Evita
Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lyrics by Tim Rice
Opened
June 21, 1978 at the Prince Edward Theatre, (London) and ran for 2,900
performances.
New York Run
Produced
by Robert Stigwood
Directed by Harold Prince
Choreography by Larry Fuller
Opened
September 25, 1979 at the
Broadway Theatre, New York and ran for 1,567 performances.
Synopsis
EVITA is an opera based on the life
story of Eva Per—n, the second wife of the Argentine president Juan Per—n. Eva
Duarte was born in 1919, illegitimate, poor, without privilege. She became the
most powerful woman her country had ever seen, the First Lady of Argentina at
the age of 27. She died in 1952 of cancer, aged 33.
ACT ONE
It is the 26 July 1952. A young
Argentine student, Che, is among the audience in a Buenos Aires cinema when the
film is stopped by an announcement that Eva Per—n, "the spiritual leader
of the nation, has entered immortality".
Eva's funeral is majestic, a
combination of the magnificent excesses of the Vatican and of Hollywood
[REQUIEM FOR EVITA]. Huge crowds, much pageantry, wailing and lamentation. Che
is the only non-participant [OH WHAT A CIRCUS].
Che in EVITA is at times a
narrator, at times an observer, at times simply a device that enables the
authors to place Eva in a situation where she is confronted with direct
personal criticism. There is no evidence whatsoever that Che Guevara ever met
Eva Per—n or became in any way involved with her, but the character Che in
EVITA is based upon this legendary revolutionary. He was, however, an Argentine
born in 1928 and would therefore have been 17 when the Per—ns came to power and
24 when Eva died. He became strongly opposed to the Peronist regime during
EvaÕs lifetime and it is not unreasonable to suppose that his later activity in
Cuba and elsewhere was in part a reaction against the government he had known
in his youth.
Flashback to 1934. A night club in
Jun’n, EvaÕs hometown [ON THIS NIGHT OF A THOUSAND STARS]. Eva Duarte is just
15. She asks the singer appearing in the club, Agust’n Magaldi, with whom she
has had a brief affair, to take her to the big city—Buenos Aires. He is
reluctant [EVA BEWARE OF THE CITY] but she gets her way [BUENOS AIRES].
Once in Buenos Aires, Eva quickly
disposes of Magaldi and works her way through a string of men, each of whom
helps her one rung more up the ladder of fame and fortune [GOODNIGHT AND THANK
YOU]. She becomes a successful model, broadcaster and film actress.
1943. Colonel Juan Per—n is one of
several military leaders close to the presidency of Argentina which in recent
years has proved a far from secure job for its tenant. [THE ART OF THE
POSSIBLE].
At a charity concert (featuring
EvaÕs old friend Magaldi) held to raise money for the victims of an Argentine
earthquake, Eva and Per—n meet. They both realize that each has something the
other wants [IÕD BE SURPRISINGLY GOOD FOR YOU]. From now on Eva hitches her
ambitions to political stars. She evicts Per—nÕs mistress from his flat
[ANOTHER SUITCASE IN ANOTHER HALL] and moves into Per—nÕs life to such an extent
that she excites wrath of two factions who were to remain her enemies until her
death—the Army and the Aristocracy [PERONÕS LATEST FLAME].
As the political situation becomes
even ore uncertain it is Eva rather than Per—n who is more determined that he
should try for the highest prize in Argentina—the presidency, supported
by the workers whose backing she and Per—n have long cultivated. [A NEW
ARGENTINA].
ACT TWO
EvaÕs ambition is fulfilled and
from the balcony of the Casa Rosada on the day of Per—nÕs inauguration as
president (4 June 1946), the vast crowd gives Evita, now Per—nÕs wife, an even
greater reception than that accorded to Per—n—thanks to her emotional and
brilliant speech and to her striking appearance [DONÕT CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA].
Che notes and experiences some of the violence that was never far away from
Per—n.
Che asks Eva about herself and her
success but does not meet with a great response [HIGH FLYING ADORED]. EvaÕs
main concern is her forthcoming tour of Europe [RAINBOW HIGH] which begins in a
blaze of glory in Spain but meets with later setbacks in Italy and France. She
never gets to England at all [RAINBOW TOUR].
On her return home, Eva resolves to
concentrate solely on Argentine affairs, undeterred by continual criticism from
the society of Buenos Aires [THE ACTRESS HASNÕT LEARNED THE LINES YOUÕD LIKE TO
HEAR]. Che points out that the regime has to date done little or nothing to
improve the lot of those Eva claims to represent—the working classes.
Eva launches the Eva Per—n
Foundation [AND THE MONEY KEPT ROLLING IN AND OUT], a huge concern of shambolic
accountancy and little practical benefit to the nationÕs economy although it
helps to elevate her to near goddess status in the eyes of some of the those
who benefited from the Fund—including children [SANTA EVITA]. CheÕs
disenchantment with Eva is now total. He sneers at those who adore her and for
the last time tries to question her about her motivation and the darker side of
the Per—n administration [WALTZ FOR EVA AND CHE]. EvaÕs response is that of the
pragmatist. "There is evil ever around, fundamental." She has
realized that she is ill.
Anti-Eva feeling among the military
reaches new heights, and Che lists several of the major failures and abuses of
the Per—n administration. Per—n attempts to justify her domination of Argentine
life. He draws attention to her illness [SHE IS A DIAMOND].
Per—n and Eva discuss the worsening
situation—he is losing his grip on the government, she is losing her
strength. Eva refuses to give in to her illness and resolves to become
vice-president [DICE ARE ROLLING].
But the opposition to her from the
army is too great; more importantly her body lets her down. She knows that she
is dying and makes a broadcast to the nation, rejecting the post of
vice-president, a position she knows she could never have won. [EVAÕS FINAL
BROADCAST].
In her last hours, images, people
and events of her life flow through EvaÕs mind, while the nationÕs grief knows
no bounds—to the mass of people she has become a saint, nothing less. As her
life draws to a close she wonders whether she would have been happier as an
obscure ordinary person. Maybe then her life would have been longerÉ [LAMENT].
But even in death she is denied
obscurity. The moment she dies the embalmers move in to preserve her fragile
body to be "displayed forever", although this never happened. The
story of the escapades of the corpse of Eva Per—n during the quarter-century
after her death is almost as bizarre as the story of her life.
Source: CD Notes –
EVITA: PREMIERE AMERICAN RECORDING
EVITA won 7 Tony Awards 1979
Best
Musical Book: Tim Rice
Best
Musical Score: Andrew Lloyd
Webber and Tim Rice
Best
Musical: Producer Robert
Stigwood
Outstanding
Actress in a Musical: Patti
LuPone
Outstanding
Featured Actor in a Musical:
Mandy Patinkin
Outstanding
Direction of a Musical: Harold
Prince
Outstanding
Lighting Design: David Hersey
Grammy Award 1981 for EVITA cast recording
Golden Globe Awards
Musical
or Comedy Evita -- Buena Vista
Pictures Dist.
Actress,
Musical or Comedy Madonna --
Evita
Original
Song You Must Love Me --
Evita; music: Andrew Lloyd Webber; lyrics: Tim Rice