Chicago, Illinois, in the 1920s was awash with change, jazz and violence. Passage of the 18th Amendment to the US constitution made alcohol illegal on Jan. 17, 1920, the same year the 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote.
In Chicago, gangsters such as Al Capone and Bugs Moran made fortunes smuggling liquor across the border from Canada and distributing it across the county. The city became synonymous for two “Gs” and two “Cs”: gin, guns, corruption and celebrity criminals, as bloody gangland battles for control of the bootleg trade made newspaper headlines across the country, along with a number of women who stood trial for killing their lovers or husbands.
Cook County Jail even had a “murderess row,” a section set aside just for women awaiting trial for murder. Two of its most famous detainees, Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner, had allegedly shot their lovers, and despite initially confessing to the crimes, were acquitted.
Photo Courtesy of Jeremy Daniel
Starting on Wednesday, Taipei will get a glimpse of the Windy City’s wild side when the Bob Fosse musical Chicago opens at the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall.
The musical, and the play it is based on, have almost as storied a history as the shows’ main characters.
Reporter and aspiring playwright Maurine Dallas Watkins covered the trials of Annan and Gaertner for the Chicago Tribune and was outraged at how the judicial system was manipulated, the idea of celebrity criminals and the unwillingness of all-male juries to believe that women, especially young, pretty ones, could be murderers.
Photo Courtesy of Jeremy Daniel
She channeled disgust into a play, titled The Brave Little Women, which eventually opened as Chicago and became a hit on Broadway in 1926.
The leading characters of Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly were loosely based on Annan and Gaertner, while the character of Billy Flynn was drawn from Annan’s attorneys, William Scott Stewart and W.W. O’Brien.
Watkin’s play did well in New York City, and toured the US for two years. It was made into a silent movie under the same name in 1927, and in 1942 was turned into a movie titled Roxie Hart.
US choreographer, director and filmmaker Bob Fosse tried for years to get permission from Watkins to turn the play into a musical, but she refused.
After she died in 1969, Fosse, his wife Gwen Verdon and producer Richard Frye were able to buy the rights to the play from Watkins’ estate. Fosse turned to the legendary songwriting team of John Kander (music) and Fred Ebb (lyrics) for help in making Watkin’s play into a musical. Kander and Ebb’s hits included the musical Cabaret, which Fosse had made into a film that won eight Academy Awards after its release in 1972.
Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville, directed and choreographed by Fosse, opened on Broadway in 1975, starring Verdon as Hart, and ran for 936 performances. It made its London debut in 1979.
The show was revived on Broadway in 1996, nine years after Fosse’s death, with choreography by Ann Reinking, a protegee of Fosse who had played the Hart role in 1977. The show won six Tony Awards, including Best Choreography for Reinking and a Grammy for Best Musical Cast Recording.
The 1996 revival has gone on to become the longest-running US musical in Broadway history, with touring productions that have covered the US and much of the world, while a 2002 movie based on the musical, directed and choreographed by Rob Marshall and starring Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renee Zellweger, Richard Gere and Queen Latifah, introduced the tale of Hart and Kelly to a whole new generation and won six Academy Awards the following year.
In the musical, Hart, a housewife and nightclub dancer, kills her lover after he threatens to leave her and is sent to jail to await trial, where she meets Kelly, who is facing similar charges. Hart hires a slick criminal lawyer, Flynn, to defend her and becomes a media sensation.
The cast that will appear in Taipei is led by South African-born Amra-Faye Wright as Kelly, Texas native Dylis Croman as Hart, Kansas-born Brent Barret as Flynn and Detroit native Roz Ryman as Matron “Mama” Morton, all of whom have extensive backgrounds in musical theater and have played their Chicago roles on Broadway, while Wright has also played Kelly in London’s West End.
The show runs about two-and-a-half hours, including an intermission.
Sept.16 to Sept. 22 The “anti-communist train” with then-president Chiang Kai-shek’s (蔣介石) face plastered on the engine puffed along the “sugar railway” (糖業鐵路) in May 1955, drawing enthusiastic crowds at 103 stops covering nearly 1,200km. An estimated 1.58 million spectators were treated to propaganda films, plays and received free sugar products. By this time, the state-run Taiwan Sugar Corporation (台糖, Taisugar) had managed to connect the previously separate east-west lines established by Japanese-era sugar factories, allowing the anti-communist train to travel easily from Taichung to Pingtung’s Donggang Township (東港). Last Sunday’s feature (Taiwan in Time: The sugar express) covered the inauguration of the
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