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Blood Brothers



 
 
Blood Brothers is a musical
Musical theatre

Musical theatre is a form of theatre combining music, songs, spoken dialogue and dance. The emotional content of the piece ? humor, pathos, love, anger ? as well as the story itself, is communicated through the words, music, movement and technical aspects of the entertainment as an integrated whole....
 with book, lyrics and music by Willy Russell
Willy Russell

William Russell is a British dramatist, lyricist, and composer. His best-known works are Educating Rita, Shirley Valentine, and Blood Brothers ....
. It is one of the longest-running works of musical theatre in history, with the 1988 West End
West End theatre

West End theatre is a popular term for mainstream professional theatre staged in the large theatres of London's "Theatreland". Along with New York City's Broadway theatre, West End theatre is usually considered to represent the highest level of commercial theatre in the English language world....
 production still running after twenty years.

The musical has a contemporary nature vs. nurture plot, revolving around fraternal twins who were separated at birth. The twins' different backgrounds take them to opposite ends of the social spectrum, one becoming an Oxbridge
Oxbridge

Oxbridge was originally a fictional composite of the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge in England, and the term is now used to refer to them collectively, often with implications of superior intellectual or social status, emphasising the apparent "difficulty" of gaining admission....
-graduated councillor and the other unemployed and imprisoned.






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Encyclopedia


Blood Brothers is a musical
Musical theatre

Musical theatre is a form of theatre combining music, songs, spoken dialogue and dance. The emotional content of the piece ? humor, pathos, love, anger ? as well as the story itself, is communicated through the words, music, movement and technical aspects of the entertainment as an integrated whole....
 with book, lyrics and music by Willy Russell
Willy Russell

William Russell is a British dramatist, lyricist, and composer. His best-known works are Educating Rita, Shirley Valentine, and Blood Brothers ....
. It is one of the longest-running works of musical theatre in history, with the 1988 West End
West End theatre

West End theatre is a popular term for mainstream professional theatre staged in the large theatres of London's "Theatreland". Along with New York City's Broadway theatre, West End theatre is usually considered to represent the highest level of commercial theatre in the English language world....
 production still running after twenty years.

The musical has a contemporary nature vs. nurture plot, revolving around fraternal twins who were separated at birth. The twins' different backgrounds take them to opposite ends of the social spectrum, one becoming an Oxbridge
Oxbridge

Oxbridge was originally a fictional composite of the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge in England, and the term is now used to refer to them collectively, often with implications of superior intellectual or social status, emphasising the apparent "difficulty" of gaining admission....
-graduated councillor and the other unemployed and imprisoned. Both fall in love with the same girl, who marries one but falls in love with the other; this conflict ultimately leads to their death.

Background and productions

The original production by Willy Russell was written as a school production in 1981. Russell then developed the work into a full-blown musical, which opened in the Liverpool Playhouse, in 1983, starring Barbara Dickson
Barbara Dickson

Barbara Ruth Dickson OBE is a Scotland singer whose hits include "I Know Him So Well" and "January February". She is also a two-time Olivier Award-winning actress with roles including Anita Braithwaite in TV's 'Band of Gold' and the original Mrs Johnstone in Willy Russell's long-running musical 'Blood Brothers'....
 and Andrew C. Wadsworth. It was only a modest success. The show transferred to London, where it played for only six months or so before closing, although it won the Olivier Award for Best New Musical
Olivier Award for Best New Musical

The Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical is an annual presentation by the The Society of London Theatre in recognition of achievements in commercial British musical theatre....
.

Bill Kenwright
Bill Kenwright

Bill Kenwright Order of the British Empire is an actor, theatrical producer. He is also the Chairman of Everton F.C.....
 took over the show, and following a year-long national tour it reopened in the Albery Theatre in London in 1988 before transferring it to the Phoenix Theatre
Phoenix Theatre (London)

The Phoenix Theatre is a West End theatre in the London Borough of Camden, located on Charing Cross Road . The entrance is in Phoenix Street.The theatre was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, Bertie Crewe and Cecil Masey and is Grade II listed....
, where it has been running ever since. Con O'Neill
Con O'Neill (actor)

Con O'Neill is a British actor, born in 1966 Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England to parents from Dundalk in Ireland. He started acting at the Everyman Theatre in Liverpool....
, who played Mickey, won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor in 1989 (1988 season) for his performance.

The production is in its 21st year and has developed a cult following. The central role of Mrs. Johnstone has been played by, among others, Stephanie Lawrence
Stephanie Lawrence

Stephanie Lawrence was a United Kingdom actress....
, Clodagh Rodgers
Clodagh Rodgers

Clodagh Rodgers is a singer from Northern Ireland, probably best known for her chart-topper "Jack in the Box "....
, Kiki Dee
Kiki Dee

Kiki Dee is a successful singer-songwriter, with a career that has lasted over 40 years.Her most famous song was a duet with Elton John, entitled "Don't Go Breaking My Heart", which was released in 1976 and went to Chart-topper both in the UK Singles Chart and the United States Billboard Hot 100 record chart....
, Lyn Paul
Lyn Paul

Lyn Paul, born Lynda Susan Belcher , is an England pop music singer. She changed her name to Lyn Paul before joining the international pop group The New Seekers in 1970....
, Siobhan McCarthy
Siobhán McCarthy

Siobhan Mary Ann McCarthy is a television and stage actress. She is married to Andrew Bruce, and resides in London with her husband and two children, Kieran and Juliet....
, and four of the Nolan sisters
The Nolans

The Nolans are a group of sisters from the Republic of Ireland and England, who performed as a pop vocal act. The group, best-known for their song "I'm In The Mood For Dancing", gained prominence as guest performers on numerous UK television shows....
 (Linda, Bernie, Denise and Maureen). On 3 November 2008, Niki Evans
Niki Evans

Niki Evans is an English singer. She is best known for coming fourth in the The X Factor of the popular British television talent show The X Factor in 2007....
 made her West End debut playing Mrs Johnstone and is scheduled to continue in the role for six months. Ex-Blue member Antony Costa
Antony Costa

Antony Daniel Costa is an England singer and actor....
 played the role of Mickey during 2006. Theatre and TV star Steven Houghton
Steven Houghton

Steven Houghton is a United Kingdom actor and singer.Born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, Houghton trained at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance in Leeds....
 joined the London cast as The Narrator in 2007. The London production currently stars Lyn Paul as Mrs. Johnstone (Niki Evans at the Phoenix theatre), Steven Palfreman as Mickey and Richard Reynard as Eddie. The narrator is currently played by Craig Price in the West End production. In the 2008 national UK tour, Marti Webb
Marti Webb

Marti Webb is a musical theatre actor from England, who appeared on stage in Evita , before starring in Andrew Lloyd Webber's one woman show Tell Me On A Sunday in 1980....
 was Mrs. Johnstone for a brief period, from September to the end of the year, playing two weeks in the West End, whilst Niki Evans
Niki Evans

Niki Evans is an English singer. She is best known for coming fourth in the The X Factor of the popular British television talent show The X Factor in 2007....
 played her home town. In 2009, Maureen Nolan is playing Mrs. Johnstone in the national UK tour.

The first Australian production, in 1988, included Russell Crowe in the role of Mickey and rocker Chrissy Amphlet as Mrs. Johnstone.

Broadway and U.S. tour

The Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 production opened on 25 April 1993 at the Music Box Theatre
Music Box Theatre

The Music Box Theater is a legitimate Broadway theatre theatre located at 239 West 45th Street in midtown-Manhattan.The once most aptly named theater on Broadway, the intimate Music Box was designed by architect C....
. The show closed on 30 April 1995 after 840 performances. Several of the British actors made their Broadway debuts, including Stephanie Lawrence as Mrs. Johnstone, Con O'Neill as Mickey, Mark Michael Hutchinson as Eddie and Warwick Evans as the narrator. Kerry Butler
Kerry Butler

Kerry Butler is a Tony Award-nominated United States actress known primarily for her work in theatre....
 made her Broadway debut in the ensemble. In order to boost box office sales, Bill Kenwright convinced Petula Clark
Petula Clark

Petula Clark, Order of the British Empire , is an English singer, actress, and composer whose career has spanned seven decades.Clark's professional career began as an entertainer on BBC Radio during World War II....
 to make her Broadway debut as Mrs. Johnstone, with real-life brothers David Cassidy
David Cassidy

David Bruce Cassidy is an United States prolific character actor of stage, singer and guitarist. He is best known for his role as Shirley Jones's eldest son, Keith Partridge, in the 1970s Musical film/sitcom The Partridge Family from 1970 to 1974 He enjoyed a successful pop career in the 1970s, and still performs today....
 and Shaun Cassidy
Shaun Cassidy

Shaun Cassidy is an United States actor, singer, writer, and Television producer. He is the eldest son of actress Shirley Jones, and the second son of actor Jack Cassidy....
 as her sons. She later starred in the U.S. national tour from 1994–95. Clark and the Cassidys also recorded the international cast album, with Willy Russell as the Narrator. Following Clark's portrayal, Mrs. Johnstone was played other 1960s pop singers, with Carole King
Carole King

Carole King is an United States singer, songwriter, and pianist. She was most active as a singer during the first half of the 1970s, though she was a successful songwriter for considerably longer both before and after this period....
 and Helen Reddy
Helen Reddy

Helen Reddy is an Australian/American singer-songwriter. She has won a Grammy Award, been a theatrical stage performer appearing on Broadway theatre, an actress in feature films and credited with writing and singing one of the most iconic and culturally significant songs of the 1970s, "I Am Woman"....
 later playing the role on Broadway.

Plot


Act 1

On a street in Liverpool
Liverpool

Liverpool [] is a city and metropolitan borough of Merseyside, England, along the eastern side of the Mersey Estuary. It was founded as a History of borough status in England and Wales in 1207 and was granted City status in the United Kingdom in 1880....
 around 1980, two figures lie on red stretchers, surrounded by police, with their grieving mother beside them and are then carried away. The mother, Mrs. Johnstone pleads, "Tell me it's not true, say it's just a story." A narrator introduces the story: "...lets see how she came to play this part." Mrs. Johnstone evokes "Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe was an American actress, singer, model, and a sex symbol.After spending much of her childhood in foster homes, Monroe began a career as a model, which led to a film contract in 1946....
", and the scene moves back 25 years in time to the late 1950s or early 1960s. Mrs. Johnstone tells of her life then: she was once married but is now a single parent with lots of children. She is pregnant at present but feels she can just about cope with one more child.

Mrs. Johnstone is a cleaner for an upper-class couple, Mr and Mrs Lyons. She superstitiously tells Mrs Lyons not to put new shoes on the table. Mrs Lyons is desperate for a baby but is unable to have one, and her husband does not want to adopt. Mrs Johnstone finds out that she is going to have twins and explains to Mrs Lyons that she cannot cope financially with two more babies; the "welfare" have been onto her about the ones she's already got. Mrs Lyons then suggests that Mrs Johnstone give one of the babies to her. Mrs Johnstone agrees and is made to swear on the bible to keep to the deal. Mrs Johnstone has the twins, but then regrets having agreed to give one away.

Mrs Johnstone continues to work for Mrs Lyons, but Mrs Lyons soon feels that Mrs Johnstone is paying too much attention to the child that she has given up to her. She fires Mrs Johnstone, who wants to take the baby with her, but Mrs Lyons plays on Mrs Johnstone's superstitions by telling her that "if twins separated at birth learn that they were once one of a pair they will both immediately die". Mrs Johnstone says she does not want to be a murderer and leaves without the child.

Seven years later, Mickey, the son Mrs Johnstone kept, meets Eddie, the other twin, and after learning they share the same birthday, the two boys decide to become blood brothers. They make a pact. Mrs Johnstone finds them and sends Eddie away, telling him not to come round again or else the "Bogey-man" will get him. Later in the day Mickey goes to Eddie's house, and Mrs Lyons throws him out. She and Eddie argue on the subject, and Eddie swears at her with a word that Mickey taught him. Mrs Lyons slaps him and immediately regrets her reaction.

Mickey is playing with some neighbourhood children including his friend Linda. Afterwards, he takes her to see Eddie, and the three of them sneak off to play. Mrs Lyons tries to find Eddie. She becomes worried about Eddie's association with Mickey, as she has started to believe the superstition that she herself had made up. She decides to move house and persuades her husband by pretending to be ill. When Eddie says goodbye, Mrs Johnstone gives him a locket with a picture of herself and Mickey, as the boys separate. The scene shifts as Mrs Johnstone and her family are being re-housed in the countryside and move into their new house.

Act 2

Eddie and Mickey are now 14 years old. Mrs Johnstone and her family's lives improved since moving, and they have not seen Eddie in all this time. Mickey has a crush on Linda, who is obviously interested in him too, but Mickey doesn't know how to act with her. Both of them are suspended after mouthing off to their teacher. Eddie is also suspended from his boarding school for refusing to give up Mrs Johnstone's locket to a teacher, but he will not tell his mother about it. Mrs Lyons sees Mrs Johnstone near her house and her worries are renewed. Eddie and Mickey bump into each other in a field, but don't recognize each other. Each wants to be like the other.

They finally realize who the other is and meet up with Linda. Mrs Lyons goes mad and tries to kill Mrs Johnstone. The scene shifts, and they are 18 years old. Eddie has feelings for Linda but won’t say anything as he knows Mickey likes her too. Eddie leaves for university but not before encouraging Mickey to ask Linda out. During Eddie's absence, Mickey is fired from his factory job, which forces him onto the dole. He soon discovers that Linda is pregnant, and they decide to get married. Eddie returns at Christmas ready to party and have fun, but Mickey realises that they are now very different; after a small fight with Eddie, they part. To get money, Mickey assists his brother Sammy in a robbery that goes wrong, and becomes an accessory to murder. He is caught and sentenced to seven years in prison as Mrs Johnstone mourns the events.

In prison, Mickey becomes chronically depressed. When released early for good behaviour, he is still dependent on the anti-depressant drugs, and his relationship with Linda is not going well. She tries to help him, but fails. She contacts Eddie, who is now a councillor, and they have a romantic fling in a park. Mrs Lyons sees them together and tells Mickey about it. Mickey, distraught over Eddie and Linda's affair, grabs a gun before storming down to the council offices to confront Eddie.

There, Eddie is giving a speech when Mickey storms in with the gun. Mickey asks why, even though Eddie has everything and Mickey has nothing, Eddie would take away the one good thing that Mickey had, Linda. Eddie denies this intention, and the police enter, demanding that Mickey put the gun down. Mrs Johnstone runs onto the stage and, in an attempt to stop Mickey from shooting Eddie, tells the two brothers the truth. Mickey despairs that he was not the one given away, because then he could have had the life given to Eddie. He accidentally sets the gun off, shooting and instantly killing Eddie. The police shoot Mickey, even though Mickey attempts to shout that it was an accident. Mrs Lyons' superstitious prediction has come true, but the Narrator comments that class was more to blame than superstition. Everyone is in a state of disbelief over the events.

Musical numbers

Act I
  • Overture – Orchestra, Company and Narrator
  • Marilyn Monroe – Mrs Johnstone and Company
  • Marilyn Monroe (Reprise) – Mrs Johnstone
  • My Child – Mrs Johnstone and Mrs Lyons
  • Easy Terms – Mrs Johnstone
  • Shoes Upon The Table – Narrator
  • Easy Terms (Reprise) – Mrs Johnstone
  • Kids' Game – Company
  • Gypsies In The Wood – Narrator
  • Shoes Upon the Table – Narrator
  • Bright New Day (Preview) – Mrs Johnstone
  • Long Sunday Afternoon/My Friend – Mickey and Eddie
  • Bright New Day – Mrs Johnstone and Company


Act II
  • Entr'acte – Orchestral piece
  • Marilyn Monroe 2 – Mrs Johnstone and Company
  • The Devil's Got Your Number – Narrator
  • That Guy – Mickey and Eddie
  • Shoes Upon the Table (Reprise) – Narrator
  • I'm Not Saying A Word – Eddie
  • Miss Jones – Mr Lyons, Miss Jones and Company
  • Marilyn Monroe 3 – Mrs Johnstone
  • Light Romance – Mrs Johnstone
  • Madman – Narrator
  • Tell Me It's Not True – Mrs Johnstone and Company


Awards and nominations

  • Olivier Award for Best New Musical
    Olivier Award for Best New Musical

    The Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical is an annual presentation by the The Society of London Theatre in recognition of achievements in commercial British musical theatre....
     (1983) (winner)
  • Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Musical
    Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Musical

    See Olivier Awards for more information about the awards and a full list of categories and winners.The Laurence Olivier Awards are a series of awards presented annually by The Society of London Theatre....
     (1988) – Con O'Neill (winner)
  • Tony Award
    Tony Award

    The Antoinette Perry Awards for Excellence in Theatre, more commonly known as the Tony Awards, recognize achievement in live United States theatre and are presented by the American Theatre Wing and The Broadway League at an annual ceremony in New York City....
     Best Musical (nominee)
  • Tony Award Best Book of a Musical – Willy Russell (nominee)
  • Tony Award Best Actor in a Musical – Con O'Neill (nominee)
  • Tony Award Best Actress in a Musical – Stephanie Lawrence (nominee)
  • Tony Award Best Featured Actress in a Musical – Jan Graveson (nominee)
  • Tony Award Best Direction of a Musical – Bill Kenwright, Bob Tomson (nominees)
  • 1993 Theatre World Award
    Theatre World Award

    The Theatre World Award, first awarded for the 1945-46 season, is an United States honor presented annually to actors and actresses in recognition of an outstanding New York City stage debut performance, either on Broadway theatre or off-Broadway....
     – Stephanie Lawrence (winner)
  • Drama Desk Award
    Drama Desk Award

    The Drama Desk Award, created in 1955, is an award which recognizes theatres produced on Broadway theatre, off-Broadway, off-off-Broadway, and for legitimate not-for-profit theaters....
     Outstanding Actor in a Musical – Con O'Neill (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Mark Michael Hutchinson (winner)
Won an "oscar" of the west end for the Great Play sol thousands

External links

  • from
  • www.bloodbrothersthemusical.webs.com Fan website with exclusive and updated content.