Monday, May 21, 2012

Annie broadway

  • Little Orphan Annie has found a home finally — the Palace Theatre.
  • (San Francisco Gate)
  • Howard, a native of Santa Clarita, was part of a nine-month-long nationwide search that involved auditioning more than 5,000 Annie hopefuls who showed up for an open casting call for the Broadway musical version.
  • (Glendale News-Press)
  • Pittsburgh CLO has announced casting for its summer season, which includes six shows, featuring the national tours of Come Fly Away and The Addams Family, and CLO original productions of A Chorus Line, Annie in a dozen Broadway shows.
  • (Starring Sally Struthers, Hunter Herdlicka, Liz Callaway and More! - Broadway World)
  • The sun will come out tomorrow. It's a sentiment that's been with us a long time, thanks to "Annie," the classic Broadway musical about a little red-headed orphan girl, her dog, and the billionaire who comes to love her as his own.
  • (The Spokesman-Review)
  • After more than 5,000 auditions, the Broadway revival of the Tony-winning musical Annie announced its cast of orphans on May 15.
  • (Playbill)
  • This is my return to Broadway as a man now and I could not have done what I did onstage every night without these amazing people up here with me. Jonas made his Broadway debut in the musical revival Annie Get Your Gun in 2001.
  • (WXYZ)
  • When it comes to understanding the fundamentals of voice lessons for children, who better to ask than the voice teacher of Broadway's new "It Girl"? Lilla Crawford, star of the upcoming production of "Annie," works with Badiene Magaziner.
  • (BackStage.com)
  • (The one being used by Dutch Apple was smartly updated by Peter Stone for a 1999 Broadway revival.) But Annie Get Your Gun, which opened on Broadway in 1946, is one of those shows — much like Oklahoma — that can smell a little musty at times.
  • (Lancaster online.com)
  • Being cute counts, too, but not as much as you think. William Berloni, who cast and trained the original Sandy for the Broadway run of "Annie," said without training, a pet won't even get a look from agents or talent scouts.
  • (Boston Herald)

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