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Making fun of Andrew Lloyd Webber

Producers David Babani and John Freedson are staging a biting but affectionate satire of hit musicals and their creators.

July 8, 2009 15:50
David Bibani USE

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

Oh, the irony. Theatre producer David Babani’s first West End show was a New York revue called Forbidden Broadway, a parody of the great American and the great British musical. The show was packed with mickey-taking turns that took the rise out of the theatrical establishment.

A decade later Babani has once again joined forces with his American counterpart John Freedson — who joined the show in 1985 as a performer and has since served as its producer — to stage an updated London version of Forbidden Broadway. Targets this time include productions such as La Cage aux Folles, and Sunday in the Park With George. And the irony is that these are Babani’s own productions. Once the up-and-coming producer with his nose pressed to the theatre establishment’s window, Babani is now part of the very theatrical establishment lampooned by Forbidden Broadway.

Forbidden was born in New York when unemployed performer Gerard Alessandrini had the bright idea of drumming up some work by writing a show for himself. For material he looked to Broadway’s biggest hits and rewrote many of the songs as loving but cutting parodies. The cabaret opened at the Palsson’s Supper Club in 1982, beginning a record-breaking run of last of 27 years which only ended in March. Over that period, the satire, which was constantly updated to take account of new hit shows, became a full-time job for Alessandrini and picked up a bunch of awards.

“It was my first West End show,” remembers Babani. “Yours too,” he says to his co-producer Freedson.