Pal Joey, Oklahoma, Carousel and South Pacific. And his answer to the hoary old question about why Jews are so over-represented in Broadway musical theatre?

"I really don't know." And then with an eloquence that has something of a Barack Obama address, he casually adds: "I think part of the Jewish tradition is to protest. And singing is a form of protestation. It is gestural by definition and to lift the voice into song is akin to making waves." This is as insightful a response as you are likely to get to this question. So the Jewish relationship with musicals is a little like the Jewish relationship with God to whom Jews are as likely to argue with as pray to.

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