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    • 1882

      • In 1882 C. E. Kohl and George Middleton opened the first acknowledged vaudeville entertainment in Chicago, their West Side Museum.
      encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1299.html
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  2. Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville opened on June 3, 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre, and ran for a total of 936 performances, closing on August 27, 1977. [19] The opening night cast starred Chita Rivera as Velma Kelly, Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart, Jerry Orbach as Billy Flynn, and Barney Martin as Amos Hart.

    • How The Chicago Musical Represents Life in 1920s Chicago
    • True Crimes That Inspired Chicago
    • Vaudeville Performance of The 1920s
    • How Accurate Is Chicago to 1920s History?

    Picture this: It’s 1923, and there have been three Presidents in three years. The 18th Amendment (Prohibition) is in effect, so you can’t even drink (legally) as you complain about the revolving door of leaders. Everything is changing around you after the end of World War I, as industrialization, urbanization, immigration, and evolving gender roles...

    The Chicagomusical was inspired by Maurine Dallas Watkins’s 1926 play, which, in turn, was inspired by two real-life trials: those of Beulah Annan and Belva Gaetner. The women inspired Roxie and Velma, respectively: Beulah was a housewife cheating on her mechanic husband (she shot her lover, like Roxie), and Belva was a cabaret singer. Belva killed...

    Chicagoisn’t just a legal history musical. The show also embraces 1920s culture, most specifically the rise of jazz music, evolving gender roles, and especially vaudeville revues. These shows could include dancers, singers, acrobats, magicians, animals, and a host of other entertainment types. Vaudeville revues were popular before the 1920s, with t...

    It was incredibly rare to be convicted for matricide in 1920s Chicago: Of the 186 accused women, only 24 were convicted, and some of those cases were overturned. Only 12 women served their full time and were convicted. Instead, many of these women were lauded as celebrities, with the two most popular Chicago newspapers, the Chicago Tribune and Hear...

  3. Oct 29, 2022 · Despite all this conflict, the show went on and, "Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville," opened on Broadway in 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre starring Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart, Chita Rivera as Velma...

  4. Mar 31, 2024 · When was Vaudeville in its prime? In the United States, vaudeville began to take shape in the mid-to-late 19th century, particularly in cities like New York, Boston, and Chicago.

  5. Originally debuted in 1975, the musical Chicago was a modest success, but even the cynical ’70s weren’t ready for a chilly story about murder as a form of entertainment. But with today’s reality shows and televised trials, nothing is sacred.

  6. The late 1920s. Musical Comedy. ABOUT THIS SHOW. Music by: John Kander; Book by: Fred Ebb, Bob Fosse; Lyrics by: Fred Ebb. Based on Chicago. NYC PRODUCTIONS. TOURING PRODUCTIONS. 1. Jun 3, 1975 - Aug 27, 1977. 46th Street Theatre, New York, NY. Musical Original. 2. Nov 14, 1996 - Present.

  7. Sep 30, 2018 · When Chicago was first adapted into a Broadway musical by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Bob Fosse, each musical number was written in the vaudeville style. A vaudeville is a light, comic number, combining music and pantomime to entertain - but not to educate, or suggest a lesson in morality.

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