Barbara Cook, Renée Fleming, Julia Migenes, Peter Sellars Set for Los Angeles ... TheaterMania.com The Songbook series will continue with three events focusing on the art of the American song, featuring Barbara Cook (November 14), Ann Hampton Callaway (February 10), and Max Raabe & Palast Orchester (April 10). The 2012/13 Jazz series at Walt Disney ...
Barbara Cook, Ann Hampton Callaway Sings Streisand, Angels in America, Where ... Playbill.com Of interest to theatre fans is The Songbook Series, which will feature performances by Tony winner Barbara Cook and Tony nominee Ann Hampton Callaway. Cook will celebrate her 85th birthday at the Los Angeles venue; her concert with the Philharmonic is ...
Elaine Stritch Joins Lineup for TheatreWorks USA Gala, 2/12 Broadway World (Barbara Cook and Donna Murphy, both of whom were originally announced to appear, have withdrawn due to scheduling conflicts.) The 50th Anniversary Celebration gala will honor five individuals whose longtime professional contributions to Theatreworks ...
Meryl Streep explains how her opera training helps vocal control Los Angeles Times The actress said she performed "The Music Man" in a high school staging and that she had seen Barbara Cook in the original Broadway production of the musical. (Streep was honored alongside Cook at the most recent Kennedy Center Honors.) ...
Playing Music Protects Memory, Hearing, Brain Processing ABC News Think of musical figures who have had long careers -- from Mick Jagger to Paul McCartney to Barbara Cook -- and it appears there's something, beyond love of their art, that has kept them going. Nina Kraus's Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory at ...
PHOTO ARCHIVE: Carrie Musical, Original Photos and Playbill Playbill.com ... and Dean Pitchford collaborated with "Carrie" screenwriter Lawrence D. Cohen on the musical adaptation which premiered in London at the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1988 starring Linzi Hateley as Carrie, with Tony winner Barbara Cook as her mother.
A Cabaret Plumbs History to Write Its Own Plotline New York Times Mr. Wittman, who once worked at Studio 54 organizing stage shows, said he envisioned 54 Below as a throwback to Reno Sweeney, the club on West 13th Street where in the '70s “you could see Peter Allen and Barbara Cook and also Edie Beale.