Yankee Doodle Dandy! Opens in Dallas June 15, Following Seattle Run | Playbill

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News Yankee Doodle Dandy! Opens in Dallas June 15, Following Seattle Run Yankee Doodle Dandy!, the new musical biography of the songwriter-playwright-actor-producer George M. Cohan, gets its second regional engagement June 15-27, this time in Dallas.

The work originated earlier this spring at Seattle's 5th Avenue Theatre in a co-production with Dallas Summer Musicals. The songs of Cohan will now echo at the Music Hall at Fair Park in Dallas. It moves to the Fox Theatre in Atlanta July 6-11 as part of the Theatre of the Stars season.

The show is written and co-directed by David Armstrong, producing artistic director of Seattle's 5th Avenue Theatre. Armstrong told Playbill On-Line that refinements have been made to the show since its Seattle run, and that about 10 minutes were shaved off Act I in the process. He called the show an audience favorite, and said feedback from subscribers was rapturous.

Yankee Doodle Dandy! features the music of George M. Cohan, with new music and lyrics by Albert Evans. Songs include "Give My Regards to Broadway," "Over There," "You're a Grand Old Flag" and "Yankee Doodle Dandy."

The cast includes Seán Martin Hingston (Broadway's Contact) as the young George M. Cohan, and Richard Sanders ("WKRP in Cincinnati") as the older George.

Judy Blazer (Titanic, Me and My Girl) performs in dual roles: Ethel, Cohan's first wife, and Georgette, Cohan's daughter. Jason Schuchman plays George's best friend and business partner Sam Harris, and Seán G. Griffin plays the doorman Old Lou.  Dirk Lumbard and Cynthia Ferrer play Cohan's parents Jerry and Nellie, and Danette Holden plays Cohan's sister Josie. Rounding out the ensemble are  Greg Michael Allen, Kathryn Arnett, Alan Boswell, Adam Brozowski, Kari Lee Cartwright, Tony Curry, Taryn Darr, Marc dela Cruz, David Drummond, Brigitte Graf, Brittany Jamieson, Joey Matta, Jayme McDaniel, Amanda Paulson, John Scott, Jesse Stoddard, Pamela Turpen and Kathryn Van Meter.

For ticket information, call (214) 691-7200.

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To tell the story, Armstrong conjured a framing device for what is essentially a memory play in which and aging Cohan looks back on his life. The frame came out of research, the director said.

"Very near the end of his life, he got out of a sick bed that he hadn't been out of in months," Armstrong told Playbill On-Line. "He insisted that his nurse take him out on the town, and he went and visited his old haunts and the theatres that he used to own — the places he used to frequent. It was 1942. They go and sit in the back of a theatre that's playing the movie of 'Yankee Doodle Dandy.' They were there about 15 minutes, they went out and walked through Times Square and went home and died. So he literally gave his regards to Broadway on one of the last nights of his life. True story. I thought that was an amazingly theatrical device, and a way to reference the movie but state right up-front that we're not doing the movie."

Does Yankee Doodle Dandy! explore the aggressive, less flattering side of Cohan?

"Yeah, that's part of what the framing device is about — to make it clear that was the Hollywood version of the story, but not Cohan's life," Armstrong said. "One of the challenges of writing the show is that George M. Cohan was a sonofabitch. A lovable one, who certainly was beloved by his friends and the public, but he had a difficult side, like anybody that driven and that creative. He's really a theatrical genius: The writer, producer, director and the star of all his shows."

Additional new music and lyrics are by Albert Evans.

"Albert Evans has done an amazing job of sleuthing out a lot of Cohan songs that people have never heard before," Armstrong said. "We use those in a variety of ways: Some of them are recreations of scenes and numbers of [Broadway] shows within the show, and some we use to reflect the action of what's happening in his life...as book songs. We've had to create material to tell George M. Cohan's life story: Some of which are existing tunes we didn't know the lyrics to, so Albert wrote new lyrics. In a couple of cases, we've created entirely new songs. I think it will be very difficult for the audience to know who created what. We joke that Albert has a Ouija board with notes on it and he sits at home and channels George M. Cohan."

There are about 25 songs in the score, most of them written entirely by Cohan, with 5-6 songs having some element of new material or adaptations, the director said.

Audiences will also see recreations of actual numbers such as "Give My Regards to Broadway," from Little Johnny Jones. The song and performance were immortalized in the film, "Yankee Doodle Dandy," complete with Cohan's stiff, muscular tap-dancing style recreated by James Cagney, who played Cohan in the picture. Hingston, who plays Cohan in Yankee Doodle Dandy!, will offer a recreation, as well.

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Jamie Rocco is co-director and co-choreographer of Yankee Doodle Dandy!, with Armstrong.

Previews played Seattle April 24-28, with an opening April 29, continuing to May 16.

Richard Gray is the musical director. Ian Eisendrath is the associate musical director and Bruce Monroe is the conductor.

Tom Sturge is the lighting designer, Kurt Fischer is the sound designer, James Wolk is the set designer, Greg Poplyk is the costume designer, and Mary Pyanowski is the hair/make-up designer.

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Throughout his life Cohan wrote more than 40 Broadway plays and musicals, collaborated with other authors on 14 plays to which his name was never attached, wrote and composed over 500 songs and musical numbers, produced 128 theatrical attractions and personally appeared in five films and over 3400 live performances. In 1941, Cohan won a Congressional Medal of Honor for the song, "Over There." Cohan died of cancer Nov. 5, 1942.

What attracted director Armstrong to do a show about Cohan?

"First, the music and the fact that there were these great songs that didn't really have an effective vehicle to live in," he said. "You couldn't really revive Cohan's shows, although large parts of them are highly entertaining."

Would we identify his shows, such as Forty-Five Minutes From Broadway (1906) and Little Johnny Jones (1904), as story-driven musicals like we have today?

Armstrong observed, "I would say they are thoroughly recognizable as musicals, and they bring so many of the elements together that are still with us. He invented the Broadway musical, which is one of the themes of the show. Nothing before him, I think, would be recognizable to us as a Broadway musical. Like so many shows, including shows in the '20s and '30s, there are only one or two titles that has remained viable [to revive as written with original book and lyrics]. Most of his major hit songs and shows were written before the first world war, but he had hit shows up until the 1920s."

 
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