Little Shop of Horrors (musical)

Little Shop of Horrors (musical)
Little Shop of Horrors
LittleShopAlbum.jpg
Original Cast Album
Music Alan Menken
Lyrics Howard Ashman
Book Howard Ashman
Basis Roger Corman film
The Little Shop of Horrors
Productions 1982 Off-Broadway
1983 West End
1986 Film
2003 Broadway
2004 U.S. National Tour
International productions
2006 West End Revival
2009 UK Tour
Awards Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Musical
Drama Desk Award for Best Musical
Outer Critics Circle Award
Evening Standard Award for Best Musical

Little Shop of Horrors is a rock musical, by composer Alan Menken and writer Howard Ashman, about a hapless florist shop worker who raises a plant that feeds on human blood. The musical is based on the low-budget 1960 black comedy film The Little Shop of Horrors, directed by Roger Corman. The music, composed by Menken in the style of early 1960s rock and roll, doo-wop and early Motown, includes several well-known tunes, including the title song, "Skid Row (Downtown)", "Somewhere That's Green", and "Suddenly, Seymour".

In addition to the original long-running 1982 off-Broadway production and subsequent Broadway production, the musical has been performed all over the world. Because of its small cast and relatively simple orchestrations, it has become popular with community theatre, school and other amateur groups.[1] The musical was also made into a 1986 film of the same name, directed by Frank Oz.

Contents

Synopsis

Act I

A voice "not unlike God's" recalls a time when the human race "suddenly encountered a deadly threat to its very existence". A trio of 1960s street urchins named Crystal, Ronette and Chiffon set the scene ("Little Shop of Horrors") and comment on the action throughout the show. Seymour Krelborn is a poor young man, an orphan living in an urban skid row. Audrey is a pretty blonde with a fashion sense that leans towards the tacky. They lament their stations in life and seek a life away from the urban blight ("Skid Row (Downtown)"). They are co-workers at Mushnik's Skid Row Florists, a run-down flower shop owned and operated by the cranky Mr. Mushnik. Seymour has recently obtained a mysterious plant that looks like a large venus fly trap. While he was browsing the wholesale flower district, a sudden eclipse of the sun occurred, and when the light returned, the weird plant had appeared ("Da-Doo"). Seymour is secretly in love with Audrey and names the plant Audrey II in her honor.

The little plant does not thrive in its new environment and appears to be dying. Seymour questions why it should be doing poorly, since he takes such good care of it. He accidentally pricks his finger on a rose's thorn, which draws blood, and Audrey II's pod opens thirstily. Seymour realizes that Audrey II requires blood to survive and allows the plant to suckle from his finger ("Grow For Me"). As Audrey II grows, it becomes an attraction and begins generating brisk business for Mushnik. As the caretaker of the plant, Seymour has suddenly gone from loser to hero ("Ya Never Know"). Audrey's boyfriend beats her, and she reveals that she secretly has feelings for the timid Seymour. Her dream is to have the ideal suburban life with Seymour, complete with a tract home, frozen dinners and plastic on the furniture ("Somewhere That's Green").

Meanwhile, the employees at Mushnik's are sprucing up the flower shop, due to the popularity of the now large Audrey II, and the revenue it is bringing in ("Closed for Renovation"). Orin Scrivello, a sadistic dentist, is Audrey's abusive boyfriend. Modeled after the "Leader of the pack" characters of the 1950s, Orin drives a motorcycle, wears leather, and enjoys bringing other people pain ("Dentist!"). Orin encourages Seymour to take the plant and get out of Skid Row. Realizing that his sudden profitability is completely dependent on the plant (and therefore Seymour), Mushnik takes advantage of Seymour's innocence by offering to adopt him and make him a full partner in the business ("Mushnik and Son"). Having always wanted a family, Seymour accepts, even though Mushnik has always yelled at him and treated him poorly.

Meanwhile, Seymour is having difficulty providing enough blood to keep Audrey II healthy. When Seymour stops feeding the plant, Audrey II reveals that it can speak (in a demanding voice) and says that, if fed, it will make sure that all of Seymour's dreams come true ("Feed Me (Git It)"). Seymour initially refuses, but he then witnesses Orin abusing Audrey. The plant presents this as a justification for killing Orin. Not realizing he is being manipulated again, Seymour gives in to his baser instincts and agrees. He sets up a late-night appointment with Orin, intending to kill him. However, Seymour loses his nerve and decides not to commit the crime. Unfortunately for Orin, who has been gassing himself with nitrous oxide, the gas device is stuck in the 'on' position, and he overdoses while asking Seymour to help save him. Seymour, unable to shoot Orin, lets him asphyxiate ("Now (It's Just The Gas)"). Seymour feeds Orin's body to the now huge Audrey II, and the plant consumes it with ravenous glee ("Act I Finale").

Act II

The flower shop is busier than ever, and Seymour and Audrey are having trouble keeping up with the onslaught of new business ("Call Back in the Morning"). Audrey eventually confides to Seymour that she feels guilty about Orin's disappearance, because she secretly wished it. The two admit their feelings for one another, and Seymour promises that he will protect and care for Audrey from now on ("Suddenly, Seymour"). The two plan to leave together and start a new life, although Seymour mistakenly attributes Audrey's feelings to his newfound fame, not realizing that she loved him even before, when he was just a shophand.

Before they can go, Mushnik confronts Seymour to accuse him of causing Orin's death, saying that the police are investigating, although they don't have much evidence yet; Mushnik has put two and two together: the bloody dentist's uniform, the drops of blood on the floor, and he has seen Seymour and Audrey kissing. Seymour denies it, but Mushnik wants him to give a statement to the police. Audrey II tells Seymour that he has to be rid of Mushnik or he will lose everything including Audrey ("Suppertime"). Seymour tells Mushnik that he put the days' receipts inside Audrey II for safekeeping. Mushnik climbs inside the plant's gaping maw to search for the money, realizing the deception too late, and screams as he is chomped on, slurped and swallowed. Seymour now runs the flower shop and is approached by reporters, salesman, lawyers, and agents promising fame and fortune. Although tempted by the trappings of his success, Seymour realizes that it is only a matter of time before Audrey II will kill again and that he is morally responsible. He considers destroying the plant but, believing that his fame is the only thing that is earning him Audrey's love, he is unable to do so ("The Meek Shall Inherit").

As Seymour works on his speech for a lecture tour, Audrey II again squalls for blood. Seymour threatens to kill it just as Audrey walks in asking when Mushnik will return from visiting his "sick sister". Seymour learns that Audrey would still love him without the fame and decides that Audrey II must die after the scheduled LIFE magazine interview at the shop. Audrey is confused and frightened by Seymour's ramblings, but she runs home by his order. That night, unable to sleep and distressed by Seymour's strange behavior, Audrey goes to the flower shop to talk with him. He is not there, and the plant locks the door and begs her to water him. Not sensing the mortal danger, she approaches to water it, and a vine wraps around her and pulls her into the plant's gaping jaws ("Sominex/Suppertime II"). Seymour walks in, realizes what is happening, and rushes at the plant in an attempt to save Audrey. He pulls her out, but Audrey is mortally wounded and tells him to feed her to the plant after she dies so that they can always be together. She dies in his arms, and he reluctantly honors her request ("Somewhere That's Green" (reprise)). Seymour falls asleep as Audrey II grows small red flower buds.

The next day, Patrick Martin from the World Botanical Enterprises tells Seymour that his company wishes to take leaf cuttings of Audrey II and sell them across America. Seymour realizes what the plant's evil plan was all along; Audrey II caused the solar eclipse and came from an unknown planet to conquer Earth. He then tries shooting, cutting and poisoning the plant, but it has grown too hardy to kill. Seymour, in desperation, runs into its open jaws with a machete planning to kill it from the inside, but he is quickly eaten. Patrick, Crystal, Ronette and Chiffon search for Seymour. Not finding him, Patrick tells the girls to take the cuttings.

Crystal, Ronette and Chiffon relate that, following these events, other plants appeared across America, tricking innocent people into feeding them blood in exchange for fame and fortune. Out of the fog, Audrey II, bigger than ever, appears with opened new flowers revealing the faces of Seymour, Audrey, Mushnik and Orin, who beg that, no matter how persuasive the plants may be, they must not be fed ("Finale Ultimo (Don't Feed the Plants)"). Audrey II slithers towards the audience and threatens them. (In the original off-Broadway production, plant tendrils fell all over the audience, as if each audience member were being pulled into the plant. In the Broadway production, a monstrously huge Audrey II was projected out over the fifth row and the balcony seats, as if it would eat the audience members.)

Original production

The musical had its world premiere on May 6, 1982 at the Workshop of the Players' Art (WPA) Theatre. It opened off-Broadway at the Orpheum Theatre on July 27, 1982. This original production, directed by Ashman, with musical staging by Edie Cowan, was critically acclaimed and won several awards including the 1982-1983 New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Musical, the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical, and the Outer Critics Circle Award.[2] Howard Ashman wrote, in the introduction to the acting edition of the libretto, that the show "satirizes many things: science fiction, 'B' movies, musical comedy itself, and even the Faust legend".[3]

When it closed on November 1, 1987, after 2,209 performances, it was the third-longest running musical[4] and the highest-grossing production in off-Broadway history.[5] Though a Broadway transfer had been proposed for the production, book writer Howard Ashman felt the show belonged where it was.[6] The production ran for 5 years. Since it was not produced on Broadway, the original production was ineligible for the 1982 Tony Awards. The producers were the WPA Theatre, David Geffen, Cameron Mackintosh and the Shubert Organization. The Audrey II puppets were designed and operated by Martin P. Robinson.[3]

An original cast recording, released in 1982, omits the songs "Call Back in the Morning", and "Somewhere That's Green" (reprise), and only had abridged versions of "Now (It's Just the Gas)," "Mushnik and Son," and "The Meek Shall Inherit." It also shifts the location of the song "Closed for Renovation," appearing in the show after "Somewhere That's Green" while appearing on the cast album after "Now (It's Just the Gas)" to serve as an upbeat bridge from Orin's death to the Act II love ballad, "Suddenly, Seymour".[7] This recording features Leilani Jones, who replaced Marlene Danielle as Chiffon two weeks after the musical opened.

Original Off-Broadway cast

  • Seymour Krelborn — Lee Wilkof
  • Audrey — Ellen Greene
  • Mr. Mushnik — Hy Anzell
  • Chiffon — Marlene Danielle (replaced after two weeks by Leilani Jones)
  • Crystal — Jennifer Leigh Warren
  • Ronette — Sheila Kay Davis
  • Audrey II (voice) — Ron Taylor
  • Audrey II (manipulation) / Wino #1 — Martin P. Robinson[8]
  • Orin Scrivello, Narrator, Wino #2, Customer, Radio Announcer, Bernstein, Mrs. Luce, Skip Snip, and Patrick Martin — Franc Luz

1983 West End

A London West End production opened on January 1, 1983 at the Comedy Theatre, produced by Cameron Mackintosh. It ran for 813 performances, starring Barry James as Seymour and Ellen Greene (reprising her role) as Audrey. It received the Evening Standard Award for Best Musical and closed on October 5, 1985.[9][10]

Musical numbers

Act I
  • Prologue (Little Shop of Horrors) — Chiffon, Crystal and Ronette
  • Skid Row (Downtown) — Company
  • Da-Doo — Chiffon, Crystal and Ronette
  • Grow for Me — Seymour
  • Ya Never Know — Mushnik, Chiffon, Crystal, Ronette and Seymour
  • Somewhere That's Green — Audrey
  • Closed for Renovations — Seymour, Audrey and Mushnik
  • Dentist! — Orin, Chiffon, Crystal and Ronette
  • Mushnik and Son — Mushnik and Seymour
  • Sudden Changes — Seymour
  • Feed Me (Git It) — Audrey II and Seymour
  • Now (It's Just the Gas) — Orin and Seymour
  • Coda — Chiffon, Crystal, Ronette and Audrey II
Act II
  • Call Back in the Morning — Seymour and Audrey
  • Suddenly, Seymour — Seymour, Audrey, Chiffon, Crystal and Ronette
  • Suppertime — Audrey II
  • The Meek Shall Inherit — Company
  • Sominex/Suppertime (reprise) — Audrey and Audrey II
  • Somewhere That's Green (reprise) — Audrey
  • Finale Ultimo (Don't Feed the Plants) — Company

Audrey II puppets

The character of Audrey II is described as being "An anthropomorphic cross between a Venus flytrap and an avocado. It has a huge, nasty-looking pod that gains a shark-like aspect when open and snapping at food. The creature is played by a series of four increasing[ly] large puppets".[11]

The first puppet is a small potted plant "less than one foot tall" held by the actor portraying Seymour.[11] He manipulates the plant himself with his hand and then sets it down, where it is moved by an unseen hand from beneath a shelf. The second puppet is larger than the first and is operated by Seymour during the song "You Never Know". A fake arm in a sleeve matching Seymour's jacket is attached to the plant's pot, while the actor's real arm operates the plant. The third puppet sits on the floor and is large enough to hide a person inside, who moves the plant's mouth in sync with Audrey II's voice, which is supplied by an offstage actor on a microphone. The puppeteer's legs are clad in green tights with "leaf" shoes" that serve as the plant's tendrils. In Act II, the largest puppet again hides an actor inside, who manipulates the puppet's mouth and often some of its branches. By this point, the head is at least eight feet in diameter and capable of "swallowing" the three main characters. For the finale, additions can be made to make the plant appear even bigger.[11] Extra stage hands are often used to move larger branches and roots, which, in the original off-Broadway production, spilled off the stage and into the audience. In some productions, dangling vines over the house enhance the effect of Audrey II menacing the audience.

Amateur productions of Little Shop of Horrors receive designs for building the puppets from MTI, as part of the rental scripts and scores, based on the original Martin P. Robinson designs. Some companies who have produced the show in the past and built their own puppets rent them out to other companies to recoup some of their construction costs.[12]

Differences between the 1960 film and stage musical

The musical is based on the basic concept and dark comic tone of the 1960 film, although it changes much of the story. The setting is moved from Skid Row in Los Angeles to Skid Row in New York. Seymour's hypochondriacal Jewish mother is omitted, and Seymour becomes an orphan in the care of Mushnik. Also dropped is the subplot involving the two investigating cops. The characters of Mrs. Siddie Shiva and Burson Fouch are also omitted, although Mrs. Shiva is mentioned as being the shop's biggest funeral account. The character of the gleefully masochistic dental patient (played by Jack Nicholson) is deleted from the stage musical but restored in the 1986 film version (played there by Bill Murray).

In the musical, the character of the sadistic dentist, Orin Scrivello, is killed by suffocation from laughing gas instead of being stabbed with a dental instrument. His abusive relationship with Audrey is added to the musical to give Seymour a motive to kill him. In the film, Seymour murders several innocent bystanders, and Mr. Mushnik tricks a thief, who comes to rob the shop, into looking for money inside the plant, where he is eaten. In the musical, Seymour tricks Mr. Mushnik into doing the same when Mushnik plans to turn Seymour over to the police. The musical transforms two neighborhood girls into a chorus of three street urchins: Crystal, Chiffon and Ronette, named after (and reminiscent of) girl groups of the 1960s. The evil plant is named "Audrey II" rather than the film's "Audrey Junior", and instead of being a crossbreed of a butterwort and a Venus Flytrap, it is now a creature from outer space intent on taking over the world.

Perhaps the biggest difference is the ending. The musical ends with Orin, Mushnik, Audrey and Seymour all eaten by the plant, and the three girls report that Audrey II's progeny continues to consume people. In the 1960 film, Mushnik and Audrey survive, and the plant's carnivorous activities are discovered when its flowers bloom with the faces of its victims, including Seymour, imprinted on them. The musical references this ending in its finale, in which the Plant's four victims' faces are seen in its blooming flowers.

1986 film adaptation

A film version of the musical was made in 1986. Directed by Frank Oz and noted as the only film written by Howard Ashman, it starred Rick Moranis as Seymour, Ellen Greene as Audrey, Vincent Gardenia as Mr. Mushnik, Steve Martin as Orin Scrivello, DDS, and the voice of Levi Stubbs as Audrey II. Bill Murray played the small comic role of the masochist, Arthur Denton. The 1986 film follows the plot of the musical closely but omits the songs "Ya Never Know," "Mushnik and Son", "Now (It's Just the Gas)", "Sudden Changes," "Closed for Renovation" and "Call Back in the Morning"; the final cut ending also omits "Finale Ultimo (Don't Feed The Plants)". Other changes include the removal of Mr. Mushnik's adoption proposition and a new ending, in which Seymour is able to save Audrey from Audrey II and then electrocutes the plant after it has destroyed the shop. Seymour and Audrey marry and move to the tract home of her dreams, but a small Audrey II-type bud is seen in their garden, which portends a possible spread of the alien plants. An ending more faithful to the stage version was filmed, in which the plant eats Audrey and Seymour and then, having grown to massive size and reproduced, goes on a King Kong-style rampage through New York City. It was received poorly by test audiences, and the upbeat alternate ending was used for the theatrical cut. A new song for Audrey II, "Mean Green Mother from Outer Space", was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song.

Subsequent productions

2003 tryout and Broadway

Poster for 2003 tryout in Florida starring Alice Ripley and Hunter Foster

In 2003, an $8 million revival of Little Shop of Horrors was planned with the goal of opening on Broadway on August 14. A $1 million pre-Broadway production debuted at the Actor's Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre in Coral Gables, Florida on May 16, 2003. The revival featured several people involved in the original 1982 production. Lee Wilkoff, who originated the role of Seymour in 1982, was cast as Mr. Mushnik. The production was directed by Wilkoff's wife, Connie Grappo, who was the assistant to Howard Ashman during the original production.[6] Martin P. Robinson, who designed the original Audrey II puppets and was a muppeteer for Sesame Street, enlisted his friends at The Jim Henson Company to create new, high tech puppets especially for the show. Hunter Foster and Alice Ripley joined the cast as Seymour and Audrey, respectively, and the prologue was recited by Robert Stack.[13]

This version of Little Shop of Horrors received mixed reviews, with some critics complaining that by expanding it to fit a larger theatre, the intimacy of the show was lost. Other critics were harsher, calling the show "flat" and "uninspired", judging several actors as miscast,[citation needed] although the Miami Herald declared that "Alice Ripley's Audrey – part lisping Kewpie doll (a la Ellen Greene, who originated the role), part dental punching bag – is heartbreakingly adorable."[14]

In June 2003, the producers announced that the Broadway production was being canceled because "In spite of the great number of talented people involved, the elements of this production did not come together in the way we would have liked."[15] Nevertheless, the production was not quite dead. Producers ousted Grappo in favor of veteran Broadway director Jerry Zaks and fired everyone in the cast except Foster.[16][17] New casting began on June 3, with plans for September previews.

The musical finally made its Broadway debut at the Virginia Theatre on October 2, 2003 with a cast including Foster as Seymour, Kerry Butler as Audrey, Rob Bartlett as Mr. Mushnik, Douglas Sills as Orin, Michael-Leon Wooley as the voice of Audrey II and DeQuina Moore as Chiffon.[16][17] Although this was the first time it had played on Broadway, the show's success in film and numerous regional productions made it fall under the "Revival" category for the 2003 Tony Awards. Foster was nominated for a 2004 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his performance.

The revival was fairly faithful to the original 1982 production, although there were some changes. It used the expanded version of the title song heard in the 1986 film, expanded the song "You Never Know" with a "WSKID" radio introduction while also revising the Act I Finale and adding an Entr'acte before "Call Back in the Morning." The orchestrations were also beefed up for the bigger theatre to include reeds, trumpets and percussion, whereas the original production used a 5-piece combo.[18] In the finale, a gigantic Audrey II extended over the audience to snap its hungry jaws at them.[19]

The cast album of the production was recorded by the original Broadway cast on September 15, 2003 and was released on October 21.[20] Four songs were deleted during the show's development process: "A Little Dental Music", "The Worse He Treats Me", "We'll Have Tomorrow", and "I Found A Hobby", although they were included as bonus material for the album.[18][20]

The production closed on August 22, 2004 after 40 previews and 372 regular performances.[21] The closing Broadway cast included Joey Fatone as Seymour and Jessica-Snow Wilson as Audrey.[21]

2004 U.S. national tour

On August 10, 2004, a U.S. national tour of Little Shop of Horrors began, with Anthony Rapp starring as Seymour.[22] Audrey was played by Tari Kelly, Lenny Wolpe filled the part of Mushnik, and James Moye played Orin.[22] The tour closed April 16, 2006 in Columbus, Ohio.

2006 and 2011 London revivals

Audrey II in the 2006–07 West End production

A production began previews on November 17, 2006 at the Menier Chocolate Factory. This revival, directed by Matthew White, featured an all-new Audrey II designed by David Farley, likely based on the pitcher plant.[23] The production was a critical and commercial success and transferred to the Duke of York's Theatre in London's West End in March 2007. At the end of June 2007, the show transferred to the Ambassadors Theatre in the 's West End, and it ended its run on September 8, 2007.[24] The London cast featured Paul Keating as Seymour, Sheridan Smith as Audrey, Alistair McGowan as Orin, and Mike McShane providing the voice of Audrey II.[23] Smith and McGowan received 2008 Laurence Olivier Award nominations for their performances, and the production was nominated for Best Musical Revival.[25] The production began touring the UK in 2008.[26]

A new production opens on November 9, 2011 at The Broadway Studio Theatre, Catford.[citation needed]

1991 Animated Cartoon Series

A Saturday morning animated cartoon version, titled Little Shop, ran for one season on Fox Kids in 1991. Seymour and Audrey were depicted as teenagers, and the plant, "Audrey Junior", was not man-eating or evil, but had a huge appetite for meat and retained its catchphrase, "Feed me!" Each episode also featured two stylish music video sequences, many of which were raps by the plant. IMDB credits Frank Oz with the inspiration for turning the movie/musical into a cartoon.[27]

Notes

  1. ^ TIME magazine reported in its May 26, 2008 issue, p. 51, that this musical ranked as the most frequently produced musical by U.S. high schools in 2007.
  2. ^ "Lortel Archive for Little Shop of Horrors". Lortel Archives. http://www.lortel.org/LLA_archive/index.cfm?search_by=show&title=Little%20Shop%20of%20Horrors. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  3. ^ a b Ashman, Howard. Introductory notes, Little Shop of Horrors acting edition (1982)
  4. ^ Sedore, Clair. "Long Runs in the Theatre", World-theatres.com. Retrieved on July 30, 2008.
  5. ^ Gordon, James. "Plymouth-Whitemarsh: ‘Little Shop of Horrors’", www.philly.com, 30 March 2009, Accessed 13 August 2009
  6. ^ a b Pogrebin, Robin (2003-10-20). "The Show That Ate the Original Cast". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9904E3DD103EF933A15753C1A9659C8B63&scp=2&sq=%22Little+Shop+of+Horrors%22&st=nyt. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  7. ^ castalbumscollector.com listing
  8. ^ Audrey II was created as a series of elaborate puppets, some of which were large enough to be operated by an actor from the inside.
  9. ^ Lewis, David. "Little Shop of Horrors", The Guide to Musical Theatre
  10. ^ "History and Awards", Lyric Opera musicals site
  11. ^ a b c Music Theatre International. ""Little Shop of Horrors", Casting – Character Breakdown". http://www.mtishows.com/show_detail.asp?showid=000188. Retrieved 25 December 2008. 
  12. ^ See, for example, "Prattsburgh Central School, Audrey II Rental"
  13. ^ Gans, Andrew (2003-05-16). "Florida Engagement of Little Shop of Horrors Opens May 16". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/79584.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  14. ^ "Did FL Critics Eat Up B'way-Bound Little Shop?". Broadway.com. 2003-05-20. http://www.broadway.com/gen/Buzz_Story.aspx?CI=28350. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  15. ^ Simonson, Robert (2003-06-02). "Little Shop of Horrors Cancels Broadway Engagement". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/79855.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  16. ^ a b Gans, Andrew (2003-07-14). "Complete Casting Announced for Broadway's Little Shop of Horrors". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/80650.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  17. ^ a b Gans, Andrew (2003-08-13). "Little Shop of Horrors Cast Previews Broadway Revival". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/81192.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  18. ^ a b Suskin, Steven (2003-11-16). "On the Record: Little Shop, Albertine and Zanna". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/features/article/82777.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  19. ^ Finn, Robin (2003-10-14). "Public Lives; A Hot, Sweaty Job in a Plant, Eating People". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F07E0DF113FF937A25753C1A9659C8B63&scp=3&sq=%22Little+Shop+of+Horrors%22&st=nyt. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  20. ^ a b Jones, Kenneth (2003-09-03). "Little Shop Cast Album Due Oct. 21, With Bonus Tracks". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/81461.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  21. ^ a b Gans, Andrew (2004-08-22). "Broadway's Little Shop of Horrors Closes Its Doors Aug. 22". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/87985.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  22. ^ a b Hernandez, Ernio; Gans, Andrew (2004-08-24). "Anthony Rapp is Suddenly Seymour as Little Shop of Horrors Starts in Los Angeles, Aug. 24". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/88027.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  23. ^ a b Nathan, John (2007-08-16). "London's Little Shop of Horrors to Close in September". Playbill. http://www.playbill.com/news/article/110357.html. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  24. ^ "Little Shop of Horrors", This is Theatre, 10 November 2008
  25. ^ 2008 Olivier Award nominations
  26. ^ Roberts, John. "Little Shop of Horrors - Theatre Royal Brighton," February 17, 2009
  27. ^ Little Shop at the Internet Movie Database

References

  • Ganzl, Kurt. The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre: 2nd Edition. Schirmer Books, 2001
  • Kennedy P., Michael & John Muir. Musicals. Harper Collins Publishers, 1997.

External links


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