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by Rick Sebak
Staff Writer
Diamond Studs has moved to New York with the speed
and power of a mighty locomotive, and hopes are billowing
for a supercharged success and a long healthy run. The
locally-conceived "Horse Opera in Two Acts" is now being
called "A Saloon Musical" and is set for an official January
14 opening at the Westside Theatre in Manhattan.
Sponsored by The Chelsea Theater Center of Brooklyn,
the New York show, which began two weeks of previews on
New Year's Eve, is virtually the same which amazed and
enthralled local audiences at the Ranch House in October.
Joyce Cohen has replaced Cindy Gooch Huntley as Zee
James, but the rest of the original Chapel H ill cast appears in
the big city production which will be reviewed by the all
powerful New York critics opening night.
Diamond Studs tells the story of Jesse James' life in a
sparkling series of non-chronological vignettes. The musical
Some new actresses, she said, have been hired to play the
saloon girls and were quickly accepted into the "general
chump atmosphere."
The set in the Westside Theater consists of a kind of
reconstructed Ranch House, with the overhead balcony
duplicated onstage. An upright piano and the ingenious
staging of John Haberand Patricia Birch are again filling the
otherwise empty stage.
A more extensive bar will be set up in the West 43rd Street
theater, and theater managers are awaiting the arrival of a
liquor license which will permit the saloon to serve
something more authentically Western than wine and beer.
1 Word-of-mouth since the first preview has been even
better than expected, Simpson said. "People are already
coming back to see it again. It's a general goodtime show
with the kind of music which New Yorkers don't get to hear
very often."
The Continental Travel Agency has arranged a package
tour for local fans of the show. Walter Turner, who planned
score is composed of some classic American folksongs and
some extraordinary new numbers by Bland Simpson and
Jim Wann, both of whom figure importantly in the cast.
Wann, who plays the central figure of Jesse, is a former UNC
student and was responsible for the show's original
conception and book.
A couple of new songs, including "Sleepy Time Down
South" and "New Prisoner's Song," have been added to the
score since the show headed North. "I'll Be Abiding With
You," the love duet between Jesse and his wife, has been
dropped.
Cathleen Simpson, assistant to director John Haber,
commented on some of the small changes in the transplanted
show. "Things have been generally tightened up a bit," she
said. "We've had to change some of the things we found
wouldn't work."
the tour entitled "The Eighty-Five Dollar Special," foresees
a kind of jubilant weekend journey for all who might be
ready. for a break in the early semester.
"If you tried to do this all by yourself," he said, "it would
cost a minimum of S105."
The tour will travel by train (one entire car has been
reserved) and will leave from the Raleigh Amtrak Station on
Friday, Jan. 17, returning Sunday evening. No activities are
planned for Friday evening (arrival time allows plenty of
time to make the evening performance of any show in New
York) or Saturday except for the 10 p.m. performance of
Diamond Studs on Saturday night.
"The Eighty-Five Dollar Special" includes the roundtrip
train ticket, two nights in the Taft Hotel, station to hotel
transportation, and an orchestra seat for the show. All
reservations for the tour must be made at the Continental
Travel Agency in the NCNB Plaza (967-2251) by Friday.
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