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Contact (musical)

Contact is a musical "dance play" that was developed by Susan Stroman and John Weidman, with its "book" by Weidman and both choreography and direction by Stroman. It ran both off-Broadway and on Broadway in 1999–2002. It consists of three separate one-act dance plays.

Contact

Various

Various

1999 Off Broadway
2000 Broadway
2002 West End
2003 U.S. tour

Background[edit]

According to a 1999 Playbill article, the musical was inspired by an experience that Stroman had "when she visited a dance club in the Meat Market district. There she witnessed a fascinating woman in a yellow dress who took turns dancing with different partners throughout the night. Watching from the sidelines, Stroman thought, 'she's going to change someone's life tonight.'"[15][16]


Robin Pogrebin wrote in The New York Times in 1999 of Stroman visiting a swing club and noticing a dancer in a yellow dress. "The woman would step up to the dance floor as a song was beginning and nod or shake her head at the various men asking to be her partner. Then, after holding everyone's attention with her nervy grace, she would disappear into the crowd. What came out of this was Contact... "[17]


The same origin was related in an article in The New Yorker, written by John Lahr in 2014: “'Into this sea of dark fashion stepped a girl in a yellow dress,' Stroman recalled. 'You couldn’t help but notice her: it was a very bold color to wear at night—lemon yellow—the same color you find on a traffic light. When she wanted to dance, she would step away from the bar and some man would ask her to dance.'"[18]

Part One – "Swinging"

Contact is made up of three separate dance pieces, each set to pre-recorded music, including from Tchaikovsky, Stéphane Grappelli, the Squirrel Nut Zippers, Royal Crown Revue, and The Beach Boys. In each story, the central character expresses a longing to make a romantic connection.[19]


All three stories concern "contact", or its lack.[20]

Casts[edit]

Original Broadway cast and replacements[edit]

Source: Internet Broadway Database[24][25]

Critical response[edit]

Ben Brantley, in his review in The New York Times of the production at the Newhouse, wrote: "...Stroman... aided by the dramatist John Weidman and a dream ensemble of dancing actors and acting dancers, has created the unthinkable: a new musical throbbing with wit, sex appeal and a perfectionist's polish. Brimming with a sophistication that is untainted by the usual fin-de-siecle cynicism, Contact restores the pleasure principle to the American musical. It's the kinetic equivalent of Rodgers and Hart."[26]

Contact improvisation

Contact Synopsis

at the Internet Broadway Database

​Contact​

at the Internet Off-Broadway Database

​Contact​

Interview with Karen Ziemba

Interview with Deborah Yates

Review Dance Magazine, October–November, 1999