Film 'Black Orpheus' to be adapted for Broadway
By MARK KENNEDY, Associated Press
Jul 7, 2014 2:05 PM CDT
FILE - This April 4, 2012 file photo shows playwright and director George C. Wolfe at a screening of the film"The Intouchables" in New York. Wolfe will direct a play adapted from the Oscar-winning film "Black Orpheus." Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage will write the story. “Black Orpheus” is the...   (Associated Press)

NEW YORK (AP) — With all eyes on Brazil and the World Cup, Broadway is getting into the act with plans to adapt the Oscar-winning film "Black Orpheus" for the stage.

Producers said Monday that Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage will write the story and Tony Award-winner George C. Wolfe will direct. The musical will have its world premiere on Broadway, but no timetable was set.

"Black Orpheus" is the 1959 film by Marcel Camus, recreating the Orpheus and Eurydice myth in the Rio de Janeiro Carnival. It won the Palme d'Or at Cannes that year and also a Golden Globe and an Oscar for best foreign-language film a year later.

The original movie — based on a play by Brazilian poet, lyricist, and playwright Vinicius de Morae — was a French-Italian-Brazilian production directed by Marcel Camus and starred Marpessa Dawn and Breno Mello. The new musical's producers will be Stephen Byrd, Alia Jones-Harvey and Paula Marie Black.

"We are so thrilled to bring this classic piece of Brazilian popular culture to life onstage," Byrd said in a statement. "The World Cup is providing a wonderful international platform for Brazil right now, and we look forward to further spotlighting this legacy on Broadway."

Set against the exotic pageantry of Carnival, "Black Orpheus" tells the story of a couple who fall in love during Carnival and are forced to take a mystical journey to the underworld. The soundtrack popularized the nascent genre of bossa nova.

The film got some renewed attention in the past year when the rock band Arcade Fire drew on the myth and the movie for its latest album, "Reflektor."

Nottage won a Pulitzer Prize for her play "Ruined," and her other works include "Intimate Apparel" and "By the Way, Meet Vera Stark." Playwright and director Wolfe has won Tonys for "Angels in America: Millennium Approaches" and for "Bring in da Noise/Bring in da Funk."

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Mark Kennedy can be reached at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits