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RW3
#150LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 12:25pm

For those who have been less than thrilled with the show, does it make you concerned about Gatsby?

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Kad
#151LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 12:34pm

RW3 said: "For those who have been less than thrilled with the show, does it make you concerned about Gatsby?"

No director is without flops or misfires. 


"...everyone finally shut up, and the audience could enjoy the beginning of the Anatevka Pogram in peace."

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Huss417
#152LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 12:36pm

Kad said: "It’s an appeal to camp value for a show that has until now presented itself and has been marketed as a serious musical, which is not really a great sign.


For this gay man, and many of my friends, the ad was an eyeroll.
"



You can add this gay man to that list as well.


"I hope your Fanny is bigger than my Peter." Mary Martin to Ezio Pinza opening night of Fanny.

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ColorTheHours048
#153LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 12:56pm

MsPiety&Rectitude said: "Wow, you are really dedicated to criticizing this show! I think this is your fifth or sixth post telling us how much you dislike it. I know March can be a dull time of year, hang in there xx"

I’m just speaking about a show I saw and had a passionate reaction to. Sorry you don’t tolerate criticism well.

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SonofRobbieJ
#154LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 1:53pm

It's the 'is one of the best Elphabas of all time' that makes me feel a little sad. Perhaps this is what the children mean when using the word 'cringe.' 

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Auggie27
#155LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 2:42pm

The ad - love it or hate it - exposes a broader problem: no one seems to know how to locate a target audience and reach them. If this piece offers something for everyone, what is the “something?” A bio musical with a rarefied historical backstory about an artist best known for poster reproductions? Once upon a time, the tale of Eva Peron had to be framed and marketed. The Prince prism - it’s a show about media - resulted in one of the most successful television ads ever. It opened the fall I moved to NYC and I saw it every morning on the Today local cutaway. But it sold a song with one of the catchiest pop hooks in musical theater. People with zero interest in Argentina or ALW wanted to see the show with that song and that elegant blonde woman on a balcony. Nothing here promises a comparable experience and that’s the problem: it’s a musical without an identity,


"I'm a comedian, but in my spare time, things bother me." Garry Shandling
Updated On: 3/29/24 at 02:42 PM

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inception
#156LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 3:55pm

They used that same ad to sell Evita on tour for years & years as well.  It was so glamorous,  yet enigmatic & mysterious at the same time.  


...

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Charley Kringas Inc
#157LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 4:45pm

As someone who's only vaguely followed this show, I still don't know what the hook is, just that it comes across as being kind of academic and has a title with all the allure of sawdust.

chrishuyen
#158LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 5:16pm

To be fair, I guess most biomusicals don't really have a specific hook outside of the person/group's name anyway (MJ was a bit unique in the idea to look at his life through the lens of preparing for a tour).  And I'm not someone that knows much about fine art, so I don't know how big Lempicka's name is for those that know more, but I suppose the main issue here is that a lot of people might not know who she is.  

Maybe including more of her artwork in the promo materials would help, as I do think she has a fairly unique style (though I also wonder if they're restricted in what they can use and for what purposes, since they mentioned some sort of licensing rights for the paintings).  And maybe the idea that she was a queer woman painting from that perspective.  But I think the show itself is meant to be more of a character study of who she was and how both internal and external factors shaped her work and her world view (though they could certainly do a better job of crafting that story in a lot of aspects). I'm not saying it needs a framing device, but maybe having one wouldn't hurt to add a specific lens/focus to the story (possibly expanding on the person who discovered her art and how it influenced other artists in the future? There was a point where she was making so many pieces in such a short time that I can imagine she wasn't able to just enjoy her success)

It's interesting because I was talking to a friend after the show about how this compares to Harmony (arguably similar in subject matter, both about "forgotten" artists and trying to make a case for how they should be remembered/be seen as important), and she thought this show overall flowed better because it generally kept Tamara front and center as a character (despite some puzzling motivations at times), whereas Harmony had too many characters and was also trying to include a lot of political themes.  But I think another thing that Lempicka does better is that you can see the actual artwork she made, while in Harmony they don't even sing the same songs as the original Comedian Harmonists so there's a level of remove in being able to tell what made them special.

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TheatreFan4
#159LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 8:30pm

chrishuyen said: "Maybe including more of her artwork in the promo materials would help, as I do think she has a fairly unique style (though I also wonder if they're restricted in what they can use and for what purposes, since they mentioned some sort of licensing rights for the paintings). "

See I'm confused on why this would be the case considering her great granddaughter (who is the executor of her Estate) is a producer on this show and I don't seen any other licensing credits in the playbill for any of her artwork aside from her Estate so it feels like a conscious choice which doesn't make much sense to me...

two ladies tickets
#160LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 8:58pm

TheatreFan4 said: "chrishuyen said: "Maybe including more of her artwork in the promo materials would help, as I do think she has a fairly unique style (though I also wonder if they're restricted in what they can use and for what purposes, since they mentioned some sort of licensing rights for the paintings). "

See I'm confused on why this would be the case considering her great granddaughter (who is the executor of her Estate) is a producer on this show and I don't seen any other licensing credits in the playbill for any of her artwork aside from her Estate so it feels like a conscious choice which doesn't make much sense to me...
"

I was having this exact conversation with a work colleague over lunch today. We were wondering why they didn't use more of her artwork. I know that a lot of Lempicka's paintings are owned by private collectors, for instance Madonna owns many of her paintings, but even if they are owned by a private collector, the estate would still have licensing control right? Or maybe it works completely differently in the art world? Does the owner of the painting have control over the rights? This is what we couldn't quite figure out this afternoon over lunch. 

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veronicamae
#161LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 9:40pm

It's common strategy to give the advertising campaign a visual makeover post-opening - I wonder if they'll start putting the recognizable paintings into advertising once they have something to say.

BorisTomashevsky
#162LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 9:49pm

A Google search seems to say that the heirs to the estate own the copyrights to the art. I’m sure the producers must have tried to cut a deal, but maybe it was a bridge too far for the estate to agree? 

Either way, I bet they wish they could use the art now more than ever. 

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TheatreFan4
#163LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 9:56pm

BorisTomashevsky said: "A Google search seems to say that the heirs to the estate own the copyrights to the art. I’m sure the producers must have tried to cut a deal, but maybe it was a bridge too far for the estate to agree?

Either way, I bet they wish they could use the art now more than ever.
"

The Estate's executor (her great granddaughter) is a literal producer on this show and has been present in rehearsals.

BorisTomashevsky
#164LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 10:03pm

TheatreFan4 said: "BorisTomashevsky said: "A Google search seems to say that the heirs to the estate own the copyrights to the art. I’m sure the producers must have tried to cut a deal, but maybe it was a bridge too far for the estate to agree?

Either way, I bet they wish they could use the art now more than ever.
"

The Estate's executor (her great granddaughter) is a literal producer on this show and has been present in rehearsals.
"

Doesn’t mean she’ll give carte blanche for the art to be used. It’s valuable and recognizable stuff and if the production can’t afford it, it won’t get any green light.

I’d also be surprised if she’s not listed “in name only” which we’ve seen happen with other shows the last couple of years. I’d also want to be present to keep an eye on things, and not necessarily to make sure the project succeeds at whatever the cost to the estate, if I was custodian of that estate. 

Willing to be wrong about all of the above. 

Updated On: 3/28/24 at 10:03 PM

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Charley Kringas Inc
#165LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/28/24 at 11:11pm

chrishuyen said: "To be fair, I guess most biomusicals don't really have a specific hook outside of the person/group's name anyway (MJ was a bit unique in the idea to look at his life through the lens of preparing for a tour). And I'm not someone that knows much about fine art, so I don't know how big Lempicka's name is for those that know more, but I suppose the main issue here is that a lot of people might not know who she is.

Maybe including more of her artwork in the promo materials would help, as I do think she has a fairly unique style (though I also wonder if they're restricted in what they can use and for what purposes, since they mentioned some sort of licensing rights for the paintings). And maybe the idea that she was a queer woman painting from that perspective. But I think the show itself is meant to be more of a character study of who she was and how both internal and external factors shaped her work and her world view (though they could certainly do a better job of crafting that story in a lot of aspects). I'm not saying it needs a framing device, but maybe having one wouldn't hurt to add a specific lens/focus to the story (possibly expanding on the person who discovered her art and how it influenced other artists in the future? There was a point where she was making so many pieces in such a short time that I can imagine she wasn't able to just enjoy her success)
"

The fact that she’s not a household name is an immediate hurdle. Lempicka (don’t lempicka that scab or it won’t heal!) doesn’t really have a famous life, so it’s not intriguing in a “I need to see how they stage this” way, and I have no idea what it is about her art that the show is capitalizing on for compelling drama. It’s like if Sunday in the Park was called “Seurat” and was just kind of generally about his life.

The show might be just fine but I do find this element of advertising really fascinating. It’s funny how, even after all these years, the old Evita ads still give me chills. I want to see the loud rotating woman!

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TaffyDavenport
#166LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/29/24 at 12:50pm

Saw this parody on a SMASH fan Twitter account:

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Auggie27 Profile Photo
Auggie27
#167LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/29/24 at 12:59pm

The Pippin ad changed Broadway advertising forever - the first show to use a specially created video spot with footage - and arguably, so did the Evita ad, created by Bob Giraldi, who would go on to do the Michael Jackson videos, most memorably, "Beat It." Watching it again today, I'm reminded of the era and how the show was a marker for Broadway then. it's an exciting cinematic take that promises something grand, epic, and yet intimate, infused with that cusp of the 1980s pop feel. You can't dismiss that song's killer hook. Or LuPone and Patinkin, oozing charisma in those closeups. I never tired of seeing it on television. And as I noted in my OP on the topic here, people not remotely drawn to the show for its content had to see the damned thing, my own mother ultimately was one of them.

If this show found something remotely similar in the Lempicka narrative, and recreated the Giraldi style (he did a gorgeous Dreamgirls spot, but that's a show that had no identity problem), it might land on a needed signature, something to plant in audiences' imagination.  


"I'm a comedian, but in my spare time, things bother me." Garry Shandling

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EDSOSLO858
#168LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/29/24 at 1:12pm

Where have lottery seats been for this show?


Life is the most precious gift in the world... embrace every moment

Kad Profile Photo
Kad
#169LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/29/24 at 6:39pm

TheatreFan4 said: "BorisTomashevsky said: "A Google search seems to say that the heirs to the estate own the copyrights to the art. I’m sure the producers must have tried to cut a deal, but maybe it was a bridge too far for the estate to agree?

Either way, I bet they wish they could use the art now more than ever.
"

The Estate's executor (her great granddaughter) is a literal producer on this show and has been present in rehearsals.
"

Her being involved does not preclude her placing restrictions on how the production can use the artwork. Since the paintings aren’t being featured in ads or on merchandise, it’s not a leap to assume such restrictions may exist. 


"...everyone finally shut up, and the audience could enjoy the beginning of the Anatevka Pogram in peace."

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Rumpelstiltskin
#170LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/29/24 at 9:24pm

Kad said: "Her being involved does not preclude her placing restrictions on how the production can use the artwork. Since the paintings aren’t being featured in ads or on merchandise, it’s not a leap to assume such restrictions may exist."

One day history will recognize this as the missed marketing opportunity that proved fatal to the production.  For the majority of us who recognize the artwork but not the artist, and hear "Lempicka" and think athletes foot powder, the visual tying the unusual name to the artwork is essential.  If it were not for my BroadwayWorld addiction, I never would have learned the backstory and given the piece a second thought.  Limited by the restrictions suggested by Kad, the current campaign just feels desperate and disassociated with the product it's trying to sell.  

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Robbie2
#171LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/30/24 at 12:40am

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"Anything you do, let it it come from you--then it will be new." Sunday in the Park with George

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Robbie2
#172LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/30/24 at 12:41am

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"Anything you do, let it it come from you--then it will be new." Sunday in the Park with George

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Robbie2
#173LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/30/24 at 12:43am

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"Anything you do, let it it come from you--then it will be new." Sunday in the Park with George

Listener
#174LEMPICKA Previews
Posted: 3/30/24 at 3:46pm

When is opening night?