Busker Alley Concert, with Dale & Close, Headed for Bway?

By: Nov. 06, 2006
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Busker Alley, which will soon be seen at the York Theatre Company in a star-studded concert headlined by Tony-winners Jim Dale and Glenn Close, may sidle up to a Broadway run.

According to a New York Post article, Dale stated of his character, "It's the role I was meant to play...That's why I'm doing this - I'm hoping we'll go onto Broadway sometime next year."

The one-night only benefit performance of Busker Alley will be held on November 13th at 8:00 p.m. at The Kaye Playhouse at Hunter College.  Also set to appear are: Jessica Grové, Simon Jones, Noah Racey, Greg Mills, Krista Rodriguez, Ann Rogers, Michael Lane Trautman and Jeff Williams.  

With music and lyrics by Richard and Robert Sherman (Mary Poppins, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang) and a book by A J Carothers, Busker Alley will be directed by multi-Tony Award-winning theater/film designer and director Tony Walton (Well, Uncle Vanya, Guys and Dolls revival, Grand Hotel). The creative team will also include: Lisa Shriver as choreographer, Richard Pilbrow as lighting designer, Aaron Gandy as music director.

Busker Alley is "about a busker (one who entertains in public on Londons' famous streets) who falls in love with a much younger woman who longs to be a big star in the theatre and leaves him to follow her dreams," state York notes. The show is based on the 1938 British motion picture, St. Martin's Lane, which was released in America under the title The Sidewalks of London.  The film starred Charles Laughton as Charlie Staggers, Vivien Leigh as Libby and Rex Harrison as Harley Prentiss.

Busker Alley will reunite Close and Dale who starred together in Broadway's Barnum (1980).  It will also be a reunion for Close and Walton, who worked together on Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing in 1984.

"The Sherman Brothers and A J Carothers wrote the musical in 1969 under the title Piccadilly.  Nothing happened with the show until 1982, when some interest grew and the project was rewritten and renamed Blow Us A Kiss.  Yet, it was not until 1994, when Tommy Tune became attached to the show, that it was finally launched under the new name Busker Alley. The show played in 16 cities with a planned Broadway debut scheduled for 1995 at the St. James Theatre. However, six weeks prior to its scheduled opening night Tommy Tune broke his foot during one of the performances in Tampa.  The show never reached New York. "

Dale has appeared on Broadway in The Threepenny Opera (2006 Tony Award nomination), Candide (1997 Tony Award nomination), Me and My Girl, Joe Egg (1985 Tony Award nomination), Barnum (1980 Tony Award) and Scapino (1975 Tony Award nomination), for which he also adapted the book and wrote the music.

Close has appeared on Broadway in The Play What I Wrote, Sunset Boulevard (1995 Tony Award), Death and the Maiden (1992 Tony Award), Benefactors, The Real Thing (1984 Tony Award), Barnum (1980 Tony Award nomination), The Crucifer of Blood, Rex, The Member of the Wedding, The Rules of the Game and Love for Love.  She is a five-time Academy Award-nominee.

Tickets are scaled from $100-$250 and are now available through The Kaye Playhouse Box Office.   To order, call (212) 772-4448 or visit the The Kaye Box Office, East 68th Street (between Park & Lexington Avenues) Monday through Saturday, 12 PM - 6 PM.

To inquire about special donor seating (Prime and Premium Orchestra seats for donations of $1,000 and $500, respectively) call the York Theatre directly at (212) 935-5820.  Tickets purchased at the $1,000 and $500 levels will include passes to the exclusive post-show reception with the cast and creative team, limited edition posters and a listing in the program.



Videos