Cabaret

musical by Kander and Ebb
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Awards And Honors:
Tony Awards

Cabaret, acclaimed stage musical by composer John Kander and lyricist Fred Ebb that explores the decadence of Berlin during the Weimar Republic amid the rising threat of Nazism. Set in a seedy cabaret called the Kit Kat Klub in 1929–30, the innovative musical tells the story of two doomed romances set against the emergence of anti-Semitism and fascism in Germany. Cabaret is based on John Van Druten’s play I Am a Camera (1951), which was inspired by the British-American author Christopher Isherwood’s semi-autobiographical The Berlin Stories (1945). Cabaret opened in New York City at the Broadhurst Theatre on November 20, 1966, before transferring to the Imperial Theatre and then the Broadway Theatre, where it closed on September 6, 1969, after 1,165 performances. At the 1967 Tony Awards ceremony, Cabaret won in eight categories, including best musical and best original musical score. In addition, its cast album, or original cast recording, won a 1967 Grammy Award. In London’s West End, Cabaret opened at the Palace Theatre on February 26, 1968. The musical, which has played numerous touring productions, has been revived on Broadway and in the West End during every decade since the 1970s.

Original Broadway cast and production

Main cast
  • Jill Haworth (Sally Bowles)
  • Bert Convy (Clifford Bradshaw)
  • Lotte Lenya (Fraulein Schneider)
  • Jack Gilford (Herr Schultz)
  • Edward Winter (Ernst Ludwig)
  • Joel Grey (Master of Ceremonies)

Members of the original Broadway cast included Jill Haworth, Bert Convy, Lotte Lenya, Jack Gilford, Edward Winter, and Joel Grey as the depraved Master of Ceremonies (or Emcee), a role that he reprised to great acclaim in the 1972 film version of Cabaret. Grey’s performances earned him both a Tony Award (for best featured actor in a musical) and an Oscar (for best supporting actor). The staging of the original Broadway production was unusual for the time. Suspended above the stage was a mirror, slanted so that audience members could see themselves, thus breaking the imaginary “fourth wall” between performers and viewers and making the latter part of the show. In addition, the show launched straight into the opening song, with no overture or curtain, lending to the illusion that the audience was part of the crowd at the Kit Kat Klub. The events of the musical are interspersed with songs and risqué dancing at the cabaret, beginning with the Emcee’s bawdy welcome to the show, “Willkommen.”

Plot and characters

Cabaret depicts an American writer, Clifford (Cliff) Bradshaw (Bert Convy), as he arrives in 1929 Berlin. On the train, he meets Ernst Ludwig (Edward Winter), a German who helps him find a room to rent at a boardinghouse owned by Fraulein Schneider (Lotte Lenya). At the nearby Kit Kat Klub, Cliff watches vivacious English singer Sally Bowles (Jill Haworth) perform and talks with her after the show. Sally ends up moving in with Cliff, and they begin a romantic relationship. Meanwhile, Ernst offers to pay Cliff to smuggle some goods, and Herr Schultz (Jack Gilford), a Jewish greengrocer, shyly romances Fraulein Schneider. Sally discovers that she is pregnant, but she isn’t sure of the father’s identity. Cliff tries to persuade her to have the baby, marry him, and move with him to America.

Herr Schultz and Fraulein Schneider decide to marry. At their engagement party, Ernst arrives wearing a Nazi armband. After the party, Herr Schultz tries to convince Fraulein Schneider that they will be safe together, but then someone throws a brick through the window of his shop, and, afraid, Fraulein Schneider reluctantly calls off their engagement. Cliff tells Sally that they should leave Germany now and points out that things are changing for the worse. Sally says she is not concerned with politics and tells Cliff she is staying in Berlin. She has an abortion and goes back to work at the Kit Kat Klub. Cliff sadly leaves Berlin on the train.

The character Cliff Bradshaw is widely read as a stand-in for Isherwood, who lived in Berlin in 1929 and was a witness to the decadence found in parts of the city, as well as the gathering darkness of the Third Reich. Isherwood saw that Nazism was becoming a force in Germany, but many people dismissed the Nazis as a fringe movement or ignored the threat because they were caught up in the busyness and enjoyment of their own lives. This is shown in “Willkommen,” in which the Emcee tells the crowd, “In here, life is beautiful.”

Sally too does not want to pay attention to what is happening outside the club. As she sings in “Cabaret,” the musical’s best-known song,

  • No use permitting
  • some prophet of doom
  • to wipe every smile away.
  • Life is a Cabaret, old chum.
  • Come to the Cabaret!

In the 1972 film version of Cabaret, the role of Sally was a star-making turn for Liza Minnelli, who won an Oscar for best actress for her work. The film won a total of eight Oscars.

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Karen Sottosanti