Onward Victoria
Onward Victoria is a musical (1980) with a book and lyrics by Charlotte Anker and Irene Rosenberg, and music by Keith Herrmann.
| Onward Victoria | |
|---|---|
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| Music | Keith Herrmann | 
| Lyrics | Charlotte Anker  Irene Rosenberg  | 
| Book | Charlotte Anker  Irene Rosenberg  | 
| Basis | Life of Victoria Woodhull | 
| Productions | 1980 Broadway | 
Its subject is Victoria Woodhull, the 19th-century woman who with her sister were the first women to operate a brokerage firm, at which they became millionaires; and started a newspaper. Woodhull was a eugenicist and proponent for free love and activist for equality of the sexes. Its cast of characters includes Cornelius Vanderbilt, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, restaurateur Charlie Delmonico, and Henry Ward Beecher, with whom Woodhull is linked in a fictional romance that leads to the minister being tried for alienation of affections.
This musical originated in 1979 as Unescorted Women, first produced off-off-Broadway by the Joseph Jefferson Theatre Company. With its budget sets and costumes, anachronistic pop score, and camp burlesque-style production numbers (including one in which Woodhull sang the praises of Beecher's physical endowment) intact, headed uptown the following year rechristened Onward Victoria.
After twenty-three previews - and with its closing notice already in place - the Broadway production, directed by Julianne Boyd and choreographed by Michael Shawn, opened on December 14, 1980 at the Martin Beck Theatre, where it ran for one performance. The cast included Jill Eikenberry as Woodhull, Michael Zaslow as Beecher, Ted Thurston as Vanderbilt, Laura Waterbury as Stanton, Dorothy Holland as Anthony, Gordon Stanley as Fleming, and Lenny Wolpe as Delmonico.
Theoni V. Aldredge was nominated for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Costume Design. A Broadway cast recording was released by Original Cast Records.
Musical Numbers
    
 Scene 1: Opening - New York City, 1871 
 Scene 2: Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt's Office 
 Scene 3: Victoria's Salon - Six Months Later 
 Scene 4: Plymouth Church, Brooklyn Heights 
 Scene 5: Woodhull and Clafin's Brokerage 
 Scene 6: Washington, D.C., Congress - May 24, 1871 Scene 7: Victoria's Campaign Tour 
 Scene 8: Beecher's Study - The Next Day Scene 9: Victoria's Brokerage/Beecher's Study - Three Months Later 
 Scene 10: Delmonico's Restaurant - Two Hours Later 
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 Scene 1: Victoria's Brokerage - The Next Day 
 Scene 2: Beecher's Study - Two Months Later 
 Scene 3: Victoria's Brokerage - Early Evening Scene 4: Steinway Hall 
 Scene 5: Victoria's Brokerage - Two Days Later 
 Scene 6: Brokerage/Street/Jail 
 Scene 7: Exterior and Interior of Courtroom - Six Months Later 
 
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References
    
Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops by Ken Mandelbaum, published by St. Martin's Press (1991), pages 240-41 (ISBN 0-312-06428-4)
