Production Staff
Betty Comden
Sketches/Lyricist
Bookwriter
Lyricist
Betty Comden, born in Brooklyn in 1917, was an American lyricist, screenwriter, and actress. She is best known for her work with Adolph Green, with whom she collaborated on numerous musicals and films.
Comden and Green met in 1938 while both were studying at New York University, and began writing together shortly thereafter. Their first Broadway credit was for On the Town, a musical about three sailors on a 24-hour leave in New York City. The show premiered in 1944 and was a huge success, cementing Comden and Green's place in the world of musical theater.
Comden and Green went on to ... read more
Adolph Green
Sketches/Lyricist
Bookwriter
Lyricist
Adolph Green was an American lyricist and playwright who was born on December 2, 1914, in the Bronx, New York. He was the son of Hungarian Jewish immigrants. Green's father was a successful businessman, and his mother was a homemaker. Green attended New York University, where he studied English and drama.
Green began his career in show business as a performer in the late 1930s. He appeared in several Broadway productions, including "The New Yorkers" and "Two for the Show." However, it was his work as a lyricist that would make him famous.
Green's first major success as a lyricist came in ... read more
Jule Styne
Composer
Composer
Ernest Adler
Hair Designer
Make-Up Designer
Howard Bay
Settings/Lighting
Lighting Designer
Scenic Designer
Perry Bruskin
Stage Manager
Abe Burrows
Director
Director
Carin Burrows
Assistant to Mr. Burrows
May Callas
Assistant to Mr. Bay
Ted Cappy
Choreographer
(Musical Staging)
(Musical Staging)
Choreographer
Nat Dorfman
Press Representative
Irvin Dorfman
Associate Press Representative
Evelyn Erb
Assistant to Miss Lutyens
Anthony B. Farrell
Theatre Owner / Operator
Richard Gray
Assistant Stage Manager
Herbert Greene
Musical Director
Vocal Music Arranger
Musical Director
Vocal Music Arranger
Herbert Greene was a Broadway conductor, vocal arranger, vocal coach and producer, prominent in the Broadway musical theater in New York City until his death in 1985. In 1958, he was a recipient of the Tony Award for The Music Man as Musical Director and Conductor, and won a second Tony Award as the show's co-producer with Kermit Bloomgarten.
With a classical background in opera and composition, Greene wrote innovative vocal and choral arrangements for such hit musicals as Guys and Dolls, The Most Happy Fella, Bells Are Ringing, and The Unsinkable Molly Brown, to name a few.
In addition to his ... read more
Joseph Harris
Company Manager
Florence Klotz
Assistant to Miss Personnette
Philip Lang
Orchestrator
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."
Morris Lefkowitz
Music Contractor
Arthur Lesser
Producer
Producer
Joan Personette
Costume Designer
Costume Designer
Genevieve Pitot
Dance Music Arranger
Dance Music Arranger
B.H. Segal
General Manager
John Sola
General Stage Manager
Lawrence Weiner
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