Sun Sets on the Last Remaining Boulevard
Germany, June 30
The world's last remaining Sunset Boulevard production will finally finish
it's more than two-and-a-half-year run on June 30, 1998 in Frankfurt-Niedernhausen,
Germany.
When in spring 1997, Sunset Boulevard closed in New York, London and Australia, Andrew
Lloyd-Webber's Really Useful Group (RUG) also decided to put an end to the German language
production. In a dramatic last-minute-rescue-operation (the ticket sales had already come
to a standstill) Peter Buck, a German building contractor, finally succeeded in purchasing
the Sunset Boulevard rights for Germany from the RUG. First of all, Buck dismissed the
mainly British artistic and administrative management team in Niedernhausen and started to
reduce the excessive operational costs. But after 10 months Buck had to figure out that
with an average attendance of 60 percent even this "lean" production cannot
survive. He has decided to close Sunset Boulevard on June 30, 1998. Until then, nearly one
million spectators have seen the show in Niedernhausen. Current advertisements end with
the melancholy tagline "Sometimes destiny is stronger than the effort".
The German Sunset Boulevard production opened Dec. 8, 1996 in Niedernhausen, a small town
close to Frankfurt, Germany's banking capital and the country's largest airport. The
lavish production was identical to the originals on Broadway and in the West End. Starring
as Norma Desmond in Niedernhausen were US jazz singer Helen Schneider, German TV-celebrity
Daniela Ziegler and Switzerland's leading musical star Sue Mathys.
As in Germany nearly all big theatres are operated by municipalities or the state, and
have daily repertory performances for about ten months a year, commercially operated
musicals have to construct new theatre buildings for their open-end productions. Since
1986 (when musicals started to boom in Germany with the still running Cats production in
Hamburg) there have been new theatres built in Bochum (for Starlight Express), Hamburg
(Phantom of the Opera and Buddy), Stuttgart (Miss Saigon and Beauty and The Beast),
Duisburg (Les Miserables), Dusseldorf (Grease), Cologne (Gaudi), Berlin (Space Dream) and
Essen (Joseph and The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat). Currently under construction are new
projects in Bremen (opening in Oct. 1998 with Jekyll & Hyde), Berlin (opening early
1999 with probably Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame or Lion King) and Oberhausen (opening
in Feb. 1999 with Tabaluga & Lilli, a German musical).
In Niedernhausen, the Rhein-Main Theater (1,500 seats) was constructed especially for the
German Sunset Boulevard production. As the theatre is located in the countryside without
any urban surrounding it is connected directly to the Micador hotel and has also its own
railway station. Sunset Boulevard with Sue Mathys (Norma Desmond) and Yngve Gasoy Romdal
(Joe Gillis) is playing until June 30, 1998 (Tue. to Sun. at 7:45, Sat. and Sun. matinees
at 2:45) at the Rhein-Main Theater in Niedernhausen (between Frankfurt and Wiesbaden,
Germany). For tickets call (+49-6127) 9034-251.
--By Gerhard Knopf
Editor of musicals - das musicalmagazin, magazine published in Munich, Germany |
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