I Fell Downat Myage It Snot Funny

He was the theater's most revered and influential composer-lyricist of the last half of the 20th century and the driving force behind some of Broadway's most beloved and celebrated shows.

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The Last Word: Stephen Sondheim

In a never-before-seen interview, Stephen Sondheim sat down with The New York Times in June 2008 to talk about his life, career and accomplishments.

"One of the first things you have to decide on with a musical is, why should there be songs? You can put songs in any story, but what I think you have to look for is, why are songs necessary to this story? If it's unnecessary, then the show generally turns out to be not very good." Composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim was the most important figure in American musical theater of the last half-century. [singing] "Will it be? Yes, it will." In shows like "West Side Story," "Gypsy," "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum," "Company," "Follies," "Sweeney Todd" and "Sunday in the Park With George," which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985, he created songs essential to the stories and changed the nature of the Broadway musical. "I like to change styles. That's one of the things that appeals to me about stories, is if I've never done anything like it before. It has to be some unknown territory. It's got to make you nervous. If it doesn't make you nervous, then you're going to write the same thing you wrote before." We sat down with him in June 2008 to talk about his own story and his accomplishments. "What is it about the theater that attracted you so, that made you want to spend your career, your life working in it?" "It was very simple. It was when I was 11 years old, I met Oscar Hammerstein, and he became a surrogate father, and I just wanted to do what he did. And he was a songwriter for the theater, so I became a songwriter for the theater. If he was a geologist, I would have become a geologist. Which is, I'm sure, an exaggeration, but not much." [music playing] Sondheim wasn't known for Top 40 hits, but one of his songs, "Send in the Clowns," from "A Little Night Music," rose to the top of the charts. [singing] "But where are the clowns? Quick, send in the clowns." He wrote it specifically for Glynis Johns, one of the show's stars, and it remains without a doubt his most popular and financially successful work. "Wrote it during rehearsals, brought it essentially overnight. Glynis Johns could not sustain notes, so I thought, I got to write a song with short phrases. And if they're going to be short phrases, what are better short phrases than questions? So the whole idea of, 'Isn't it rich? Are we a pair?' Question, which ordinarily would not occur to me, came into my head. And once I've gotten that, once you get the idea of questions, then it's quite easy to write." [SINGING] "Isn't it bliss? Don't you approve?" "Once you get the notion of, 'Isn't it rich? Aren't we schmucks not to be together?' I mean, you get that tone, that takes a very short period of time." [singing] "Send in the clowns." Stephen Sondheim was born on March 22, 1930, to upper-middle-class parents on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. His father manufactured dresses, and his mother designed them. But his childhood wasn't all privilege. His family life was difficult, with a distant and remote mother and parents who didn't get along. "When I was 10 years old, my parents divorced. My mother got custody of me, and she bought a place in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, as a sort of summer residence. And I was an only child. And because she was a working woman and also a celebrity hunter, she knew the Hammersteins slightly, and they had a son my age, a year younger, Jimmy. And so we became friends and companions. And Oscar obviously realized that I had some gift for songwriting, so he encouraged me during my teen years, and in fact, taught me. And I brought him a show when I was 15 years old that I thought he would want to produce. It was a show about the school I went to, George School. And I was very disappointed to find out that he wouldn't produce it. But I wanted to be the first 15-year-old on Broadway with a show. But he said, if you want to know what's wrong with the show, I'll tell you. And he went over it page by page, starting from the first sentence. He treated me like an adult instead of like a kid. By the time the afternoon was over, I really knew more about the nuts and bolts of writing a musical than most people learn in a lifetime." Hammerstein and his partner Richard Rodgers were fresh from the success of 'Oklahoma!' and 'Carousel' when they hired the teenage Sondheim to work on their next musical, 'Allegro,' in 1947. [singing] "His hair is fuzzy, his eyes are blue." Unusual for its day, it followed the life of an everyman from birth to age 35. It was their first failure, but it would influence Sondheim tremendously. "It was experimental, and so that incurred in me the whole notion of doing experimental stuff, which I've done, one way or another, most of the shows I've done." Hammerstein laid out a course of education for his teenage protĂ©gĂ©, suggesting he write four musicals, each in a different style. "The first one being an adaptation of a play that I thought was good. The second being an adaptation of a play that I liked but was flawed, that maybe I could feel I could improve. The third, something that was a non-theatrical story, but adapt it and make it theatrical. And then the fourth was to write an original. And that's exactly what I did over a period of years." In the mid-1950s, when Sondheim was in his early 20s, he wrote his first professional show, 'Saturday Night.' [singing] "The moon's like a million-watt electric light. It shines on the city —" It was headed to Broadway when its lead producer suddenly died, forcing the show to close out of town. The ambitious young composer was still without a credit, but then came an opportunity to work on Broadway, albeit as a lyricist only and not as a composer as well. It all began when he bumped into renowned playwright and librettist Arthur Laurents at a party. "And we fell to talking, and I said, 'What are you doing?' He said, 'I'm about to start on a musical version of "Romeo and Juliet."' And I said, 'And who's doing the score?' He said, 'Leonard Bernstein.' I said, 'Who's doing the lyrics?' And he said, 'Oh, my god. Well, I never thought of you.' And he literally smote his forehead. And he said, in his typical Arthur Laurents fashion, he said, 'I didn't much like your music, but I thought your lyrics were kind of good.' I said, 'All right.' He said, 'Would you like to come and play for Lenny?' Now, I had no intention of just writing lyrics. I wanted to write music. But I thought, chance to play for Leonard Bernstein? Why not? So the next morning, I played for Lenny. And Lenny said, 'I will know within a week, and I'll let you know.' And I said, 'Thank you so much, Mr. Bernstein.' Sure enough, a week later, the phone rang, and he said, 'Would you like to do it?' And I said, 'Let me call you back.' Because I didn't want to do just lyrics. And I called Oscar, who's my adviser on everything. And I said, 'You know, I don't want to do this.' But Oscar said, 'Look, you have a chance to work with very gifted professionals on a show that sounds interesting, and you could always write your own music eventually.' He said, 'My advice would be to take the job.' That's why I took it. And I learned a great deal." [singing] "Maria. I just met a girl named Maria." Sondheim didn't always agree with Bernstein on how the lyrics should be written. "I knew that there were great dangers of pretension with this whole show, and the only way to write the lyrics was to underwrite them and make them very simple." "You've said over the years that you're not really happy with the lyrics you wrote, even though they're so popular. You are?" "No, no, no, they're very self-conscious. Lenny wanted everything, the lyrics to be very poetic. But his idea of poetry and my idea of poetry are simply not the same. I mean, you know, I was 25 years old, and he was a big, big force, and Lenny kept pushing me to be very fruity. 'Today, the world was just an address.' That's a perfectly fine line on paper, but the boy from the streets is singing that?" [singing] "Today, the world was just an address, a place for me to live in." "And I've often quoted, you know, 'I Feel Pretty': 'It's alarming how charming I feel,' says this girl from the streets, and she sounds like Noel Coward." [singing] "It's alarming how charming I feel." "I do like 'Something's Coming.' That's my idea of a poetic lyric, in the sense that it uses imagery." [singing] "Something's coming. I don't know what it is, but it is going to be great." "And I like the 'Jet Song,' too." [singing] "When you're a Jet, you're a Jet all the way, from your first cigarette to your last dying day." "But you know, songs like 'Somewhere,' I mean, that's deeply embarrassing. So —" "West Side Story" got mixed reviews when it opened in 1957, and didn't win the Tony Award as Best Musical, but it was revolutionary in its combination of music and dance, and in its searing plot. Sondheim had made his first mark. He still longed to write both music and lyrics on Broadway, and it looked as if he was going to get the chance with a new musical based on the early life of the stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. [singing] "You'll be great! Going to have the whole world on a plate!" But the show's star objected. "Ethel Merman was already signed to play Rose, the mother, so it was all set. And then Ethel Merman said she would not have me as a composer, because she had just done a show called 'Happy Hunting,' with two young writers, and it was a flop. And she didn't want to take a chance on an unknown composer. And she's perfectly happy to have me do the lyrics. So I said no, and Arthur tried to persuade me, and I said, 'No, I really want to write music, this is nonsense.' Again, Oscar stepped into the breach, and he said, 'Do it.' He said, 'There are two advantages. First of all,' he said, 'you have the experience of writing for a star, which is different than just writing a show. I mean, you're tailoring material not only for the character, for the character as played by that specific actor or actress.' That's one thing. He said, 'Secondly, it's six months out of your life. Do it.' And that's exactly what happened. We wrote that show in about four months. We wrote very quickly. That's probably the quickest I've ever heard of a major Broadway musical being written. But it wrote, as Barbra Streisand would say, like butter." [singing] "Honey, everything's coming up roses and daffodils!" "It's considered one of the best, if not the best, Broadway musicals of all time." "Yeah, absolutely, it is. I think it's probably it's the culmination of that era, that told musicals in chronological order, in a linear style. I'd certainly say it was the best." In 1970, Sondheim teamed up with director Harold Prince to write his breakthrough musical, 'Company.' Just as 'Gypsy' had been the culmination of the era of the narrative musical, 'Company' broke new ground. It fractured the narrative, told the story in a nonlinear manner, and opened the way for similar musicals, like 'A Chorus Line' and 'Chicago.' Sondheim and Prince followed company with more breakthroughs: 'Follies,' 'A Little Night Music,' 'Pacific Overtures.' They were revolutionary, but mostly, they weren't financial hits. "It takes an audience a while to get used to new ways of storytelling. There are exceptional plays that break with the tradition, like 'Death of a Salesman,' and are hits at the same time. But usually, if you bring a new way of storytelling to the stage — 'Oklahoma!' is the perfect example of taking a chance and is a gigantic hit, but that is not the usual case." [singing] "These are probably the worst pies in London!" 'Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street' is considered by many to be Sondheim's best and most powerful work. A gruesome tale of death and revenge, it shows the composer at the peak of his talent. [singing] "Is that just disgusting —" "It was full of blood and gore and controversy. And though it, too, didn't make money in its original run, it has often been revived, has been performed by opera companies, and in 2007 was turned into a movie starring Johnny Depp." [singing] "I will have vengeance!" "You want to talk about dark?" "Well, it's not so dark. It's really kind of funny, that show, you know? I mean, nobody takes it seriously. It's not dark the way — it's a melodrama. I don't think melodramas are dark. Anyway, but I get it. The point is, yes, there's a lot of blood." "And there's a lot of comic relief, there's no doubt about it." "It's not about comic relief. It's the fact the attitude is not a real attitude. They're all cartoon figures. I mean, it's an operetta. These are not real people, and they're not supposed to be. They're supposed to be big, larger than life." "But isn't there a real sense in it about injustice and evil?" "If there is for you, then there is for you. I know Hal always thinks, always thought it was about the Industrial Revolution. I thought it was about scaring people." "You all know Steve is a great dramatist and our greatest living composer and lyricist." In 2010, Sondheim received an ultimate stage accolade. "I cry easy." A Broadway theater was renamed in his honor. "This is so much more moving, to christen a theater the Stephen Sondheim as opposed to the British Petroleum Playhouse or —" "What do you think — if you think about this, what would you like your legacy to be?" "Oh, goodness. Oh, I just would like the shows to keep getting done. Whether on Broadway, or in regional theaters, or schools or communities, I would just like the stuff to be done. Just done and done and done and done and done. You know, that would be the fun."

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In a never-before-seen interview, Stephen Sondheim sat down with The New York Times in June 2008 to talk about his life, career and accomplishments.

Stephen Sondheim, one of Broadway history's songwriting titans, whose music and lyrics raised and reset the artistic standard for the American stage musical, died early Friday at his home in Roxbury, Conn. He was 91.

His lawyer and friend, F. Richard Pappas, announced the death. He said he did not know the cause but added that Mr. Sondheim had not been known to be ill and that the death was sudden. The day before, Mr. Sondheim had celebrated Thanksgiving with a dinner with friends in Roxbury, Mr. Pappas said. [His death certificate, obtained by The Times on Dec. 2, said the cause was cardiovascular disease.]

An intellectually rigorous artist who perpetually sought new creative paths, Mr. Sondheim was the theater's most revered and influential composer-lyricist of the last half of the 20th century, if not its most popular.

His work melded words and music in a way that enhanced them both. From his earliest successes in the late 1950s, when he wrote the lyrics for "West Side Story" and "Gypsy," through the 1990s, when he wrote the music and lyrics for two audacious musicals, "Assassins," giving voice to the men and women who killed or tried to kill American presidents, and "Passion," an operatic probe into the nature of true love, he was a relentlessly innovative theatrical force.

The first Broadway show for which Mr. Sondheim wrote both the words and music, the farcical 1962 comedy "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum," won a Tony Award for best musical and went on to run for more than two years.

In the 1970s and 1980s, his most productive period, he turned out a series of strikingly original and varied works, including "Company" (1970), "Follies" (1971), "A Little Night Music" (1973), "Pacific Overtures" (1976), "Sweeney Todd" (1979), "Merrily We Roll Along" (1981), "Sunday in the Park With George" (1984) and "Into the Woods" (1987).

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Stephen Sondheim in 1990. From his earliest successes in the late 1950s, when he wrote the lyrics for
Credit... Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

In the history of the theater, only a handful could call Mr. Sondheim peer. The list of major theater composers who wrote words to accompany their own scores (and vice versa) is a short one — it includes Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Frank Loesser, Jerry Herman and NoĂ«l Coward.

Though Mr. Sondheim spent long hours in solitary labor, usually late at night, when he was composing or writing, he often spoke lovingly of the collaborative nature of the theater. After the first decade of his career, he was never again a writer for hire, and his contribution to a show was always integral to its conception and execution. He chose collaborators — notably the producer and director Hal Prince, the orchestrator Jonathan Tunick and later the writer and director James Lapine — who shared his ambition to stretch the musical form beyond the bounds of only entertainment.

Mr. Sondheim's music was always recognizable as his own, and yet he was dazzlingly versatile. His melodies could be deceptively, disarmingly simple — like the title song of the unsuccessful 1964 musical "Anyone Can Whistle," "Our Time," from "Merrily," and the most famous of his individual songs, "Send In the Clowns," from "Night Music" — or jaunty and whimsical, like "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid," from "Forum."

They could also be brassy and bitter, like "The Ladies Who Lunch," from "Company," or sweeping, like the grandly macabre waltz "A Little Priest," from "Sweeney Todd." And they could be desperately yearning, like the plaintive "I Read," from "Passion."

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Credit... Friedman-Abeles/New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

He wrote speechifying soliloquies, conversational duets and chattery trios and quartets. He exploited time signatures and forms; for "Night Music," he wrote a waltz, two sarabandes, two mazurkas, a polonaise, an Ă©tude and a gigue — nearly an entire score written in permutations of triple time.

Over all, he wrote both the music and the lyrics for a dozen Broadway shows — not including compendium revues like "Side by Side by Sondheim," "Putting It Together" and the autobiographical "Sondheim on Sondheim." Five of them won Tony Awards for best musical, and six won for best original score. A show that won neither of those, "Sunday in the Park," took the 1985 Pulitzer Prize for drama.

Of the many revivals of his shows, three won Tonys, including "Assassins" in 2004, even though it had not previously been on Broadway. (It was presented Off Broadway in 1990.)

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Credit... Hank Walker/The LIFE Picture Collection, via Getty Images

In 1993, Mr. Sondheim received the Kennedy Center Honors for lifetime achievement, and in 2015 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama. In 2008, he was given a Tony Award for lifetime achievement, and in 2010, in perhaps the ultimate show business accolade, a Broadway house on West 43rd Street, Henry Miller's Theater, was renamed in his honor.

For his 90th birthday in March 2020, a Broadway revival of "Company" was planned, with a woman (played by Katrina Lenk) in the central role of Bobby, but it was postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic. The New York Times published a special section devoted to him, and a virtual concert, "Take Me to the World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration," was streamed on the Broadway.com YouTube channel, featuring Broadway performers singing his songs.

Mr. Sondheim, who also maintained a home in Manhattan, a townhouse on East 49th Street, had been spending most of his time during the pandemic in Roxbury, in western Connecticut.

But he returned to New York this month to attend revivals of two of his musicals: on Nov. 14, for the opening night of "Assassins," at the Classic Stage Company in Lower Manhattan, and the next night for the long-delayed first preview, since Broadway reopened, of "Company," also starring Patti LuPone, at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theater.

Mr. Sondheim was "extremely" pleased by both productions, Mr. Pappas, his lawyer, said.

In addition to his theater work, Mr. Sondheim wrote occasional music for films, including the score for "Stavisky," Alain Resnais's 1974 movie about a French financier and embezzler, and his song "Sooner or Later (I Always Get My Man)" for Warren Beatty's "Dick Tracy" won an Academy Award in 1991. Six cast albums from his shows won Grammy Awards, and "Send In the Clowns" won the Grammy for song of the year in 1975.

With the exception perhaps of "Forum," Mr. Sondheim's shows had hefty ambitions in subject matter, form or both. "Company," which was built from vignettes featuring several couples and their mutual single male friend, was a bittersweet reflection on marriage. "Pacific Overtures" aimed to tell the story of the modernization of Japan from the Japanese perspective. "Sweeney Todd," a bloody tale about a vengeful barber in 19th-century London, approached Grand Guignol in tone and opera in staging and scoring. "The Frogs," which was first performed in the Yale University swimming pool in 1974 (with Meryl Streep in the cast) before it was revised for Broadway in 2004, blended the Greek comedy of Aristophanes with present-day political commentary.

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Credit... Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

Mr. Sondheim liked to think of himself less as a songwriter than as a playwright, albeit one who wrote very short plays and set them to music. His lyrics, scrupulously literate and resonant with complex ideas or emotional ambivalence, were often impossibly clever but rarely only clever; his language was sometimes erudite but seldom purple. He was a world-class rhyming gymnast, not just at the ends of lines but within them — one of the baked dishes on the ghoulish menu in "Sweeney Todd" was "shepherd's pie peppered with actual shepherd" — and he upheld the highest standards for acceptable wordplay, or at least tried to.

His 2010 artistic memoir, "Finishing the Hat" (the name was taken from a song title in "Sunday in the Park"; a follow-up, "Look, I Made a Hat," came out in 2011), was in many ways a primer on the craft of lyric writing. In it, he took himself to task for numerous sins, including things like adding unnecessary adjectives to fill out lines rhythmically and paying insufficient attention to a melodic line. In the song "Somewhere" from "West Side Story," for example, the highest note in the opening phrase is on the second beat, which means that in the well-known lyric — "There's a place for us" — the emphasis is on the word "a."

"The most unimportant word in the opening line is the one that gets the most important note," he wrote.

In another example from "West Side Story," he complained about a stanza from "America," which was sung by a chorus of young Puerto Rican women.

"Words must sit on music in order to become clear to the audience," he said to his biographer Meryle Secrest for her 1998 book, "Stephen Sondheim: A Life." "You don't get a chance to hear the lyric twice, and if it doesn't sit and bounce when the music bounces and rise when the music rises, the audience becomes confused."

In "America," he added, "I had this wonderful quatrain that went: 'I like to be in America/OK by me in America/Everything free in America/For a small fee in America.' The little 'for a small fee' was my zinger — except that the 'for' is accented and 'small fee' is impossible to say that fast, so it went 'For a smafee in America.' Nobody knew what it meant!"

What most distinguished Mr. Sondheim's lyrics, however, was that they were by and large character-driven, often probing explorations into a psyche that expressed emotional ambivalence, anguish or deeply felt conflict. In "Send In the Clowns," for example, he couched the famous plaint about missed romantic chances largely in the language of the theater, because the character singing it is an aging actress:

Just when I'd stopped opening doors,

Finally knowing the one that I wanted was yours,

Making my entrance again with my usual flair,

Sure of my lines,

No one is there.

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Credit... Chad Batka for The New York Times

In the title song for "Anyone Can Whistle," he wrote from the point of view of a woman who found it hard to love:

Anyone can whistle,

That's what they say —

Easy.

Anyone can whistle,

Any old day —

Easy.

It's all so simple:

Relax, let go, let fly.

So someone tell me why

Can't I?

I can dance a tango

I can read Greek —

Easy.

I can slay a dragon

Any old week —

Easy.

What's hard is simple,

What's natural comes hard.

Maybe you could show me

How to let go

Lower my guard.

Learn to be free.

Maybe if you whistle,

Whistle for me.

Over the years, many people theorized that "Anyone Can Whistle" was a cri de coeur by the author, though Mr. Sondheim denied it. "To believe that 'Anyone Can Whistle' is my credo is to believe that I'm the prototypical Repressed Intellectual and that explains everything about me," he wrote in "Finishing the Hat."

Still, it's true that he lived a largely solitary romantic life for many years.

"I always thought that song would be Steve's epitaph," the playwright and director Arthur Laurents, who wrote the book for "Anyone Can Whistle," as well as "West Side Story," "Gypsy" and "Do I Hear a Waltz?," told Ms. Secrest.

For a time in his 60s, Mr. Sondheim shared his Manhattan townhouse with a young songwriter, Peter Jones, and in 2017 he married Jeffrey Romley, who survives him, along with a half brother, Walter Sondheim.

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Credit... Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times

For all these reasons — the high-minded ambition, the seriousness of subject matter, the melodic experimentation, the emotional discord — Mr. Sondheim's shows, though mostly received with critical accolades, were almost never popular hits. He suffered from a reputation that he didn't write hummable tunes and that his outlook was austere, if not grim. For some of the same reasons, not all performers were suited to his shows, though over the years several well-known singers became his stalwart interpreters, among them Elaine Stritch, Angela Lansbury, Barbara Cook and Bernadette Peters.

Mr. Sondheim rarely gave audiences the fizzy, feel-good musical experience or the happily resolved narrative that the shows of his predecessors conditioned them to expect. He also didn't give them the opulent spectacle, the anthemic score or the melodramatic storytelling that became the dominant musical theater style of the 1980s and '90s with the arrival from Britain of Andrew Lloyd Webber's megahits "Cats" and "Phantom of the Opera," and Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg's "Les Misérables" and "Miss Saigon," followed by the corporate productions of Disney.

Of the shows for which Mr. Sondheim wrote both music and lyrics, his first, "Forum," had the longest Broadway run at 964 performances; his second, "Anyone Can Whistle," lasted nine. "Merrily We Roll Along," a famously problematic adaptation of the Kaufman and Hart reverse-chronology play about how idealistic young artists grow cynical as they age, closed after just 16. But even his successes were barely successful. Most of his Broadway shows, in their initial runs, failed to earn back the money it cost to put them on.

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Credit... Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

"I have always conscientiously tried not to do the same thing twice," Mr. Sondheim said, reflecting on his career in an interview with The New York Times Magazine in 2000, when he turned 70. "If you're broken-field running, they can't hit you with so many tomatoes. I certainly feel out of the mainstream because what's happened in musicals is corporate and cookie-cutter stuff. And if I'm out of fashion, I'm out of fashion. Being a maverick isn't just about being different. It's about having your vision of the way a show might be."

Stephen Joshua Sondheim was born on March 22, 1930, in Manhattan, and lived first on the Upper West Side. Herbert Sondheim, his father, was the owner of a dressmaking company; his mother, the former Etta Janet Fox, known as Foxy, worked for her husband as a designer until he left her, when Stephen was 10. He was sent for a time to military school, and later to the George School in Pennsylvania, but until he was 16 Stephen, her only child, lived mostly with his mother, with whom he had a troubled relationship throughout his life. (His father remarried and had two more sons.)

In the years following his parents' separation, Mr. Sondheim recalled for his biography, his mother treated him precisely as she had her husband: flirting with him sexually on the one hand, belittling him on the other. As an adult, Mr. Sondheim supported her financially; nonetheless, in the 1970s, the night before she was to have heart surgery, she wrote a letter to her son and had it hand delivered. It read, in part, "The only regret I have in life is giving you birth."

His mother was, nonetheless, responsible for the most formative relationship of her son's life. She was a friend of Dorothy Hammerstein, whose husband was the lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II; their son Jamie became friends with young Steve, and when the Hammersteins moved to a Pennsylvania farm, Stephen, who had begun playing the piano at 7, went for a visit and stayed for the summer.

His mother subsequently bought a home nearby, and Stephen was so often at the Hammersteins' that he was thought of as a family member. Hammerstein himself became a surrogate father and mentor — "It was because of my teenage admiration for him that I became a songwriter," Mr. Sondheim wrote in "Finishing the Hat," although he later assessed Hammerstein as a lyricist of soaring ability but often flawed work. Hammerstein brutally criticized the boy's first musical, written at the George School, as "the worst thing I've ever read," adding: "I didn't say that it was untalented, I said it was terrible. And if you want to know why it's terrible, I'll tell you."

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Credit... Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

An afternoon-long tutorial followed, teaching him, by Mr. Sondheim's account, more about the craft than most songwriters learn in a lifetime. Hammerstein laid out a path of writing exercises for him: Adapt a good play into a musical; adapt a flawed play into a musical; adapt a story from another medium into a musical; and, finally, write a musical from your own original story. This the young Mr. Sondheim did, a project that carried him through his graduation from Williams College in Massachusetts, where he complemented his theater work with serious composition study under Robert Barrow, an intellectually rigorous specialist in harmony, from whom Mr. Sondheim gleaned the lesson, as he put it, "that art is work and not inspiration, that invention comes with craft." Mr. Sondheim would later study independently with Milton Babbitt, the avant-garde composer.

Mr. Sondheim's first professional show business job was not in the theater at all; through the agency representing Hammerstein, he was hired to write for a 1950s television comedy, "Topper," about a fussbudget banker haunted by a pair of urbane ghosts. (Much later, Mr. Sondheim wrote a whodunit film script, "The Last of Sheila," with the actor Anthony Perkins; it was produced in 1973 and directed by Herbert Ross.) By the '50s he had become a connoisseur of word games and puzzles, and an inventor of elaborate games. From 1968 to 1969, he created cryptic crosswords for New York magazine.

His affinity for theatrical misdirection and mystery was acknowledged by his friend, the playwright Anthony Shaffer, who based the cunningly vengeful cuckold in his play "Sleuth" partly on Mr. Sondheim. (The play was once tentatively titled "Who's Afraid of Stephen Sondheim?")

Mr. Sondheim was in his early 20s when he wrote his first professional show, a musical called "Saturday Night," which was an adaptation of "Front Porch in Flatbush," a play by Philip G. and Julius J. Epstein. He got the job, to write both words and music, after the composer Frank Loesser turned it down. The show was scheduled to be presented in 1955, but the producer, Lemuel Ayers, died before he had completed raising the money for it, and the production came to a halt. The show was not presented until 1997, by a small company in London; it subsequently appeared in Chicago and finally had its New York premiere in 2000, Off Broadway at the Second Stage Theater.

Mr. Sondheim was loath to take either of his first Broadway gigs, "West Side Story" and "Gypsy," because he felt he was a composer, not only a lyricist — "I enjoy writing music much more than lyrics," he confessed in "Finishing the Hat." But he agreed to both on the advice of Hammerstein, who told him that he would benefit from working with the likes of Bernstein; Laurents (who wrote the book), and the director Jerome Robbins, in the first instance, and from writing for a star like Ethel Merman in the second, even though it was she who had wanted a more experienced Broadway hand, Jule Styne, as the composer.

Only once after "Gypsy" would Mr. Sondheim write lyrics for another composer: an unhappy collaboration with Richard Rodgers, "Do I Hear a Waltz?," based on Laurents's play "The Time of the Cuckoo."

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Credit... Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

Mr. Sondheim was asked to take the job by Laurents and by Mary Rodgers, Richard's elder daughter, whom he had met as a teenager at the Hammersteins' and for whom he had complicated feelings over many years. However, the two men proved antagonistic as writing partners — years later Mr. Sondheim was quoted as saying that Hammerstein was "a man of limited talent and infinite soul" and Rodgers the reverse — and though the show ran for 220 performances in 1965, it never had a Broadway revival, and neither man considered it a success.

The period of Mr. Sondheim's greatest work began when Harold Prince became his director. They were old friends, having been introduced by Ms. Rodgers in the late 1940s or early '50s, and Mr. Prince had been the producer of "West Side Story." He had proved his chops as a director as well, with musical successes like "She Loves Me" (1963) and "Cabaret" (1966).

Mr. Prince would direct five Sondheim musicals in the 1970s — "Company," "Follies," "A Little Night Music," "Pacific Overtures" and "Sweeney Todd'' — and though not all were commercially successful, they were all innovative, the product of two supremely talented artists whose individually authoritative visions were, for the most part, complementary. As Mr. Prince naturally saw a show's big picture, its look and its pace, Mr. Sondheim, who had inherited the Rodgers and Hammerstein belief that the songs are critical elements of the play, pushed the idea further — not merely integrating the words and music but imbuing the songs with the concerns of a playwright; that is, providing singers with the material to deepen their character portrayals, and in rehearsals concentrating on their delivery and diction.

The partnership foundered on "Merrily We Roll Along," a show that was hampered in part by the youth of its cast members, who had to play not only young characters but also the disillusioned adults they become, and by Mr. Prince's acknowledged failure to find an appropriate look for the show as a whole.

"I never knew how to direct it because I work so much from 'What is it going to look like?' " Mr. Prince told Ms. Secrest for her Sondheim biography. "That becomes the motor of the show. I never could figure it out."

"Merrily" has had several lives since then, Off Broadway, in regional theater and overseas, as producers and directors have tried to solve its problems and showcase what is generally acknowledged to be a vivid and poignant score.

In any case, the two men parted creative company for more than two decades, not working together again until they hammered out a version of a much-revised musical about a pair of entrepreneurial American brothers in the early 20th century that in other incarnations, before and after, was variously titled "Gold," "Wise Guys" and "Road Show." Under Mr. Prince, it was called "Bounce," and it was produced in 2003 at the Goodman Theater in Chicago and the Kennedy Center in Washington.

During Mr. Prince's absence from his creative life, Mr. Sondheim teamed up with a younger collaborator, James Lapine, and together they created the most cerebral works of Mr. Sondheim's career. These included "Into the Woods," which reimagined familiar children's fairy tales into darker adult fables; "Passion," a nearly operatic meditation on the nature of love; and "Sunday in the Park With George," a work whose first act ingeniously creates the artistic process of the painter Georges Seurat as he produces his masterpiece, "A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte," and whose second act jumps ahead a century to illustrate how a contemporary artist makes art in a more consumer-conscious age.

With no dancing and a slim plot, there was little of musical theater convention in the show, but, as Frank Rich wrote in The Times, it was startlingly original and deeply satisfying. "It's anyone's guess whether the public will be shocked or delighted by 'Sunday in the Park,' " Mr. Rich wrote. "What I do know is that Mr. Sondheim and Mr. Lapine have created an audacious, haunting and, in its own intensely personal way, touching work."

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Credit... Piotr Redlinski for The New York Times

It was one of Mr. Sondheim's most critically admired shows, running for 604 performances. And many critics and other Sondheim-ophiles found in it his most personal statement, as if he had used Seurat's view of the artist's life as a surrogate for his own. In the show's signature song, "Finishing the Hat," faced with the loss of the woman he loves because his devotion to painting has superseded his devotion to her, Seurat offers a sad but forceful paean to the joy of bringing original beauty into the world. It ends:

And when the woman that you wanted goes,

You can say to yourself, "Well, I give what I give."

But the woman who won't wait for you knows

That, however you live,

There's a part of you always standing by,

Mapping out the sky,

Finishing a hat

Starting on a hat

Finishing a hat

Look, I made a hat

Where there never was a hat.

William McDonald and Michael Paulson contributed reporting.

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Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/26/theater/stephen-sondheim-dead.html

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