In June 2003, the Arkansas Rep went back to the dying days of vaudeville when it presented Gypsy. Written by Arthur Laurents, Jule Styne and Stephen Sondheim, this musical fable looks at the end of vaudeville and the rise of Gypsy Rose Lee. It was directed by Rep founder Cliff Fannin Baker.
Baker said he had long wanted to do the show, but credited Bob Hupp (his successor as the Rep’s Producing Artistic Director) with figuring out a way to make it happen.
Mary Robin Roth took on the role of Mama Rose. She had previously played Miss Hannigan in Annie at the Rep. Broadway vets Trista Moldovan and Joyce Chittick played Rose’s daughters Louise and June. In real life those grew up to be Gypsy Rose Lee and June Havoc. Others in the cast of approximately 30 included John Kudan, Nicholas Dromard, and Steve Wilkerson.
The creative team included Mike Nichols (scenery), Margaret A. McKowen (costumes), David Neville (lighting) and M. Jason Pruzin (sound). Ron Hutchins choreographed, and Eric Alsford was the musical director.
Even before opening night, the production was extended a week and ended on July 6 instead of June 29.
The Arkansas Rep concluded its 25th season with the Cole Porter musical Anything Goes. Directed by Rep founder Cliff Fannin Baker, it featured an onstage orchestra led by then-Arkansas Symphony maestro David Itkin. (Rep Producing Artistic Director Bob Hupp and Itkin had been trying for a while to find a project for collaboration.)
A comedy about truth and trust, deception and decisions, Douglas Carter Beane’s As Bees in Honey Drown marked the first production of the 1999-2000 season for Arkansas Repertory Theatre. It also signified the transition between Rep founder Cliff Fannin Baker and Bob Hupp as artistic director.
When you’ve written one of the great American novels of the second half of the 20th Century and seen it turned into an Oscar winning movie, what do you do next? You continue writing.
In 1996, the Arkansas Rep presented Tony Kushner’s Angels in America: Millennium Approaches. It was one of seven professional theatres granted the rights to do the show that season. The production ran from February 29 to March 17 of that year.
N. Richard Nash’s romantic drama with comedy, The Rainmaker took over the Arkansas Rep stage in January and February 1995. Following the run in Little Rock, it toured the US through April of that year.
While audience members were tasked with solving THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD at Arkansas Rep in October 1988, they also had the chance to explore the new home for the Rep. This Tony winning musical marked the opening of the new Main Street location after twelve years in the converted church adjacent to MacArthur Park.