For those curious ones... here are photos of the original 1975 Broadway production of Bob Fosse's CHICAGO.
And yes... you're welcome.
Model of Tony Walton's set design:
"All That Jazz" (Chita Rivera):
"Funny Honey" (Gwen Verdon):
"Cell Block Tango" (yup... my mom is in that group):
"We Want Billy" (yup... my mom is in this group as well):
"All I Care About" (Jerry Orbach):
"A Little Bit of Good" (M. O'Haughey):
"We Both Reached for the Gun":
"Roxie":
"I Can't Do it Alone":
"My Own Best Friend":
"Me and My Baby":
"Mister Cellophane" (Barney Martin):
"When Velma Takes the Stand":
"Razzle Dazzle":
The Trial Scene:
"Class" (Mary McCarty):
"Nowadays" (okay, I couldn't locate a photo of Gwen and Chita in this costume so for your enjoyment... here are their replacements from 1977: Ann Reinking and Lenora Nemetz!):
"R.S.V.P./Keep it Hot" aka "The Hot Honey Rag":
BONUS:
During the out-of-town tryouts they experimented with the costumes for the newly added "The Hot Honey Rag" number (which replaced "Loopin' the Loop"). They ended-up using the one posted above with the white tassles:
From out-of-town: The Finale' (before they threw the REAL roses out into the audience):
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Great to see these all! As I've said before, love the polkadot briefs on the guys in Roxie (maybe I have a fetish for polkadots...)
It's always annoyed me that the original Chicago doesn't seem to have too many high quality colour photos--like ones that really show the set. Maybe cuz the set was dark with black lit and neon lights, etc.
""I like the set model, but there's something disturbing about old women in skanky outfits." "
Woot and Fosse wins! The original productionw as definetly much more skanky sleazy--not the sorta classy sleazy of the new production.
Rob Marshall based his 2002 film adaptation of CHICAGO on Bob Fosse's original 1975 Broadway production.
He heavily payed homage to Bob Fosse and the show by incorporating numerous elements of the original stage production:
Roxie singing "Funny Honey" on top of a piano. The ladies behind individual prison bars in the "Cell Block Tango". Billy ending "We Both Reached for the Gun" with the glass of milk. The red neon ROXIE sign in "Roxie". Amos wearing the clown costume (with the oversized collar) in "Mister Cellophane". The white tassled dresses for "The Hot Honey Rag".
Great photos, looks like it was a fantastic production. The costumes here are even more revealing than the ones in the revival. Updated On: 11/25/08 at 11:00 PM
"I like the set model, but there's something disturbing about old women in skanky outfits.'
Well I give credit to any woman who can have bodies like that at their age, dance better than any chorus cutie, and bring the house down by uttering a simple phrase or verse.
Well... they weren't the old hags everyone is making them out to be.
Chita Rivera was only 42 years old when she played Velma and Gwen Verdon was only 50 years old when she played Roxie Hart. Bebe Neuwirth was 38 years old when she played Velma (she's now 50 years old).
Remember... Madonna is now the same age Gwen was. If THAT'S old for you guys, I guess Barbra Streisand is close to death at 66.
Though it has to be pointed out age, and women's ages and what society thinks, is diffferent now then it was 30 years ago when Chicago premiered. there's all those ridiculous articles about 60 being the new forty or whatever but there is some truth to that--for a variety of reasons. (I mean just like in 1951 Norma Desmond in Sunset is seen as ANCIENT when now she really wouldn't be).
And it's true Marshall paid a lot of ommage to the original--i wish he had kept the original Hot honey Rag though--I still don't like many of his decisions.
Both Velma and Roxie should have some mileage on them. Neither is a fresh young ingenue or a hot young babe. They've both been through the mill and have a desperate edge when they get their unexpected crime-driven renaissance.
Gwen Verdon Chita Rivera Jerry Orbach Barney Martin Mary McCarty et al.
Was the original CHICAGO's cast the best ever assembled for a musical? Is there even another candidate?
As for the age of the stars, you are looking at still photos. The poster who said Velma and Roxie aren't supposed to be dewy-eyed young things is correct. But I was about 21 when it opened, saw the show many times, and I never thought of either woman as "old". On stage, they were so limber and energetic it really prevented you from thinking of them as middle-aged.
The first time I saw it I did, Eric. My response was to admire the cast and the "razzle dazzle", but think "If you really believe people are so awful, then suicide would be more productive than writing a musical." (Let's all remember this was long before O.J.'s trial, much less Jody Arias'. Celebrity defendants getting off by means of publicity wasn't nearly so common (or so it seemed).)
I saw it a second time when Lenora Nemetz was on for Rivera. I thought the show improved, because Nemetz was great but not nearly as intense as Rivera and the entire evening seemed less aggressive.
The third time I saw it, Rivera was back, but I had an better understanding of the show and I could just marvel at the performances (particularly Rivera's).
By then I was hooked and didn't worry about the overkill the rest of the times I saw it.
But looking back, I think it was less the writing than the directing. Fosse just couldn't stop spewing bile and choices such as having the jury played by one actor with 12 grotesque masks--clever as it may sound--were just too much.
Which isn't to say I wasn't also awestruck by much of his staging!