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The Robber Bridegroom is a musical with a book and lyrics by Alfred Uhry and music by Robert Waldman. The story is based on the 1942 novella by Eudora Welty of the same name, with a Robin Hood-like hero; the adaptation placed it in a late 18th-century American setting. The musical ran on Broadway in 1975 and again in 1976.
The Robber Bridegroom may refer to: The Robber Bridegroom (fairy tale), a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm; The Robber Bridegroom (novella), 1942 novella by Eudora Welty, inspired by and loosely based on the Grimm fairy tale; The Robber Bridegroom (musical), a 1975 Broadway musical, based on the 1942 novella
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... The Robber Bridegroom (musical) The Robber Bridegroom (novella) T. Till We Have Faces
The stories included "The Bremen Town Musicians," "The Little Peasant," "The Robber Bridegroom," "The Master Thief," "The Fisherman and His Wife," "Two Crows," "The Golden Goose," "Henny Penny," and "Venus and the Cat". Each cast member portrayed the various characters in each story; for example, Paul Sand was the Robber Bridegroom, Turkey ...
Robert Waldman (born 1936) [1] is an American composer, musical arranger, and orchestrator.Waldman has collaborated with Alfred Uhry twice, on Here's Where I Belong, the disastrous 1968 adaptation of John Steinbeck's East of Eden that closed on opening night, and the considerably more successful The Robber Bridegroom, which was produced on Broadway in both 1975 and 1976, enjoyed a year-long US ...
The Robber Bridegroom is a 1942 novella by Eudora Welty. [1] [2] The story, inspired by and loosely based on the Grimm fairy tale The Robber Bridegroom, is a Southern folk tale set in Mississippi. [1] At the opening of the novella, the legendary Mike Fink meets gentleman robber Jamie Lockhart
A bunch of Netflix execs and A-listers (inclding Ben Affleck and Tina Fey) gathered for an event called Next on Netflix earlier this week, and John Mulaney hopped on stage to promote his new show ...
"The Robber Bridegroom" is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, tale number 40. [1] Joseph Jacobs included a variant, Mr Fox , in English Fairy Tales , [ 2 ] but the original provenance is much older; Shakespeare (circa 1599) alludes to the Mr. Fox variant in Much Ado About Nothing , Act 1, Scene 1: [ 3 ]