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Theater
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Main Page | Webber & Rice | Dreamcoat Intro | Dreamcoat Story | Dreamcoat Pic | Dreamcoat Song |
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Andrew Lloyd Webber (1948)
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Awards: 6 Tonys, 4 Drama Desk Awards, 3 Grammys, 5 Laurence Olivier Awards, and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers' Triple Play Award.
Firsts: Had three musicals running in New York and three in London in 1982, 1988 and again in 1994. Cats became the longest running musical history
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Shows
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Andrew Lloyd Webber & Tim Rice
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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" was the musical that put
Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice on the map. And its humble beginnings as a
simple pop cantata with a Biblical theme in a school hall in March 1968 are all
part of its perennial charm and freshness.
The whole serendipity of how Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice got together
informs the bounciness of the early work they produced. Andrew had written music
from the age of six or seven. His father was a composer, organist, and teacher
at one of the leading London colleges, and his mother taught piano to young
children. Even at a very young age, he was as interested in architecture and
history as he was in music. His mother despaired of his future as a pianist as
he refused to practice as diligently as she would have liked, so she was
determined that he should excel at his academic studies. But Andrew recalls a
life-changing experience when asked to play the violin in a school concert:
"I said, 'I'm not going to do that, I'm going to play six songs [on the
piano], and I'm going to dedicate each one of them to masters in the school,'
which I did from the stage. Because of the reaction of the other kids, I knew
that there was something very different that I would be interested in doing ...
I was about nine or ten, and I'd written all the songs myself."
Throughout his teenage years at Westminster School, he composed songs for
student revues and indulged his enthusiasm for musical theater in the company of
his Aunt Vi, a former actress who took him on outings to the West End and
carried with her a smell of the grease and a glimmer of the footlights that was
irresistibly exciting to her nephew.
Together they saw "My Fair Lady," "West Side Story,"
and "South Pacific," in which the hit song "Some Enchanted
Evening" made an indelible impression. He became a complete devotee of
Rodgers and Hammerstein. He sent songs off to publishers and record producers in
London, and through this network, his name was passed on to another young
hopeful in the music business, Tim Rice.
Tim Rice wrote to Lloyd Webber in April 1965, suggesting they try writing pop
songs together, as he had been told that the budding composer was looking for a
"with-it" lyric writer: "I wondered if you considered it
worthwhile meeting me? I may fall short of your requirements, but anyway it
would be interesting to meet up -- I hope!" Andrew was on his way to Oxford
University, but this meeting changed his life.
They immediately set to work on a musical about an orphanage (the work was never
produced), and Andrew, who always says that he was literally "smitten"
with Tim, three years his senior and far more world-wise and sophisticated, left
Oxford after just two terms. He could not settle into the rhythm of academic
life as all his energy now poured into working with Tim. The young duo -- Tim
had studied law, worked in a solicitor's office, and was already mixing with
professional singers and producers at a big record company -- churned out pop
songs, following the pattern of music first, words later, which marked all their
collaborations.
The Lloyd Webber household in South Kensington became home for Tim, too, as he
moved into a spare bedroom in the large apartment owned by Andrew's grandmother.
Another regular visitor, and family friend, was a music teacher, Alan Doggett,
who had taught Andrew's younger brother, Julian (now a renowned solo cellist),
in Westminster preparatory school. Doggett had moved on to another preparatory
school, Colet Court in Hammersmith, and suggested that Tim and Andrew should
write a pop cantata for the annual school concert, ideally on a Biblical
subject.
Tim's favorite Bible story had long been Joseph and his coat of many colors. In
his recent autobiography, OH, WHAT A CIRCUS, Tim declares that the way to a
child's heart is through laughter, which is why he deliberately set out to make
the lyrics as funny as possible.
"This great tale has everything -- plausible, sympathetic characters, a
flawed hero, and redeemed villains ... It is a story of triumph against the
odds, of love and hate, of forgiveness and optimism. As with all great stories,
the teller has no need to spell out the messages if he tells the tale well.
Perhaps risking comparisons with the youthful Joseph's lack of modesty, I
believe Andrew and I told the story very well indeed."
The audience at the first performance agreed, and the show was repeated a couple
of months later, on May 12, 1968, in the Methodist Central Hall in Westminster,
where Andrew's father was the organist. The place was packed with worshippers as
well as the proud parents of all the boys in the choir. One of these parents,
unknown to Tim and Andrew, was Derek Jewell, then the jazz and pop critic for
the SUNDAY TIMES. His unsolicited review on the following weekend changed their
lives:
"Throughout its twenty-minute duration it bristles with wonderfully
singable tunes. It entertains. It communicates instantly, as all good pop
should. And it is a considerable piece of barrier-breaking by its
creators."