Angel (musical)

{{Infobox Musical

|name= Angel

|image =Angel (musical).jpg

|image_size = 220px

|caption =Broadway Playbill

|music= Gary Geld

|lyrics= Peter Udell

|book= Peter Udell
Ketti Frings

|basis= Thomas Wolfe novel Look Homeward, Angel

|productions= 1978 Broadway

|awards=

}}

Angel is a Broadway musical that opened at the Minskoff Theatre in New York on May 4, 1978. It was based on Ketti FringsPulitzer Prize winning 1957 theatrical adaptation of Thomas Wolfe's best-selling 1929 novel, Look Homeward, Angel.

The musical features songs with lyrics by Peter Udell and music by Gary Geld—the same team who created the musicals Shenandoah and Purlie. Frings and Udell collaborated on the book. Angel was directed by Philip Rose and choreographed by Robert Tucker. The production featured costumes by Pearl Somner, lighting design by John Gleason and scenery by Ming Cho Lee.

For her performance, Frances Sternhagen received a Tony Award nomination for Best Leading Actress in a Musical in 1978. Additionally, Joel Higgins was nominated for a 1978 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical.

The musical was savaged by the critics, and closed on May 13 after only five performances.

Original cast and characters

class="wikitable" style="width:50%; text-align:center"

!scope="col"|Character

!Broadway (1978)[https://www.playbill.com/production/angel-minskoff-theatre-vault-0000002359#carousel-cell139394Playbill 1961 Bio Cast List]accessed 07/07/2023

Eliza Gant

| colspan="1" |Frances Sternhagen

Eugene Gant

| colspan="1” |Don Scardino

W. O Gant

| colspan="1” |Fred Gwynne

Ben Gant

| colspan="1" |Joel Higgins

Laura James

| colspan="1" |Leslie Ann Ray

Dr. Maguire

| colspan="1" |Daniel Keyes

Fatty Pert

| colspan="1" |Patti Allison

Madame Victoria

| colspan="1" |Patricia Englund

Will Pentland

| colspan="1" |Elek Hartman

Miss Brown

| colspan="1" |Jayne Barnett

Helen Gant

| colspan="1" |Donna Davis

Songs

Angel is set in Altamount, North Carolina in the fall of 1916. In Act One, the scene is set in the Dixieland Boarding House. In Act Two, Scene One is set in Gant's marble yard and shop; and Scenes Two and Three are set again in the Dixieland Boarding House.

{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}

;Act One

  • "Angel Theme" – Orchestra
  • "All the Comforts of Home" – Boarders
  • "Like the Eagles Fly" – Ben Gant
  • "Make a Little Sunshine" – Eliza Gant, Eugene Gant, Ben Gant
  • "Fingers and Toes" – W.O. Gant, Tim Laughran, Reed McKinney, Joe Tarkington
  • "Fatty" – Ben Gant
  • "Astoria Gloria" – Fatty Pert and Boarders
  • "Railbird" – Eugene Gant
  • "If I Ever Loved Him" – Laura James
  • "A Dime Ain't Worth a Nickel" – Ben Gant, Fatty Pert
  • "I Got a Dream to Sleep On" – Eugene Gant
  • "Drifting" – Eliza Gant

{{col-break}}

;Act Two

  • "I Can't Believe It's You" – W.O. Gant, Madam Victoria
  • "Feelin' Loved" – Eugene Gant, Laura James
  • "A Medley" – Ben, Fatty, Eliza, Laura
  • "Tomorrow I'm Gonna Be Old" – W.O. Gant
  • "Feelin' Loved (Reprise)" – Eugene and Laura
  • "How Do You Say Goodbye" – Laura
  • "Gant's Waltz" – W.O. Gant and Eliza Gant
  • "Like the Eagles Fly (Reprise)" – Eugene Gant

{{col-end}}

Critical response

Reviewing for The New York Times, Richard Eder wrote:

  • "Angel...is a damp and oppressive amalgam of bathos. It has lyrics of the consistency of cornbread soaked in milk, a whole collection of indifferent performances and a score of sufficient banality to furnish a number or two for the piped music on airplanes waiting to take off."
  • "The performances have no shine to them; at best they are losing battles."
  • "Mr. Geld's score is so thin and trite as to make us notice Don Walker's orchestration. Its vulgarity is unfailing."
  • "It is putting things too strongly to call "Angel" a disaster. It is a desert."

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Botto, Louis. [https://archive.org/details/atthistheatre10000bott Playbill: At This Theatre] (Applause Books, 2002) ({{ISBN|1-55783-566-7}})
  • "Angel Turns Wolfe Into Music; Looking Homeward", The New York Times, May 11, 1978.