Does anyone know what published musical librettos there are out there??
(not Samuel French acting edition librettos, but actually published ones with color covers.)
The ones I know of are:
Grey Gardens Light in the Piazza Caroline, or Change The Secret Garden Flower Drum Song Hairspray The Full Monty A Chorus Line City Of Angels Urinetown Spring Awakening Assassins A Little Night Music Into the Woods (actually, I think most Sondheim shows are published...)
The original "Cabaret" libretto was published as a regular, text-only book in the 60s. I think it's out of print, but it shows up on ebay every so often.
(Then there's also the new book with the pictures and libretto from the Roundabout revival.)
"I just want a story and a few good songs that will take me away. I just want to be entertained. I mean, isn't that the point?"
NINE PAL JOEY A NIGHT IN HOLLYWOOD/DAY IN THE UKRAINE All of Sondheim's shows (including GYPSY and WEST SIDE STORY) KISS OF THE SPIDERWOMAN CHICAGO ZORBA TITANIC SEESAW
(these are a few I remember at the top of my head from the list at the UF library)
"Some people can thrive and bloom living life in a living room, that's perfect for some people of one hundred and five. But I at least gotta try, when I think of all the sights that I gotta see, all the places I gotta play, all the things that I gotta be at"
http://www.beintheheights.com/katnicole1 (Please click and help me win!)
I chose, and my world was shaken- So what? The choice may have been mistaken,
The choosing was not...
"Every day has the potential to be the greatest day of your life." - Lin-Manuel Miranda
"And when Idina Menzel is singing, I'm always slightly worried that her teeth are going to jump out of her mouth and chase me." - Schmerg_the_Impaler
Actually the librettos of Stephen Sondheim's "Merrily We Roll Along", "Saturday Night" and the re-working of "The Frogs" have never been published.
"A coherent existance after so many years of muddle" - Desiree' Armfelt, A Little Night Music
"Life keeps happening everyday, Say Yes" - 70, Girls, 70
"Life is what you do while you're waiting to die" - Zorba
a lot of the Sam French catalog is available for purchase. probably best to order through them.
The Rodgers & Hammerstein shows have all been published, both individually and in compilations. not sure if they are still in print.
Most of the shows (except Sondheim) in the MTI catalog are a little trickier to get. they used to be available (some of them in the Reference section of the NYPL) and now they're not. I would try actual city/public libraries. the stacks are generally kind of old and have materials from when musicals were more important in pop culture.