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Adam Guettel (/ˈɡɛtəl/; born December 16, 1964) is an American composer-lyricist of musical theater and opera. He is best known for the musical The Light in the Piazza, for which he won two Tony Awards, for Best Score and Best Orchestrations, and two Drama Desk Awards, for Best Music and Best Orchestrations.
Guettel was born December 16, 1964 to film executive Henry Guettel and writer/composer Mary Rodgers (daughter of famed composer Richard Rodgers), and was raised on the Upper West Side of New York City. He performed as a boy soprano soloist in operas including Pelléas et Mélisande and The Magic Flute, both at the Metropolitan Opera and the New York City Opera, and in another production of Pelléas with the Santa Fe Opera. He was also slated to play Amahl in the film remake of Gian Carlo Menotti's "Amahl and the Night Visitors". He later claimed that he ended his career as a boy soprano at age 13, by faking that his voice was changing; he turned to music composition soon afterward. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy, School Year Abroad (SYA France), Interlochen Center for the Arts and graduated from Yale University in 1987.
Adam is a common masculine given name.
The personal name Adam derives from the Hebrew noun ha adamah meaning "the ground" or "earth". It is still a Hebrew given name, and its Quranic and Biblical usage has ensured that it is also a common name in all countries which draw on these traditions. It is particularly common in Christian- and Muslim-majority countries. In most languages its spelling is the same, although the pronunciation varies somewhat. Adán is the Spanish form of this name.
Adam is also a surname in many countries, although it is not as common in English as its derivative Adams (sometimes spelled Addams). In other languages there are similar surnames derived from Adam, such as Adamo, Adamov, Adamowicz, Adamski etc.
In Arabic, Adam (آدم) means "made from the earth/mud/clay".
Roger Adam was a French aircraft designer and manufacturer who produced light aircraft in kit from 1948 to 1955. He established the firm Etablissements Aeronautiques R. Adam.
Adam is a fictional character; from the Ravenloft campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game.
Adam was a major character in the 1994 novel, Mordenheim, written by Chet Williamson.
Adam is the darklord of Lamordia. Known as Mordenheim's Monster or the Creature, he is an extremely intelligent and nimble dread flesh golem, based on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Adam is the most successful creation of Dr. Victor Mordenheim in his research into the creation of life, albeit the one that causes him grief unmeasured. Adam reduced the doctor's wife Elise to a vegetative state and apparently murdered their adopted daughter Eva.
The two are inextricably bound together: Dr. Mordenheim has Adam's immortality, and in return Adam shares the doctor's anguish.
Usually hidden from sight, Adam is believed to spend most of his time on the Isle of Agony, part of the archipelago known as the Finger.
Margaret: What happened here? Well let's see...
On a central square,
In the city of the sun Rosa Palace
It was high and handsome
Gleaming like the crown of a king.
Clara: Where would that be? Where is that?
Margaret: In the tower,
A warning bell would ring.
Clara: What kind of warning?
Maragaret: For a fire,
Or river overflowing.
Clara: Oh.
Maragaret: Firenze.
On a central square,
The beginning of a kingdom republic.
Clara: Was there a king? Was there a queen?
Margaret: There were princes painters,
Nobleman of logic and art.
Clara: Firenze!
Margaret: Leonardo...
Clara: Leonardo...
Margaret: Michaelangelo, the start.
Clara: That's a completely naked statue!
Margaret: T'was a dawning day
Unfurling...
Clara: From the heart...
The painting of the world we know.
Both: The world we know.
On a central square
Margaret: In the city made of statues and stories.
Clara: Go on and tell me what they mean.
Margaret: It ignited there like a beacon coming out of the dark.
You can feel it...
Clara: You can feel it...
Margaret: You can follow...
Clara: You can follow...
Margaret: The Spark.
Clara: We're on vacation.
Margaret: From an age to an age.
Clara: From an Age to an age.
Margaret: In Firenze...
Clara: In Firenze...
Margaret: In Firenze...
Clara: In Firenze...
Both: The spark, the world
The painting of the world.
Both: It started there and then and here we are.
It a new old world to me.
It's a new old world and we are here!
Margaret: Your father and I took our honey moon here before the war and this is my first time back! I think it is my favorite place on earth.
Clara: I can see why.
Margaret: The openness, the light, and... what else? From her sight on the great route, From Upper Italy to Rome, she commanded the passage of the arno they call city she here I bet you didn't know that.
Clara: I'd bet she'd loose her bet!
Margaret: Thanks to her great success in war and industry, wool, silk, furs, Florence became
One of the foremost trading centers in all of Europe. In fact, the gold Florina became widely rexognized as the-
Clara: We're here!
On a central square
Margaret: In the city made of statues and stories.
Both: It ignited there like a beacon coming out of the dark.
Clara: You can feel it...
Margaret: You can feel it...
Clara: You can follow...
Margaret: You can follow...
Clara: You can feel it...
Margaret: You can feel it...
Clara: You can follow...
Margaret: You can follow the spark...
Clara: We're on vacation!
Margaret: We're on vacation!
All: Ah...
Clara: In Firenze...
Margaret: In Firenze
Clara: In Firenze
Margaret: In Firenze
Both: The spark, the world
The painting of the world.