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  1. 1940 Motion Picture. On July 18, 1940, Universal Pictures released the film adaptation of Rodgers & Hart’s The Boys from Syracuse, premiering the film in Syracuse, New York. Directed by A. Edward Sutherland, the movie starred Allan Jones, Martha Raye, Joe Penner, Rosemary Lane and Irene Hervey. Nominated for two Academy Awards, the picture ...

  2. Richard Rodgers – The Boys from Syracuse. Shakespeares Komödie der Irrungen als übermütig-irrwitziges Musical: Der Syrakuser Kaufmannssohn Antipholus und sein Sklave Dromio sind auf der Suche nach ihren verschollenen Zwillingsbrüdern ins verfeindete Ephesus gelangt. Weil Syrakusern hier die Hinrichtung droht, wollen sie die Stadt ...

  3. The Boys from Syracuse [1997 Original New York Recording] by Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers released in 1997. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and

  4. THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE, mit der genialen Musik von Richard Rodgers, bietet großartige Songs zum Schmunzeln von Liedtexter Lorenz Hart und ironisch fetzige Dialoge von George Abbott. Verblüffte Ehefrauen, wütende Kurtisanen, bizarre Verwechslungen, vertanzte Beziehungsdramen, Flucht und Happy End. Das Ergebnis: ein vor Gelächter brüllendes ...

  5. Featuring the cast of Christopher Hewett’s celebrated 1963 off-Broadway production of The Boys from Syracuse, this original cast recording was conducted by René Wiegert, with new orchestrations by Larry Wilcox. The album was recorded and released on Capitol records in 1963 shortly after the show’s April 15 opening.

  6. History. When The Boys from Syracuse opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York City on November 23, 1938, Brooks Atkinson of The New York Times said, “Rodgers and Hart have written some of their gayest songs… a beautiful feast of rollicking mummery,” and Richard Watts of The Herald Tribune called it “the finest and most satisfying musical ...

  7. ABOUT80 YEARS OF RODGERS & HAMMERSTEINThis year we’re celebrating the 80th anniversary of Rodgers & Hammerstein! In July 1942, the Theatre Guild announced – and The New York Times shared – that Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II were teaming up for their first collaboration: a musical adaptation of Green Grow the Lilacs. That musical would eventually become Rodgers & Hammerstein ...