This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
The Connection is a 1959 play by Jack Gelber. It was first produced by the Living Theatre, directed by Living Theatre co-founder Judith Malina, designed by co-founder Julian Beck, and featured music by jazz pianist Freddie Redd.
Synopsis
editThe play has a play-within-a-play format, with characters Jim Dunn as the "producer" and Jaybird as the "writer" attempting to stage a production about the underbelly of society using "real" addicts. Some of the addicts are jazz musicians. They all (except for the "producer", "writer", and two "photographers") have one thing in common: they are waiting for their drug dealer, their "connection". The dialogue of the characters is interspersed with jazz music.
- Jim Dunn – Leonard Hicks
- Jaybird – Ira Lewis
- Leach – Warren Finnerty
- Solly – Jerome Raphel
- Sam – John McCurry
- Ernie – Garry Goodrow
- 1st Musician – Freddie Redd (composer, piano)
- 4th Musician – Jimmy Corbett (bass)
- First Photographer – Louis McKenzie
- Second Photographer – Jamil Zakkai
- 2nd Musician – Jackie McLean (alto saxophone)
- 3rd Musician – Clyde Harris (drums)
- Harry – Henry Proach
- Sister Salvation – Barbara Winchester
- Cowboy – Carl Lee
- Man in audience – Martin Sheen (uncredited)
Original production credits
edit- Written by Jack Gelber
- Directed by Judith Malina
- Designed by Julian Beck
Other performances of The Connection
editRevised Cast, 1961
editRedd's score, new cast
- Freddie Redd, composer/piano
- Howard McGhee, trumpet
- Tina Brooks (originally Jackie McLean's understudy), tenor saxophone
- Milt Hinton, bass
- Osie Johnson, drums
Touring Cast, 1961/62
editScore by Cecil Payne and Kenny Drew, Conducted by Cecil Payne
- Cecil Payne, baritone sax
- Clark Terry, trumpet
- Bennie Green, trombone
- Duke Jordan, piano
- Ron Carter, bass
- Charlie Persip, drums
Los Angeles Production
editThe score to accompany the Los Angeles production was performed by Dexter Gordon who also played "Number One Musician". He later recorded several pieces from this production for his Blue Note release Dexter Calling... (1961).
Quote (from the liner notes to the Blue Note album): "Soul Sister," the original that launches the first side is one of the themes Dexter wrote for the score of the Hollywood version of The Connection in which he had an acting, playing, and writing role; it is the equivalent of Freddie Redd's "(Theme for) Sister Salvation"... "I Want More", the significantly titled Gordon theme that closes the first side, is the West Coast equivalent of "O.D. (Overdose)"... "Ernie's Theme", is the last of the three themes on this LP from Dexter's Connection score. It parallels "Music Forever".[2]
Awards and honors
edit1959–60 Village Voice Obie Awards
edit- Obie Award for Best New Play
- Obie Award for Best All-Around Production
- Obie Award for Best Actor - Warren Finnerty
1959–60 Vernon Rice Awards
edit- Vernon Rice Award for outstanding achievement in the off-broadway theatre - Jack Gelber
Other
edit- Grand Prix for Best Play at the Théâtre des Nations, Paris, 1961
Related works
editFilm adaptation
- The Connection, produced by Lewis M. Allen, directed by Shirley Clarke, 1961. Released on DVD, Jazz Movie Classics/EFORFILMS 2869032
Recordings
- The Music from "The Connection", music composed by Freddie Redd, with Freddie Redd, Jackie McLean, Michael Mattos and Larry Ritchie, February 15, 1960, Blue Note, BLP 4027 (m)/BST 84027 (s). Released on CD, Blue Note 89392.
- Music from the Connection, different recording of the above score, issued as under Howard McGhee, with Tina Brooks, I. Ching (Freddie Redd), Milt Hinton and Osie Johnson
- The Music from "The Connection", rewritten score by Cecil Payne and Kenny Drew, Conducted by Cecil Payne, with Cecil Payne, Clark Terry, Bennie Green, Duke Jordan, Ron Carter and Charlie Persip, Recorded 14, 15, 16 March 1962 - Charlie Parker Records PLP 806 [3]
Other productions
- London, 1960
- European Tour, 1962: Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, Denmark, The Netherlands
- London, 1974, at Hampstead Theatre Club with Bill Wallis, John Ratzenberger, Harry Ditson, Mark Russel, Richard Moore, and Philip Hinton. Directed by Michael Rudman
- New York, 1981, with Morgan Freeman as Cowboy
- Chicago, 1992, the inaugural production of A Red Orchid Theatre, featuring Michael Shannon and Guy Van Swearingen
- New York, 2009, 50th Anniversary Production at the Living Theatre, directed by Judith Malina, music director Rene McLean
- Seattle, 2011, Sight by Sound productions, directed by Gavin Reub in The Little Theater
References
edit- ^ The Living Theater Repertory, 1959. "Premiere: The Connection". eBay. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Liner Notes to BLP 4083
- ^ Douglas McLelland, Liner Notes to Cecil Payne release
General references
edit- Kenneth Tynan, preface, The Connection, Grove Press, 1960
- Lionel Abel, Partisan Review, Winter, 1960 - "What adds to the play's power is that the characters are so like other people, though in such a different situation from most people."
- Ira Gitler, Liner notes to Blue Note BLP 4027/BST 84027
Further reading
edit- Antliff, Allan (2017). "Poetic Tension: The Aesthetic Politics of the Living Theatre". In Goyens, Tom (ed.). Radical Gotham: Anarchism in New York City from Schwab's Saloon to Occupy Wall Street. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 142–160. doi:10.5406/j.ctv4ncnpj.10. ISBN 978-0-252-04105-1. JSTOR 10.5406/j.ctv4ncnpj.10. Previously published as "Poetic Tension, Aesthetic Cruelty: Paul Goodman, Antonin Artaud, and the Living Theatre". Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies (1 & 2). 2015. ISSN 1923-5615.