The Wizard Of OzIn Concert |
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Glen MacDonough |
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Caissie Sanderson Phen Harrison |
Trey Walker Olivia Oesch Samantha Limner |
Maureen Rao T. Craft |
~Special Thanks to University of Wisconsin-Madison, Constantine Grame, Jane Albright, Mississippi State University, & The New York Public Library for helping me attaining materials for this revival.~
The taking of pictures and the use of recording devices in this theatre is strictly forbidden unless authorized. There will be two 8 minute intermissions. |
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Song List
The Action of the Play
Act 1
Scene 1 - Kansas Prairie Farm
- Instrumental Introduction
Scene 2 - The Munchkin Country
- Niccolo's Piccolo
- In Michigan
- The Bullfrog Song
- Daisy Donahue
- Carrie Barry
- Alas for the Man Without Brains
Scene 3 - The Road Through the Forest
- Love is Love
- Cynthia, Cynthia
- When You Love, Love Love
Scene 4 - The Poppy Field
- Poppy Song
- Act 1 Finale
Act 2
Scene 1 - The Emerald City
- The Phantom Patrol
- Budweiser's a Friend of Mine
- Twas Enough to Make a Perfect Lady Mad
- Connemara Christening
- Good Bye, Fedora
- Under a Panama
- I Love Only One Girl in the Wide, Wide World
- Sammy
- Hurrah for Baffin's Bay!
- Football
- Rejoice, The Wizard is No Longer King
Act 3
Scene 1 - The Borderland
- The Traveller and the Pie
- Must You?
- Honey, My Sweet
- That's Where She Sits All Day
- Finale
Cast
Creative Team
T. Craft
Bridget de Moura Castro
Amos Lake
Phen Harrison
Caissie Sanderson
Trey Walker
Olivia Oesch
T. Craft
Maureen Rao
Samantha Limner
T. Craft
Bridget de Moura Castro
Amos Lake
The Original Broadway Production
Offsite Connecticut Theatre presents an abridged concert version of the 1903 Broadway musical based on the 1900 novel 1900 novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum. With book and lyrics by the L. Frank Baum and Glen MacDonough as a joke writer. The show was one of the most successful musical comedies of the turn of the century and firmly cemented the timeless story and characters in the hearts and minds of the American public. The show premiered at the Chicago Grand Opera House on June 16, 1902. It open at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway on January 21, 1903, where it ran for 293 performances.