Carol Lawrence and Larry Kert sing “Tonight” on The Ed Sullivan Show. The song, by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, is from the score of West Side Story. This performance, which documents Jerome Robbins’ staging of the number for the original Broadway production, was originally telecast by CBS on November 2, 1958:
(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)


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I flew down to Florida last Friday morning and started rehearsing my Palm Beach Dramaworks
Needless to say, I’m no Mike Nichols, and I’m twice as old as he was when he staged Barefoot in 1963. But I think I have some notion of how he felt that fateful day. No sooner did I walk into Palm Beach Dramaworks’ rehearsal room on Friday morning and say “O.K., let’s get going” than I felt confident of my ability to get Satchmo on its feet and put a personal stamp on the resulting staging, one that extends well beyond the mere fact of my also having written the script. What’s more, my confidence has so far been justified: at the end of two eight-hour rehearsals, the entire show was blocked, a full week ahead of the schedule that I drew up before coming to West Palm Beach.
Closely based on Adrienne Shelly’s 2007 film and uninterestingly directed by Diane Paulus, “Waitress” tells the story of Jenna (Ms. Mueller), an unhappily married small-town waitress and virtuoso pie maker. She gets pregnant, falls in love with her handsome-but-married obstetrician, embarks on a torrid-but-doomed affair and is thereby inspired to…but need I go on? Everything that happens in “Waitress” is as familiar as a cafeteria salad—you could write your own synopsis of the chick-flick plot five minutes after the curtain goes up—and the characterizations are just as obvious….