Adam Guettel
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Adam Guettel (pronounced "Gettle"; b. 1965 in New York, New York) is an American musical theater composer and lyricist best known for 2005's The Light in the Piazza, for which he won a Tony Award. Guettel is the son of Mary Rodgers and grandson of Pulitzer Prize-winning musical theater composer Richard Rodgers.
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[edit] Biography
Guettel grew up in New York City's Upper West Side and performed as a boy soprano in operas including Pelléas et Mélisande at the Metropolitan Opera and The Magic Flute at the New York City Opera.[1] Around the time his voice changed, Guettel began composing music, including one piece that Richard Rodgers overheard and asked Guettel to play louder. (Guettel has qualified the compliment, noting that "He was literally on his deathbed on the other side of the living-room wall.")[1] The composer attended Phillips Exeter Academy, Interlochen Center for the Arts and graduated from Yale University in 1987.
His early works include 1996's Floyd Collins, Love's Fire, and Saturn Returns (which was recorded as Myths and Hymns). Guettel's music was almost immediately characterized by its complexity and use of various strings. He is perhaps one of the modern musical theater composers most heavily influenced by the work of Stephen Sondheim (for his part, Sondheim has referred to Guettel's work as "dazzling".)[2] Guettel's songs have been recorded by such artists as Audra McDonald and Brian d'Arcy James.
In 2004, Guettel contributed vocals to Jessica Molaskey's P.S. Classics album Make Believe, dueting with Molaskey on the song "Glad To Be Unhappy." After six years working on the project,[1] Guettel's musical The Light in the Piazza opened on Broadway in 2005. The show, which starred Victoria Clark and Kelli O'Hara, met with mixed critical notices, but on June 5, 2005, Adam Guettel won the Tony Award for Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre for The Light in the Piazza. He also took home the award for Best Orchestrations for the same show.
In 2003, one of Guettel's future projects was said to be "a shockingly ambitious concert piece for Audra McDonald."[1] The composer also spent much of 2006 working on a musical adaptation of The Princess Bride with original screenwriter William Goldman. As of January 2007, Guettel had completed several songs for the project. An orchestral suite from the score was performed at the Hollywood Bowl in November 2006, and Lincoln Center conducted a workshop of Bride in January 2007. The project was abandoned when Goldman reportedly demanded 75 percent of the author's share, even though Guettel was writing both the music and the lyrics.[3]
In summer 2007, Guettel composed background music for a production of Anton Chekhov's play Uncle Vanya at the Intiman Playhouse in Seattle, Washington.[4]
[edit] Personal life
In a 2003 profile in The New York Times, Guettel revealed that he has struggled with addiction and drug problems since the age of seven, when he began smoking cigarettes. He attributed part of his interest in drugs (he called the first time he got high "the happiest moment of my life") to family expectations, saying:
| “ | Because it's not just a disease; it's me, it's knowing how much I could do if I kept it together, if I had the courage and stamina and willpower! I wish I could just have fun and relax and not have the responsibility of that potential to be some kind of great man! In my family, to be good is to fail. To be very good is to fail. To only do three really good things is to fail. The only thing not a failure is to be great. And that....is tiring.[1] | ” |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e Green, Jesse. "A Complicated Gift", The New York Times, 2003-07-06. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
- ^ Rich, Frank. "Conversations With Sondheim", The New York Times, 2000-03-12. Retrieved on 2007-01-17.
- ^ Riedel, Michael. "'Bride' Not to Be While Broderick Balks at 'Producers'", New York Post, 2007-02-16. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
- ^ Hernandez, Ernio. "Samantha Mathis Stars in Lucas' New Uncle Vanya — with Music by Guettel — Beginning June 12", Playbill.com, 2007-06-12. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
[edit] External links
- 2005 Tony award acceptance speech transcript
- Adam Guettel at the Internet Broadway Database
- Interview from Studio 360 radio program, 2005
- NewMusicBox cover: Adam Guettel in conversation with Frank J. Oteri, August 7, 2006 (includes video)
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