Because the play is about an Asian society, Schulman has managed to cast the play with 95 percent Asian representation in a company of 32, including 13 children. What Schulman likes best about the production is what she calls "the arc" through which Anna and the King travel during the course of the play. "I think it's so brilliantly constructed in how they meet and butt heads in the beginning, and how they slowly learn to respect each other," she says. "And how the show gives them wonderful plot moments where you can see how they begin to question their own val- ues. Like Rodgers and Hammerstein, Jennifer Gould Alan Jay Lerner (1918-86) and Frederick Loewe (1901-88) achieved immortality with a string of great musicals, includ- ing Brigadoon, Paint Your Wagon, Camelot and their greatest suc- cess, My Fair Lady. Last year, Stratford presented My Fair Lady to uniformly rave Adrienne Gould reviews. The 2003 season fea- tures Gigi, Lerner and Loewe's 1973 adaptation of their blockbuster screen musi- cal, which starred Maurice Chevalier, Hermione Gingold and Leslie Caron. Gigi is based on Colette's novel about a young girl being trained in the social graces by her two aunts so she can become a courtesan. A rich young man falls in love with her and transforms her life. In 1959, the movie won nine Oscars, the largest number ever won by a film in the 31 years of the Academy. Fate would be less kind to the stage version, which lasted three months. When the French writer Colette wrote Gigi, she was nearly 70. It was 1942, and Europe had been conquered and destroyed by Hitler's Nazis. Colette's beloved third husband, Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner: A lovely story. Maurice Goudeket, who was Jewish, had been arrested by the definite plus in portraying the feisty, energetic 15- Germans and sent to a concentration camp in year-old Gigi. 1941. But Gigi is not Jennnifer's only role during the By the time Colette published Gigi, both author Ontario festival's season. She also plays La and reader were in great need of a lovely story that Esmeralda, the ill-fated Gypsy girl, in The carried them to another place and time. The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Performing two major novella recalls the belle e'poque of Paris in 1900, roles in repertory, and switching back and forth, is when the world was optimistic and fun. something she enjoys during the long Stratford season. A Tale Of Two Sisters The sisters say there is no sibling rivalry, nor any competition, between them. Each regards the For sisters Jennifer and Adrienne Gould, sharing other as a friend. the same stage in Gigi is a first. Jennifer plays the Jennifer began acting at age 10 when her father, title role; her younger sister, Adrienne, is one of a lawyer and amateur actor, persuaded her to audi- the dancers and plays Madame Laverne. Jennifer's porcelain beauty belies her 32 years, a STRATFORD on page 68 Both wanted to be profes s . ional performers and began working together in small theater nightclubs in Greenwich Village in the 1930s as part of an act called the Revuers with Judy Holliday, born Judith Tuvim (Tuvim is Hebrew for holiday). It was Holliday for whom they would create their biggest Broadway hit, Bells Are Ringing, in 1956. Comden and Green wrote the score and Jewish composer Jule Styne, their most frequent collabora- tor, wrote the music and libretto. In 1944, their friend Leonard Bernstein su ested Comden and Green as lyr.cists and librettists when he and choreographer Jerome Robbins planned to turn • their ballet, Fancy Free, into a full-scale Broadway musi- cal. It became On The Town, in which both Comden and Green had leading roles on stage as well as off. On The Town was a smash hit, launching the suc- cessful careers of its four young Jewish creators. Comden and Green also wrote the lyrics for Bernstein's Wonderful Town (1953), for which they won a Tony for Best Score. Among their numerous screenplays, Comden and Green wrote what many critics con- sider the greatest movie musical of all time, Singing in the Rain, star- ring the immortal Gene Kelly. Cy Coleman Sam Strasfeld In 1978, Comden and Green wrote the libretto and lyrics for On The Twentieth Century, a mock operetta with music by Cy Coleman (born Seymour Kaufman in New York City in 1929), yet another Jewish musical prodigy. Based on Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's 1932 comic play, Twentieth Century, about the love and rivalry between a down-and-out theater producer and a temperamental Hollywood star, the tale was set on the famous luxury train of the title, and Coleman's music had the rushing excitement of a locomotive. Despite glowing reviews and Tony Awards for its book and lyrics, the musical had trouble appealing 3) I Remember It Well : to 1970s audiences and remains one of the team's most underrat- ed works. Sam Strasfeld, 22, makes his debut at the Shaw Festival as a singing porter in On The Twentieth Century. A Toronto- based Jewish actor/dancer, he Kurt Weill also has been appointed dance captain of the musical and will be an understudy for one of the principal roles. T Ast season, Strasfeld was a member of Stratford's com- pany, performing in the chorus in My Fair Lady and The Threepenny Opera. When the season ended in November, he performed in Peter Pan in Hamilton, Ontario. The Fourth Penny Kurt Weill, the son of the chief cantor in a Dessau (Germany) synagogue, wrote the musical Happy End NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE on page 69 3/28 2003 67