The acclaimed production of Cotton Club Parade, which originally ran at New York City Center in November 2011, and then returned again last fall due to strong response, is heading to Broadway this fall, producers announced earlier today.
Conceived by Jack Viertel and presented under the auspices of City Center's Tony Award-winning Encores! series, Cotton Club Parade will once again be directed and choreographed by Warren Carlyle, with music direction by Jazz at Lincoln Center Artistic Director Wynton Marsalis.
The original incarnation of the show featured the Jazz at Lincoln Center All Stars under the direction of Daryl Waters.
Cotton Club Parade is a Broadway-style revue that recreates Duke Ellington's years at the famed Harlem nightclub in the 1920s and '30s, when the joint was jumping with shows featuring big band swing and blues. As in the original revues, Cotton Club Parade will feature singers, dancers and variety acts, with songs by the greatest jazz composers of the time, including Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields, a young Harold Arlen, and of course, Duke Ellington himself.
It opened at City Center on November 18, 2011 for a limited, six-performance run and received unanimous rave reviews. It was hailed as "90 minutes of pure joy" by The Daily News and named Best Jazz Moment of 2011 by The Wall Street Journal. The New York Times said it "made period jazz come to life with a focused intensity and rhythmic savvy that left me open-mouthed with wonder."
In addition to Jared Grimes, Joshua Henry, Adriane Lenox and Amber Riley, the original Cotton Club Parade cast included Alexandria "Brinae Ali" Bradley, Andrew "Dr.Ew" Carter, Kyra Da Costa, Carmen Ruby Floyd, La Tanya Hall, Jeremiah "Supaman" Haynes, Christopher Jackson, Monroe Kent III, Karine Plantadit, T. Oliver Reid and Britton Smith, with Tanya Birl, Christopher Broughton, Wilkie Ferguson, Chanon Judson, Marielys Molina, Erin Moore, Monique Smith, Daniel J. Watts and J.L. Williams.
Updated casting for the show's Broadway run, as well as performance dates and theater will be announced later.
Good news for black theatre actors…