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"I'm Still Here" was written during the out of town tryout for Follies in Boston, when Sondheim decided that another song ("Can That Boy Foxtrot") was not working. This song had been written as a throwaway song for a minor character, but Yvonne De Carlo was a high-profile name in the cast, and the creative team felt she deserved a more substantial song.
"I'm Still Here", a song from Stephen Sondheim's musical Follies "I'm Still Here" (Vertical Horizon song) "I'm Still Here (Jim's Theme)," a 2002 song by John Rzeznik "I'm Still Here," a song by The Notations "I'm Still Here," the final, hidden track on the 1991 album Woodface by Crowded House "I'm Still Here," a song by Kula Shaker from ...
Six by Sondheim is an HBO television documentary which pays tribute to Broadway composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim. The film was directed and co-produced by James Lapine , based on an idea by Frank Rich [ 1 ] and "centers on the backstory of six great Sondheim songs".
Follies is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by James Goldman.. The plot centers on a crumbling Broadway theater, now scheduled for demolition, previously home to a musical revue (based on the Ziegfeld Follies).
Classical in form but radical in empathy, “I’m Still Here” arguably does not need the follow-up sections — one set in 1996 and the other in 2014 — that somewhat alter the emotional rhythm.
This project continues a series of tributes to the authors whose songs Collins performed during her career. Stephen Sondheim played an important role in the singer's career, for the performance of his song "Send In the Clowns" the singer received two Grammy Award nominations, [2] the Judith album, on which it was included, sold a million copies in the United States.
Chasing brunch to the brink of apocalypse is Stephen Sondheim at his most extreme, and the world premiere of “Here We Are,” which opened Off Broadway at the Shed on Sunday, is a study in ...
As his last musical “Here We Are” confirms, Stephen Sondheim died happy, at the top of his lyrical and compositional game and clearly in love. “To love is to live” was a Sondheim creed. So ...