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  1. 13 de jul. de 2022 · Dearest Enemy. Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Lorenz Hart Book: Herbert Fields Musical Type: Jazz Age (1925) This collaboration between Rodgers and Hart marked their first entry into the mainstream. (To view their earlier collaborations, refer to the “additional works” section below!) The musical premiered on Broadway in 1925 and ran for over 250 performances.

  2. Learn more about the 1991 West End Revival of The Boys from Syracuse at the Official Rodgers & Hammerstein website ... About. Synopsis. Characters. Media. Music. Songs. Recordings. 1953 Studio Cast Recording. 1963 Off-Broadway Revival. 1997 New York City Center. Productions. 1938 Original Broadway Production. 1940 ... Music by Richard Rodgers ...

  3. Falling in Love with Love. Lyrics By Lorenz Hart Music By Richard Rodgers. Aching with loneliness due to the absence of her husband, Antipholus of Ephesus, Adriana ruefully reflects on her love life. First sung by Muriel Angelus in the 1938 Broadway premiere of The Boys from Syracuse, “Falling in Love with Love” became an American standard.

  4. Sung by Rebecca Luker, Debbie Shapiro Gravitte and Christine EbersolesVHS ripThe Rodgers & Hart Story: Thou Swell, Thou Witty (1999)

  5. Richard Charles Rodgers (28 de junio de 1902, Nueva York - 30 de diciembre de 1979, Nueva York) fue un compositor estadounidense considerado uno de los más importantes entre los compositores de musicales de Broadway de la época junto a Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Cole Porter o Jule Styne.Compuso canciones clásicas como Blue Moon (1934) así como numerosos musicales como The Sound of ...

  6. "Boys from Syracuse" published on by null. Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart were in the autumn of their partnership (Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s Oklahoma! was only five years away) ... Richard Rodgers (1902—1979) American composer Lorenz Hart (1895—1943)

  7. History. When The Boys from Syracuse opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York City on November 23, 1938, Brooks Atkinson of The New York Times said, “Rodgers and Hart have written some of their gayest songs… a beautiful feast of rollicking mummery,” and Richard Watts of The Herald Tribune called it “the finest and most satisfying musical ...