Whose turn is it? Where Gypsy’s finale came from, and where it went | Intellect Skip to content
1981
Volume 13, Issue 2
  • ISSN: 1750-3159
  • E-ISSN: 1750-3167

Abstract

Previously untapped primary sources and recent interviews with key members of ’s creative team allow for a more nuanced understanding of the creation and long-lasting impact of the show’s finale, ‘Rose’s Turn’. In 2010, when Stephen Sondheim described the number’s creation as ‘the high point of my theatrical life’, he signalled an unusually central role for the credited lyricist, but sources also point to a complex and intensive collaboration among many creators across a year leading up to the show’s opening. Moreover, manuscript sources and video-recorded performances show how book writer Arthur Laurents continued to adjust the number’s staging and surrounding dialogue in subsequent productions that he directed. Meanwhile, grasping Sondheim’s role helps to throw into relief how he himself applied the lessons of ‘Rose’s Turn’ to the denouements of his later shows where major characters discover self-knowledge, rather than romantic confirmation, in the finale. From this perspective, ‘Rose’s Turn’ may be construed as offering a paradigm shift that resonated on Broadway for at least five decades.

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2019-06-01
2024-04-24
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