After just five sell-out performances at the Young Vic in 2008, Street Scene - winner of the Evening Standard Award for Best Musical - returns for a full run and national tour.
The Opera Group's artistic director John Fulljames (The Human Comedy, The Enchanted Pig, Tobias and the Angel) directs an 80-strong ensemble of singers drawn from the world of theatre and opera and a community chorus of young people local to each venue. The BBC Concert Orchestra will play Weill's glorious score of Broadway musical and American opera for the opening performances, conducted by their Principal Conductor Keith Lockhart who is also Music Director of the Boston Pops Orchestra. Tim Murray, who has conducted for The Opera Group, Royal Opera House, Opera Holland Park and Welsh National Opera, will lead the Southbank Sinfonia for the rest of the run. Street Scene won the first ever Tony Award for Weill's music. It was adapted by Elmer Rice from his own Pulitzer Prize-winning play with lyrics by the great poet of Harlem Langston Hughes. Set in a brownstone tenement building over a long hot summer's day and night, Weill called it "a simple story of everyday life in a big city - a story of love and passion and greed and death." The score combines a dazzling array of show tunes, arias, jazz and blues in a musical melting pot that captures the diversity of working class New York in 1947. It features some of Weill's most compelling music including Lonely House, What Good Would the Moon Be and the big dance number Moon Faced, Starry Eyed.Videos