In-Depth
with Loving the Silent
Tears
Composer:
Henry Krieger
“I thank Supreme Master
Ching Hai for the opportunity of setting her thoughtful
and perceptive poetry to music. It was a new form for me
to work with and I enjoyed the experience. I hope this combination
of poetry and music will be pleasing to all of those who
love Supreme Master Ching Hai.”
Henry Krieger,
2-time Grammy-winning
and 3-time Oscar-nominated composer
About
the Composer
Dreamgirls,
Side Show, The Tap Dance Kid… These favorite Broadway
shows owe their memorable songs to the brilliance of one composer:
2-time Grammy Award winner and 3-time Academy Award nominee
Henry Krieger. As Playbill Magazine once wrote, “Henry
Krieger is a composer with a rare gift, that of being able
to put the sounds of pop music to successful theatrical use.”
His career path itself reads somewhat like a dream.
A native son of New York, USA, Henry Krieger’s musical
education began while listening to the strains of Chopin and
Liszt flowing from his parents’ phonograph. As time
went by, his tastes moved into a more modern expression through
exposure to the music of great R&B artists such as Fats
Waller and Ray Charles. As a young adult, Mr. Krieger first
began attending Broadway musicals, where the show-stopping
production numbers made an indelible impression on him. His
grade school, equipped with a theater similar to one on Broadway,
reinforced his interest in the dramatic arts, and he later
continued his creative and liberal arts education at the American
University in Washington, DC.
Mr. Krieger began composing for Off-Off Broadway
while in his 20s, during which time he met playwright-lyricist
Tom Eyen. Together they created the long-running Broadway
hit musical Dreamgirls, which opened in 1981 and received
six Tony Awards. Mr. Krieger was Tony-nominated for his now
legendary score. The original cast album garnered him a Grammy
Award.
Years later, Dreamgirls generated new success
as a 2006 Dreamworks film starring Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Hudson,
Beyoncé Knowles, and Eddie Murphy. The greatly loved movie
was adapted and directed by Oscar winner Bill Condon, who
had also written and directed the musical film Chicago.
Mr. Krieger composed four new songs for the Dreamgirls
film version, and had the rare distinction of having three
of them receive Academy Award nominations in the same year:
“Love You, I Do,” which also won his second Grammy
Award, “Listen,” and “Patience.”
Jennifer Hudson
in Dreamgirls movie |
In 1983, Mr. Krieger’s musical The Tap
Dance Kid, about a boy who dreams of becoming a dancer,
opened on Broadway, winning two Tony Awards.
His next Broadway musical, Side Show, on
the lives of conjoined twins who became famous stage performers,
opened in 1997 and received four Tony nominations, including
for Best Score.
Currently Mr. Krieger is working on a re-imagining
of Side Show for the stage, to be directed by Bill
Condon.
Loving the Silent Tears
|
Tony
winner Kiril Kulish and ensemble
perform "The
World Is a Whirlpool" |
For Loving the Silent Tears, the acclaimed
Mr. Henry Krieger set Supreme Master Ching Hai’s poetry
from Silent Tears to a powerful tune that closes Act
One. It was orchestrated by Emmy winner Doug Katsaros and
performed in English and Russian by Tony winner Kiril Kulish.
In this lively number, titled “The World Is a Whirlpool,”
the unique rhythm in orchestral color was warmly evocative
and magnetic. As Playbill noted in the past, Mr. Krieger is
able to take various "styles and feed them through a
genuine theatrical sensibility."
Then, as the last stop of the spiritual journey
in Act Two of the musical, the mystical “Enlightenment”
was superbly presented as a duet by Tony-nominated actress/singer
Patti Cohenour (as the main character Joy) and Aulacese pop
star Hồ Quỳnh Hương (representing her
homeland). It was another marvelously written piece from Mr.
Krieger. The melodic and effortlessly flowing dance tune gave
a sense of harmony and the attainment of enlightenment in
unexpectedly easy ways, as the poet described: “But
I tell you: / I reached awakening in the middle of my night
sleep. / In a plastic tent! / In the heart of a noisy holiday
resort.”
Indeed, with Loving the Silent Tears, Mr.
Krieger deftly translated poetic sentiments into appealing
musical tunes, which will be long remembered by delighted
audience members.
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