After myriad seasons of dance-drought on Broadway, the Great White Way is once again awash in choreography. Swing!, the “all dancing, all singing, all the time” show, is the brainchild of Lynne Taylor-Corbett, the original “floating” Cassie in A Chorus Line for two years. Although she previously choreographed Chess and Titanic on Broadway, as well as Off-Broadway’s quirky Song of Singapore, and helped with Joan Rivers’ Sally Marr and Her Escorts, she admits, “This was my first chance to actually direct a show on Broadway.”
Taylor-Corbett’s life as a director has been primarily outside of New York. In fact, she was in Korea directing Cookin’, a non-verbal Stomp-like show featuring four Korean chefs in (what else?) a kitchen, when the call came from producer Richard Frankel that started the swing for Swing.
“All my life I’ve wanted to create a show, and I literally hit the ground running on this one,” she grins, proud of her Broadway baby, almost two years in the making. During a recent quiet moment (one of very few) between auditions for the Swing road company and the flurry of awards luncheons and ceremonies, the dark haired former Alvin Ailey dancer worried aloud about what she might wear to all these events, explaining, “I usually just wear my son’s hand-me-down sweats.”
Nominated for both the Drama Desk and Tony Award for choreography, most important to her is the Tony nomination for direction of a musical. Taylor-Corbett also is delighted to be nominated in the company of two other female choreographers/directors–Kathleen Marshall and Susan Stroman–a Broadway first. “Kathleen Marshall and I were just talking about how great this is at the Drama Desk Awards,” Taylor-Corbett says.
“Swing fascinates me,” she confesses, “after all, it’s the music that got us through the Second World War, and it’s all the rage again among
young people. But I didn’t want to just do a traditional revue. Swing is African-American rhythms meeting New Orleans jazz, and I wanted to create the same sense of spontaneity and the unexpected, that permeates the music. So I trekked out to East L.A., to meet West Coast authority Buddy Schwimmer, who became a consultant [one of several]. It was Buddy who asked me if I’d heard of Casey MacGill [charismatic leader of the on-stage Gotham City Gates orchestra], who not only came on board, but wrote several original numbers, including ‘Rhythm’ and ‘Kitchen Mechanics’ Night Out.’ Casey’s definitely the keeper of the flame.”
Taylor-Corbett continues, “I also wanted to break down barriers between the musicians and the actors, not just by putting them on stage, but by integrating them into the action.” This produced two extraordinary numbers, pairing Tony-nominated actress Laura Benati with trombonist Steve Armour (“Cry Me A River”) and Caitlin Carter with bass player Conrad Korsch (“Harlem Nocturne”). “It’s the old chicken-egg thing,” she recalls with a smile. “We didn’t know if musicians could do the choreography of the pieces, but both Steve and Conrad came through like troupers. Now we’ve lined up several other musicians who can act.” Ironically, another Tony nod went to singer/songwriter and vociferous non-dancer, Ann Hampton Callaway (“I Won’t Dance”).