

And, both of the above are well within original author intent. This leads me to ask - how strict is the "no additiosn to script" part of the contract? Obviously, something like the bond between Annie & Molly being great enough Oliver is shown to plan to adopt Molly also can easily be hinted at through choreography with no extra lines. When she said she hadn't, Duffy says "Oh, I must have forgotten to stamp it!" as she stomps on her foot. They even had Miss Hannigan say the orphan was "laying down on the job." (Like her 'don't get up" to FDR in some, a line only she could deliver becasue it's in her character.) In another, right after the orphans do SMILE, Duffy asks Miss Hannigan if she got the letter Duffy had sent. One performance had a girl who couldn't walk well but sang well they let her be an extra orphan, strapped her to a bed, and had her immobile as if she was a polio victim (score one for a director willing to include the handicapped while making it *very* realistic for the '30s). I've seen a couple performances online that were quite clever in using what they had or making little additions that are funny.

It'll likely be Annie KIDS our group would do if anything, and stuff happened over the last year that mean we probably won't like I'd hoped for a while, but this question can also help others, so. and even befriends President Franklin Delano Roosevelt! She finds a new home and family in billionaire, Oliver Warbucks, his personal secretary, Grace Farrell, and a lovable mutt named Sandy.Īnnie is the perfect family-friendly musical and an ideal show for a largely female cast.

In adventure after fun-filled adventure, Annie foils Miss Hannigan's evil machinations. With the help of the other girls in the Orphanage, Annie escapes to the wondrous world of NYC. She is determined to find the parents who abandoned her years ago on the doorstep of a New York City Orphanage that is run by the cruel, embittered Miss Hannigan.

With equal measures of pluck and positivity, little orphan Annie charms everyone's hearts despite a next-to-nothing start in 1930s New York City. The beloved book and score by Tony Award winners, Thomas Meehan, Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin, features some of the greatest musical theatre hits ever written, including "Tomorrow." THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATIENCE.īased on the popular comic strip by Harold Gray, Annie has become a worldwide phenomenon and was the winner of seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical. PROCESSING TIME FOR APPLICATIONS MAY EXCEED NORMAL WAIT TIMES.
