Production Staff
Abe Burrows[uncredited]
Bookwriter
Bookwriter
Hugh Martin
Composer/Lyricist
Composer
Lyricist
Ferenc Molnár
Source Material
(based on play)
(based on play)
Preston Sturges
Bookwriter
Bookwriter
Ingram Ash
Advertising
Larry Baker
Assistant Stage Manager
Gower Champion
Choreographer
Choreographer
Alexander H. Cohen
Producer
Producer
Buster Davis
Musical Director
Rose Goldstein
Production Assistant
Paul Groll
Company Manager
Neil Hartley
Stage Manager
Willard Keefe
Press Representative
Phil Lang
Orchestrator
Philip J. Lang was a musician, composer and music educator who taught at the graduate schools of music at the University of Michigan and the University of Colorado and was the orchestrator of more than 50 Broadway musicals including My Fair Lady and Camelot (with Robert Russell Bennett); Annie Get Your Gun; Applause; Hello, Dolly!; Carnival; and 42nd Street. Mr. Lang was an orchestrator for the Metropolitan Opera and a frequent musical arranger for television including Hallmark Productions, David Susskind, Radio City Music Hall and "The Tonight Show."
Philip J. Lang
Orchestrator
Philip J. Lang was a musician, composer and music educator who taught at the graduate schools of music at the University of Michigan and the University of Colorado and was the orchestrator of more than 50 Broadway musicals including My Fair Lady and Camelot (with Robert Russell Bennett); Annie Get Your Gun; Applause; Hello, Dolly!; Carnival; and 42nd Street. Mr. Lang was an orchestrator for the Metropolitan Opera and a frequent musical arranger for television including Hallmark Productions, David Susskind, Radio City Music Hall and "The Tonight Show."
Hugh Martin
Vocal Music Arranger
Vocal Music Arranger
Raoul Pène Du Bois
Scenic Designer
Costume Designer
Settings/Costumes
Richard Pribor
Dance Music Arranger
Harry Rigby
Producer
Producer
Milton Rosenstock
Musical Director
Musical Director
John Barry Ryan
Assistant Stage Manager
Allan Small
Orchestrator
Orchestrator
Jule Styne
Producer
Producer
With the scores of such Broadway classics as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Peter Pan, Bells Are Ringing, Gypsy, and Funny Girl to his credit, composer Jule Styne ranks as one of the undisputed architects of the American musical theater.
Born in London's East End on December 31, 1905, Styne's family moved to the United States in 1912. Young Julius showed such a talent for the piano that he had performed with the Chicago, St. Louis, and Detroit Symphonies by age 10.
He developed his feel for popular music working with the jazz bands of 1920s Chicago, and as vocal coach to such ... read more
David Tebet
Press Representative
Archie Thompson
Production Stage Manager
Archie Thomson
Production Stage Manager
John C. Wilson
Director
Director
(Staging)
(Staging)
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