Baby | |
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150px Original Broadway poster |
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Music | David Shire |
Lyrics | Richard Maltby, Jr. |
Book | Sybille Pearson |
Productions | 1983 Broadway 2004 Manila 2011 Brazil |
Baby is a musical with a book by Sybille Pearson, based on a story developed with Susan Yankowitz, music by David Shire, and lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr.. It concerns the reactions of three couples each expecting a child. The musical first ran on Broadway from 1983 to 1984.
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Three couples, each newly expecting a child, have different but familiar reactions. Lizzie and Danny are university juniors who have just moved in together. Athletic Pam and her husband, Nick, a sports instructor, have had some trouble conceiving. Arlene, already the mother of three grown daughters, is unsure of what to do, contemplating abortion while her husband Alan is thrilled with the thought of a new baby. Throughout the show, these characters experience the emotional stresses and triumphs, the desperate lows and the comic highs, that accompany the anticipation and arrival of a baby.
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"Baby, Baby, Baby (Reprise)" was replaced in the initial run and the original cast recording with the song "Patterns," wherein Arlene contemplates her circular life as mother and wife.
"The End of Summer" was written for the Paper Mill Playhouse production, and is now part of the newly revised score available for licensing.
"With You" and "And What If We Had Loved Like That" are in reverse order in the new libretto.
The Broadway production, directed by Richard Maltby, Jr. and choreographed by Wayne Cilento, opened on December 4, 1983 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, where it ran for 241 performances and 35 previews. The cast included Liz Callaway as Lizzie Fields, Beth Fowler as Arlene McNally, Todd Graff as Danny Hooper, Catherine Cox as Pam Sakarian, James Congdon as Alan McNally, and Martin Vidnovic as Nick Sakarian. Set design was by John Lee Beatty, costume design by Jennifer von Mayrhauser, and lighting design by Pat Collins.
The Paper Mill Playhouse, Millburn, New Jersey presented an updated version of the musical from March 31, 2004 to May 9, 2004. The cast featured Carolee Carmello (Arlene), Chad Kimball (Danny), LaChanze (Pam), Norm Lewis (Nick), Moeisha McGill (Liz), and Michael Rupert (Alan).[1]
The Ohio premiere of Baby was the first production to use the new and updated score which was finalized for this production. It also contained an updated script with more modern references. The show ran March 2010 at TrueNorth Cultural Arts, Sheffield Village, Ohio.[2] The cast was headed by Natalie Green (Lizzie), Shane Joseph Siniscalchi (Danny), Michael Dempsey (Alan), Bernadette Hisey (Arlene), David Robeano (Nick) and Maggie Stahl-Floriano (Pam) under the direction of Fred Sternfeld.[3] The production won ten Cleveland Times Tribute Awards for Outstanding Theatre in 2010.[4]
Baby was staged at the Meralco Theatre in Manila from August 18 through September 5, 2004. The cast included Lea Salonga in the role of Lizzie Fields and David Shannon as Danny.[5]
A Brazilian production opened on May 15, 2011.[6], starring Tadeu Aguiar[7] , Sylvia Massari, Olavo Cavalheiro, Sabrina Korgut, André Dias and Amanda Acosta.
Frank Rich, theatre critic for The New York Times wrote, "At a time when nearly every Broadway musical, good and bad, aims for the big kill with gargantuan pyrotechnics, here is a modestly scaled entertainment that woos us with such basic commodities as warm feelings, an exuberant cast and a lovely score. Perfect Baby is not, but it often makes up in buoyancy and charm what it lacks in forceful forward drive... Sybille Pearson has chosen her characters as if she were a pollster in search of a statistical cross-section of modern (and uniformly model) parents. Worse, this writer... values hit-and-miss one-liners over substance... Miss Pearson is also fond of such plot contrivances as mixed-up lab reports, and, in Act II, the story runs out altogether. The last trimester for the mothers in Baby is as much of a waiting game as it can be in real life. Yet David Shire, the composer, and Richard Maltby Jr., the lyricist, rush to the book's rescue by addressing the show's concerns with both humor and intelligence... To keep up with the varied ages of the characters, Mr. Shire writes with sophistication over a range that embraces rock, jazz and the best of Broadway schmaltz... Mr. Maltby's lyrics are not just smart and funny, but often ingenious." He concluded, "If the virtues of Baby can't override all its hitches, so be it. In achievement, this show is a throwback to the early 1960s - the last era when Broadway regularly produced some casual-spirited musicals that were not instantly categorizable as blockbusters or fiascos. Those musicals - like, say, Do Re Mi or 110 in the Shade - weren't built for the ages but could brighten a theater season or two: They were ingratiatingly professional, had both lulls and peaks, and inspired you to run to the record store as soon as the original cast album came out. So it is with Baby, and wouldn't it be cheering if such a show could find a home on the do-or-die Broadway of today?"[8]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
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1984 | Tony Award | Best Musical | Nominated | |
Best Book of a Musical | Sybille Pearson | Nominated | ||
Best Original Score | David Shire and Richard Maltby, Jr. | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical | Todd Graff | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical | Liz Callaway | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Richard Maltby, Jr. | Nominated | ||
Best Choreography | Wayne Cilento | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Musical | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Martin Vidnovic | Won | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | Catherine Cox | Won | ||
Outstanding Orchestrations | Jonathan Tunick | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Lyrics | Richard Maltby, Jr. | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Music | David Shire | Nominated | ||
Theatre World Award | Todd Graff | Won |
Baby is the third studio album by The Detroit Cobras, released 27 September 2005.
Baby is a 2000 made-for-television drama film starring Farrah Fawcett, Keith Carradine and an early performance from Alison Pill.
A baby is left on the doorsteps at the Malones' house. The baby is left with a note (from its mother) saying that she'll return when the time is right. The Malones take the baby in and care for its as if were their own.
Teairra Marí (born Teairra María Thomas; December 2, 1987) is an American singer-songwriter, dancer, hip hop model and actress. At the age of 17, Jay Z signed her to Def Jam and she released her first album, Teairra Marí. After disappointing sales, she was let go from her recording contract in the middle of production for her second album Second Round. In 2008, she returned to the music scene with the Pleasure P-assisted single "Hunt 4 U". After constant leaks, she was forced to re-record and re-title a second attempt at her second album At That Point. In 2010, she starred in the film Lottery Ticket alongside rappers Bow Wow and Ice Cube. Since 2010, she has released several mixtapes including features from Nicki Minaj, Soulja Boy, and Gucci Mane.
In 2014 Teairra was featured on the song and the music video "Where This Light Goes" along with Tiffany Foxx and Angelina Pivarnick.
"Body" is a song recorded by American R&B singer Marques Houston. It is the second single from Houston's fourth studio album Mr. Houston, and was released in parallel to the single Sunset.
A music video for the single Body was released in August 2009 at the same time that the video for the single Sunset was released. The Music Video for "Body" was directed by Kevin Shulman
Music Video For "Body" was directed by Kevin Shulman
The point is the smallest whole unit of measure in typography. It is used for measuring font size, leading, and other minute items on a printed page. Different points have been used since the 18th century, with measures varying from 0.18 to 0.4 millimeters. Following the advent of desktop publishing in the 1980s and '90s, the importance of digital printing supplanted the letterpress printing systems around the world and established the DTP point as the de facto standard. This measures 1⁄72 of the international inch (about 0.353 mm) and, as with earlier American points, is considered 1⁄12 of a pica.
In metal type, the point size of the font described the height of the metal body on which the typeface's characters were cast. In digital type, letters of a font are designed around an imaginary space called an "em square". When a point size of a font is specified, the font is scaled so that its em square has a side length of that particular length in points. Although the letters of a font usually fit within the font's em square, there is not necessarily any size relationship between the two, so the point size does not necessarily correspond to any measurement of the size of the letters on the printed page.
In police terminology, a beat is the territory and time that a police officer patrols. Beat policing is based on traditional policing (late 19th century) and utilises the close relationship with the community members within the assigned beat to strengthen police effectiveness and encourage cooperative efforts to make a safer community. Beat police typically patrol on foot or bicycle which provides more interaction between police and community members.
Before the advent of personal radio communications, beats were organised in towns and cities to cover specific areas, usually shown on a map in the police station and given some sort of name or number. Officers reporting on duty would be allocated a beat by their sergeant and sometimes given a card indicating that the officer should be at a particular point at set times, usually half an hour, or forty-five minutes apart. The points would usually be telephone kiosks, police pillars or boxes, or perhaps public houses where it would be possible to phone the officer should he be needed to respond to an incident. The officer would remain at the point for five minutes and then patrol the area gradually making his way to the next point.
It's been so long since I've been home
(... back)
I brought the betas and I'm feeling raw
Too much space where you belong
Some wet dark room
These feelings are right to be wrong!
(That's the move )
It's been so long since I've been home
(I'll be pissing you from the start)
My body beats and I'm feeling raw
(Uh, still...)
Too much places I have fought
Playing the game, scoring my name
Couldn't have been so wrong!
... look on your head
And turn on the...
Your own...
... wake up, you're into...
I like... be missing you...
Too much space where you belong
Some wet darker room
These feelings are right to be wrong!
(That's the move )
It's been so long since I've been home
(I'll be pissing you from the start)
My body beats and I'm feeling raw
(Uh, still...)
Too much places I have fought
We're playing the game, scoring my name
Couldn't have been so wrong!
He couldn't have been so wrong!