6 videos that trace the 42nd Street journey from stage to screen

24 Oct
2019
Posted in: Features Videos
Author: Staff
6-videos-that-trace-the-42nd-street-journey-from-stage-to-screen
42nd Street videos

As we count down to 42nd STREET hitting 650+ cinema screens via More2Screen in November, have a look at the official cinema trailer - and five other unmissable videos that trace the journey for the largest-ever staging of this Broadway classic, which ran at Theatre Royal Drury Lane until earlier this year.

42nd Street, with music and lyrics by Harry Warren and Al Dubin, the show centres on the efforts of famed Broadway director Julian Marsh to mount a successful stage production of a musical extravaganza at the height of the Great Depression and Peggy Sawyer, a talented newcomer with stars in her eyes who gets her big break after leading lady Dorothy Brock is injured. Bonnie Langford, who played Peggy Sawyer in the original London production, now stars as Dorothy Brock alongside Emmerdale’s Tom Lister (as Julian Marsh), Clare Halse (Peggy Sawyer) and Philip Bertioli (Billy Lawlor).

The stage production was produced by Michael Linnit and Michael Grade. It was filmed live for the cinema screen at the 2000-seat Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in November 2018 by BroadwayHD, the US-based streaming service for live theatre. Ross MacGibbon directed the filmed version in collaboration with the late Mark Bramble, filming in 4K with eight cameras at three separate performances to capture the spectacular scale of the stage show.

The 60-strong cast also features Jasna Ivir (as Maggie Jones), Christopher Howell (Bert Barry), Matthew Goodgame (Pat Denning), Graeme Henderson (Andy Lee), Bruce Montague (Abner Dillon), Mark McKerracher (Mac/Doc/Thug), Emma Caffrey (Annie), Ella Martine (Lorraine), Clare Rickard (Phyllis) and Paul Knight (Oscar).

42nd Street is broadcast to more than 650 cinema screens across the UK and Ireland on 10 and 12 November 2019. Click here to find your nearest cinema and showtime.


1. Cinema trailer


2. West End trailer


3. Opening night


4. Building the Drury Lane set


5. Open auditions for dancers


6. Broadway to West End: Then & now