Emcee Cabaret

Alex M Profile Photo
Alex M
#1Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/2/15 at 8:01pm

So we all know how Alan Cummings reinvented the character of the Emcee in Cabaret from how Joel Grey did it. Well i was thinking if there ever was to be another Cabaret revival in the next lets say 10 years would you want the character of the Emcee to change again and if so how would you want the character to change.

Updated On: 6/2/15 at 08:01 PM

Drewski Vanderbilt Profile Photo
Drewski Vanderbilt
#2Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/2/15 at 8:06pm

Depends on What they are doing, if they do a revival of the 1999 production (which I don't think they can do because they already did and it was Alan Cumming's Final time playing the Emcee.) it will be the same but if it's a new production it may be different. it depends on the Actor playing the Emcee.

Nicklovestheatre
#2Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 7:58am

Updated On: 6/3/15 at 07:58 AM

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dramamama611
#3Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 8:27am

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If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it? These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#4Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 12:23pm

Ugh. Cabaret is my favorite show, but it's also so tricky because when it gets revived and reinterpreted, I often get the sense that new productions are competing both with each other and with the past to do something "bold" and "new" and to be "the most risque" or create "the most provocative" Cabaret you've ever seen. And that, a lot of times, does not end well. Everybody wants to push the envelope more than everybody else with this show. 


I love Cabaret. I love the source material, the play, the novel(s). The Mendes revival (revisal, really?) to me, is definitive. That's not an objective word, but it's MY definitive. That Emcee, for me, that is it. I have seen, and I'm sure in the future will continue to see, some great riffs on that general idea. And I think we're lucky that there's a reinterpretation that's such a great departure from the original but still works as well as it does. Or maybe even better, depending on what you like.


But ten years from now, I don't think I would want to see some other production in which who he is changes radically again. What would it be? How would it work? Why would you do it? Where is it in the text? (I ask these questions having seen the ART production, with Amanda Palmer, and it worked. It was within the framework and it was not a radical reinvention and it didn't change who the character is. But just to say, I'm not advocating a museum piece.) What I really want to see is something that's very close to the character as he is written -- as fleetingly as it is that he appears -- in the Isherwood novels. I want someone who really captures that. 


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 6/3/15 at 12:23 PM

EricMontreal22 Profile Photo
EricMontreal22
#5Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 2:34pm

While it works in the Mendes' production, I'd like to see "clever" directors dropping the idea of making the Emcee a Nazi victim at the end. 

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MrsSallyAdams
#6Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 3:27pm

Several regional productions have cast the Emcee as a woman. I know of at least two major productions in Chicago that have done so, but neither performance seemed different enough from previous male emcees to shine new light on the role.


One touch I liked in the Hypocrites 2010 production: The "Two Ladies" number was performed by Lady Emcee, Sally and Cliff.


http://www.theatreinchicago.com/cabaret/3475/


threepanelmusicals.blogspot.com

Wilmingtom
#7Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 3:40pm

Other than his costume, Cumming's take on the character was very much in line with Grey's, just as the role is written. Cumming didn't reinvent the character, he just played it.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#8Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 4:23pm

Not sure which performances you were watching. They're pretty different. Interpretively, conceptually, symbolically. 


I'm trying to remember what it is exactly because it's been years since I've seen it, but somewhere there's an interview, I believe with Alan but I could be misspeaking, putting really concisely what exactly the big difference is: Joel Grey's Emcee represented, in some ways, Hitler, that which would destroy; Alan's Emcee represented everything that would be destroyed. That's a radical difference, sorry.


Oh and I didn't see the Hypocrites production, I wasn't here yet, but I've heard cool things about it. I've never actually seen a female Emcee in that sense -- where it's actually supposed to be a woman. The ART production used a woman playing a man, but in a way that suggested we were never supposed to fully believe anything we were seeing. It was great.


A work of art is an invitation to love.
Updated On: 6/3/15 at 04:23 PM

EricMontreal22 Profile Photo
EricMontreal22
#9Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 9:37pm

" Joel Grey's Emcee represented, in some ways, Hitler, that which would destroy; Alan's Emcee represented everything that would be destroyed. That's a radical difference, sorry."

Yes, exactly.

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darquegk
#10Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 10:25pm

The original production and its derivatives have the central message of complicity: WE DID THIS. WE LET THIS HAPPEN. NEVER AGAIN. The revival and its derivatives switch the message to one of hindsight: LOOK WHAT THEY DID TO US. NEVER AGAIN.

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RingOfKeys2
#11Emcee Cabaret
Posted: 6/3/15 at 11:24pm

Just to be clear, Joel Grey's Emcee symbolized Adolf Hitler himself. Alan Cumming's Emcee symbolizes everything that was lost in Berlin. I can't think of a way to re-invent the role yet again in a way that would work with the show itself, but I'm sure there is a clever director out there who could stir up something :)