I saw a local performance of Cabaret and during this song some of the musicians had Yellow Stars, Pink Triangles or both on their costumes. As the song went on cast members dressed in uniform would usher them out, with many giving resistance and trying to continue the song, but ultimately being dragged off. The sounds of notes missing a beat or being interrupted only for the instrument to be silent as the song continued was haunting. At the curtain call the director gave a big thank you to all the musicians who were comfortable enough with their identity to have it presented and to be a part of the show. The fact that the people being taken offstage were actually Jewish or Queer really emphasized the true nature of Nazi Germany and the Shoah, that the treatment was real and that it would have happened to them had they actually been there. It really emphasized how all of this really happened, and that it can happen again.
@finleyforevermore6 ай бұрын
That's such an incredible directorial choice, but absolutely heartbreaking.
@conniefoster97332 ай бұрын
That sounds heartbreaking... As you say, it could happen again too, so easily. Some people would have us back there now. (And I say that as somebody who'd be wearing the pink triangle)
@Terri_MacKay2 ай бұрын
That must have been an incredibly emotional and powerful moment, for the audience and the performers involved.
@klatafaceАй бұрын
That’s so enlightening. I wish I could have seen their performance
@francespreece319226 күн бұрын
I saw this with Will Young in it some years ago, and honestly it was one of the best shows I had seen. At the end of their performance, this scene portrayed most of the cast naked, but covering themselves with their hands as they were taken away to their fate. Heart wrenching production.
@rebekahfaithkerr8 жыл бұрын
He utilizes every centimeter of his face. His expressions are haunting and bone-chilling. So glad he won the tony.
@Frantasticfranziska7 жыл бұрын
He's brilliant, isn't he.
@esoniaknight66145 жыл бұрын
haunting...absolutely
@janeminwell43955 жыл бұрын
Mesmerising.
@stephaniegabrielsen80483 жыл бұрын
Alan Cummings was perfect! I love Joel greys version but Alan’s is hauntingly brilliant.
@susancullimore5643 Жыл бұрын
You nailed it with bone chilling!
@naturelover97166 жыл бұрын
“It’ll all work out. It’s only politics, and what has that got to do with us?” And here we see where those thoughts lead.
@glennvader88534 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, we have it happening again right now with Trump.
@lizzychrome76304 жыл бұрын
The cabaret this time is the internet.
@9volt654 жыл бұрын
@@glennvader8853 We pulled through. We did it.
@SRLovesPandas14 жыл бұрын
@@9volt65 the work is only just beginning
@diatplay4 жыл бұрын
@@glennvader8853 Yes, but why are we seeing it and who is staging the Spectacle so we can all grow a bit, or a lot, perhaps? Major Arcana. Trumps. Trumpkin. Trumpington Cross. And so on. We're living Moliere, basically, and In Living Color
@PhantomFandoms7 жыл бұрын
Okay, but at the end when he starts to remove the trench coat you get a laugh from the audience, thinking he's about to reveal some other traditional emcee style outfit, as soon as he drops it it goes dead silent and honestly when I experienced that live for the first time I was speechless myself.
@cannibalisticrequiem6 жыл бұрын
Perhaps, but then maybe the audience knows what's coming.
@UlangtahunRandu5 жыл бұрын
can someone etell me what that means? Idont understand the part when he took of the coat
@cosmicsins62265 жыл бұрын
bro the first time i saw cabaret, i had NO CONTEXT so as soon as that happened i was soo beyond shocked
@Cotton_Candy.__5 жыл бұрын
Pedro Sorana it’s what the prisoners wore when they were in concentration camps. The Emcee has 3 badges; yellow star for Jew, pink triangle for homosexual, red star for (I think) communist. Three things the Nazis and Hitler were against. Anyway, he was sent to a concentration camp and died.
@kerrijansson29194 жыл бұрын
@@Cotton_Candy.__ Yes, a red star is for Communist.
@theoryfruit10 жыл бұрын
The yellow star symbolized Jewish people, the pink triangle symbolized homosexuals, and the red star symbolized political prisoners/dissenters.
@abbyjpg38329 ай бұрын
THANK YOU, I think this is very important info, I was so curious what those were.
@sadiemormon-horn68098 ай бұрын
I thought the red star was for communists. That’s what I read online
@Nico140719978 ай бұрын
@@sadiemormon-horn6809 communists were political prisoners
@Nat-cu4tr8 ай бұрын
@@sadiemormon-horn6809communists were the most common political prisoners but basically anyone who fought against the nazi regime was given the red star
@Gee-xb7rt6 ай бұрын
@@abbyjpg3832 Cabaret is historically inaccurate Dachau was initially opened for political opponents in 1933 when Hitler was elected/appointed chancellor. He also closed the cabarets in 1933. The badge system started in 1937. Kristallnacht and the attacks on Jewish ghettos started in 1938. Jews and gay people served in the SA and SS until 1940. I always assumed that the Cumming version suggests he was sent to Dachau after the cabaret was closed for being a dissident, adding a bit of historical accuracy. The source material is more about the depression, and the events that led to radicalization, Isherwood left Berlin in 1933. Jean Ross is the real person Sally Bowles character and her family have been fighting the musical inaccuracies for forever.
@frostyguy19898 жыл бұрын
The play reflects eerily accurately what actually happened in real life. Weimar Germany was once famous for its cabarets, which tended to be deeply satirical of modern life, full of gallows humour, and many were openly critical of the Nazis. Naturally, once Hitler gained power, the Nazis utterly destroyed Germany's unique cabaret scene, with many of the actors sent into concentration camps.
@JeffFreemanPresents7 жыл бұрын
The play is based on the works of Christopher Isherwood who lived in Weimar Germany. Check out his "Berlin Stories," which inspired "I Am a Camera," and, ultimately, "Cabaret."
@esoniaknight66145 жыл бұрын
I didn't know that. WW2 is so sad and fascinating. I pray it never repeats itself in any country.
@AEE3414 жыл бұрын
@@esoniaknight6614 And after Hitler there was Stalin who killed millions, Sadam Hussain who killed Kurds, The takeover of Sudan, and right now it is on the internet that China has people in camps (Muslims, and others).
@sprouting_lady4 жыл бұрын
This is what I love about it. It highlights an aspect of Weimar Germany that has been forgotten by so many: the vibrant, thriving underground queer culture there. It's bone-chilling to realize how quickly it was all snuffed out, where we might today be had it not been, and how effective the Nazi book-burning campaigns were in helping erase that history from most people's knowledge.
@holdon49924 жыл бұрын
Don’t look now but it’s now America. The pink triangle on transgender soldiers, the white supremacy murderers as “heroes”, the destruction of the American economy and all its values. A descendant of German immigrants. Fabulous. Oh, Cabaret!
@laurelleaves7 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how quickly Alan's expression changes when he takes off his coat. One second he's the same sexy, flirtatious Emcee we all know then as soon as the coat opens his expression drops. It's a little thing, but most other Emcees I've seen stay serious through that whole bit and I think Alan's choice (or the director's) of the Emcee having one last little moment of himself makes the whole thing much sadder.
@crowteeth4204 жыл бұрын
it also tricks the audience into thinking its gonna be another typical mc moment, revealing some risqué outfit and then it feels like a slap in the face. it’s made even more sudden and shocking because of the juxtaposition
@cassieosbourne7666 Жыл бұрын
@@crowteeth420in Brechtian terms it’s called the Verfremdungseffekt or the distancing effect. The more popularised term is ‘the tickle-tickle-slap’
@thewhiterabbitchaser6 ай бұрын
@@cassieosbourne7666 this is very interesting thank you for your comment!
@Loki_K Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love this ending, but one change I would happily also embrace, is when Emcee says "Even the orchestra is BEAUTIFUL", a local theatre had the background unlit until that line. At that moment, the lights flared, suddenly revealing empty chairs. We had been listening to just a recording of music, preselected by people we couldn't see or influence. Loved that touch.
@Gee-xb7rt6 ай бұрын
In 1933 once Hitler was chancellor he closed the cabarets and opened Dachau, an abandoned factory, became a detention center for political dissidents. I think trying to emulate this is about the only thing historical about Cabaret. The source material is about the depression and the rise of extremism because of it, not about Nazis and Jews. The prisoner badge system didn't start til 1937. Kristallnacht was 1938. Cabaret shouldn't be considered history.
@bonniedobkin67046 ай бұрын
I saw the ending done that way, as well. unbelievably powerful.
@benbailey89286 ай бұрын
Bro, why are you under every comment? It’s a musical, in which much of what is in stage is metaphorical. He’s wearing the clearest symbol of the height of the fascist movement, and its ultimate consequences. It isn’t telling the audience “he was sent to a concentration camp the next day”
@S-pw2jh6 ай бұрын
Oooo I love that! Sounds chilling
@TheTradge4 ай бұрын
@@Gee-xb7rtwow you must be fun at parties, it’s a piece of theatre not a fucking history documentary, get a life 😂
@isabelberger94412 ай бұрын
I was in the pit orchestra when my college did this musical and they literally told us to play our parts after the line “Even the orchestra is beautiful” as out of tune as possible (probably to symbolize the eerie feeling of slowly devolving into fascism). Still gives me chills to this day.
@jaimejewer618510 жыл бұрын
That was actually significantly less terrifying than the one I saw in theatre. After he's done with the "life is beautiful" he shows the orchestra which is empty, sings the last part on his own, takes off his coat, and walks into a giant room with everyone else where a bright light comes on and you know what happens
@markbadolato636210 жыл бұрын
+Jamie Jewer Did you see the 2012 London revival???
@Wubbledaddy9 жыл бұрын
Mark Badolato That's the ending of the 98/2014 version
@tymiller29038 жыл бұрын
Jaime Jewer was this a production at Marshall University?
@BabyBoomerChannel7 жыл бұрын
Yes - you are correct. The pace of the story accelerates so fast at the end - you don't quite get what's happening until after it happens. The disjointed music.... perfect. I saw in about 1998, right after it moved to Studio 54, with Cummings. The end was strikingly scary - and I knew I had just witnessed history.
@jnvlogs18316 жыл бұрын
My school did it like that except later in the song after he shows the orchestra the wall with the doors fam down and you see the ensemble
@kmjdlc5 жыл бұрын
what i find chilling is how quickly Alan changes his expression before and after he takes off his coat to reveal the uniform. how can one have such a playful demeanor and make the crowd laugh but a split second later have such a serious change that leaves the audience speechless.
@Bloodanna7 ай бұрын
Also when he is listening to the testimonies and he is still being The MC, but you can see on his face as he slowly realizes no one is going to support or save him. 😢
@riveringstuff49352 жыл бұрын
That little smirk he gives after "after all what am I? A German" kills me. I've watched this a few times now and that smirk always almost convinces me there's going to be a nazi uniform under the coat, it's just so full of knowing spite. Alan Cumming is truly a gift to the theater world, and this ending haunts me like nothing else does.
@anagulordava4704Ай бұрын
"and it was the end of the world" always gives me chills
@finleyforevermoreАй бұрын
Same here. And the way the Willkommen vamp starts up after Cliff says it still haunts me. It feels so inappropriate and wrong, and it gives me goosebumps every time.
@caramiaantoinette51302 күн бұрын
“And we were fast asleep” does it for me 😢
@finleyforevermoreКүн бұрын
@@caramiaantoinette5130 Couldn't agree more. :[
@carsonpolipenguin11425 жыл бұрын
Truly amazing. The bitterness at the end of "We have no troubles HERE." I gasp every time.
@bahhumbug982411 ай бұрын
Part of it makes me think he's in on it and is glad for it. We have no troubles HERE (or else!), the girls and the orchestra are beautiful (agree or else!) ..until he takes off the coat.
@lizgordon59996 ай бұрын
@@bahhumbug9824I’m not gonna lie I thought the twist was gonna be that he was a nazi the whole time so I was like 😨
@bahhumbug98246 ай бұрын
@@lizgordon5999 Or maybe he was an informer like Mick Jagger's cabaret singer in the movie version of "Bent."
@CainLaurant2 ай бұрын
The fact so many of us came here. So many of us see the parallels and signs to a real historical event.. to how freedom was stripped away so swiftly... Speaks volumes.
@rosiemercury1112 ай бұрын
Elaborate. Who is losing their freedoms right now?
@anonymousname58602 ай бұрын
@@rosiemercury111it’s not everyone at first. It’s group by group. Learn from history. Who will speak for you when there is no one left.
@rosiemercury1112 ай бұрын
@ STFU with the bs. They’re about to blow your wig off your head with escalating a war. Telling me about read my justify, bitch you’re the one thst needs to raje your asa out of Massa Bidens ass
@girlishgamer1Ай бұрын
@@rosiemercury111 Why the hell are you watching the ending to this musical then?
@klatafaceАй бұрын
@@girlishgamer1 rage bait. That’s all they ever do, so they have a reason to talk down to people
@Sophie-nz9fz8 жыл бұрын
Alan is so incredible. this ending breaks my heart every single time I see it. he has such an emotional range and watching him embody a character is nothing short of electrifying.
@janeminwell43955 жыл бұрын
So true, he is utterly compelling.
@FlorenceUgh7 ай бұрын
Wq
@goatspaghetti5 жыл бұрын
I don't know why, but when I first watched Cabaret, I got it in my head that the Kit Kat Club was actually all a metaphor for a Nazi camp and the Emcee and performers were already in there and the audience were Nazis almost watching what actually happened as entertainment. I don't know if I looked a bit deep into it, but I think it came from the idea of how simply he revealed he was wearing the striped pyjamas as if he had always been wearing them and then a lot of people in the cast also join him... Also in the film how when it pans at the end and shows all the red bands
@morgancloutier59082 жыл бұрын
I want to see a production WITH THIS mentality. This is dark and ugly. You’re a genius
@eileenmunson3647 Жыл бұрын
I think your perspective is quite correct..
@bemiatto675 ай бұрын
I know some productions hold up a mirror at the end, so that interpretation is pretty valid
@StarSnowGhost6 жыл бұрын
*starts stripping* Audience: giggles* *takes off coat* Audience: Crap.
@UlangtahunRandu5 жыл бұрын
can you explain what that part means?
@weavilefrost70345 жыл бұрын
@@UlangtahunRandu late reply, but the stripped suit and the star is based on the real life suits that the prisoners in concentration camps would wear. So it's referring how the characters, such as the MC, are likely going to be persecuted, tortured and killed by the Nazis.
@UlangtahunRandu5 жыл бұрын
Weavile Frost omg 🤭 thankyou for the explanation
@AEE3414 жыл бұрын
@@weavilefrost7034 Do you know if Alan C. started that (the holocaust outfit) or was it in the original?
@weavilefrost70344 жыл бұрын
@@AEE341 Ive not seen a recording of the original, but there is an even older play compared to this one that also has the MC in the stripped suit, so odds are that it was in the original as well.
@arrow_of_ravenclaw515522 күн бұрын
I recently saw a local production of cabaret. I went in mostly blind, and didn’t know the ending, and man. The version was it was just emecee after the train scene. This production had their band onstage, so after, “even the orchestra is beautiful.” He goes to pull beck the curtain to show the orchestra, but it was empty. He then turns around, wearing the Star of David and I think the pink triangle. They did the lighting to make it look like he was in a gas changer. The emcee’s acting was phenomenal.
@teddysworld69393 ай бұрын
This is such a small detail, but I love the part at the very end when sally is singing the last little “life is a cabaret ol’ chum,” and you can see a big smile right before she bows her head. Ugh, I’m tearing up.
@calamityjai99 Жыл бұрын
You can almost physically see the sarcasm dripping when the MC says “beeeuuutiful”
@TheVO_Official4 ай бұрын
I love how haunting and broken the Willkommen melody is here. It’s the absolute final warming that the joy of the club is gone and SOMETHING is wrong
@zinctherat69672 ай бұрын
crazy how so many of us had the same thought process
@cruisematt85855 ай бұрын
Everyone has their favorite but for me, it’s Alan. He owned this role and made it his own. Phenomenal actor. Every movement, every facial expression is brilliant and done with purpose. Love you always Alan!
@sreganb8 жыл бұрын
when I first saw the show I didnt realize that the ending meant that all the kit kat klub dancers got sent to the concentration camp, this show really makes you think
@finleyforevermore2 ай бұрын
This was the first song I thought of when I saw that Trump won again. It's both beautiful and tragic to see others had the same thought process as me.
@coolioschoolio43592 ай бұрын
It’s sad my mind immediately went to “it’s only politics, what does that have to do with us”
@finleyforevermore2 ай бұрын
@@coolioschoolio4359 What does it have to do with us? Oh, only everything. 🫂
@bemiatto672 ай бұрын
@coolioschoolio4359 that's exactly why many people didn't vote. Apathy got Trump elected again.
@classiclover1238 жыл бұрын
I was so unprepared for this ending when I saw the stage production- I wept.
@bobbimouzon62728 жыл бұрын
classiclover123 So did I....I sobbed! My daughter said well, Mommie, how did you think it was going to end?
@palepurple19698 жыл бұрын
It totally punches you in the gut. I had only seen the movie version which is not so blunt. when he dropped that coat, it was just such a punch. You're just horrified at the end. But it's good because they do not back off of it - it is about the atrocities of war putting an end to a carefree life - it's supposed to be blunt.
@MrCrowebobby6 жыл бұрын
Then you can understand why Isherwood absolutely hated Liza's performance. Sally was a loser, in his words, you could never picture Liza as a loser. Julie Harris's "Sally" was more than perfect, according to Isherwood, she was more Sally than the real Sally. See "I Am a Camera."
@thecgirl33310 жыл бұрын
I was lucky enough to see Alan this weekend, had no idea this was coming. I have never sobbed that much in public. What. A. Performer.
@Biowoman.4 жыл бұрын
I went to see a performance of Cabaret when it came to my town (the west end version was touring) and so I already knew this ending but still... In the version I saw it was haunting in a different way. The word 'Kabaret' was backwards on stage with Emcee and the others dancing disjointedly behind the letters as Sally left to safety. Emcee stepped out and the soldier walked by and lightly pushed the letters down. Each one with a loud thud and the Emcee winced each time. Then the Emcee took off his coat and he, and the other dancers, faced the back of the stage. They'd removed all their clothes and hugged each other, the lights dimmed as a smoke effect came down from the ceiling, implying the gas chambers. I was shook.
@daisythorogood87314 жыл бұрын
I think I saw this one too!!
@Biowoman.4 жыл бұрын
@@daisythorogood8731 That's so cool! It was the UK tour!
@dmstewart663 жыл бұрын
WOW!
@lucycossavella49023 жыл бұрын
This is how it was when I saw it, John Partridge was the Emcee and he was absolutely electric
@lucycossavella49023 жыл бұрын
Also, the moment of the older gent taking his coat off at the party and the audience fell dead silent when they saw the nazi armband he was wearing
@mialeakahn90155 жыл бұрын
I like this ending so much, it has a much more sinister feel to it especially after being so campy for so long. I wonder why they don’t do this ending more often.
@fluffypuppy16413 жыл бұрын
Just curious what other ending do they sometimes do?
@FletcherWolfe3 жыл бұрын
@@fluffypuppy1641 there have been a few. Some endings the audience is forced to leave the room, others have the characters sent into a chamber “naked” full of smoke, some end like this. It really depends on the directors decision.
@reneekujawskibauernfeind45232 жыл бұрын
The last touring company revival that I saw was absolutely chilling. The Emcee turns around and walks upstage, the back curtain rises, revealing a line of people in silhouette as all the downstage lights go out, leaving nothing but painfully bright spots at eye level aimed at the audience as a projection of box cars moves across the lights from house right to house left. Words can never describe it, but seeing it in person induces goosebumps and tears. The last sound you hear before the blackout is a shot - and believe me, you feel it in your chest.
@MoonPhantom2 жыл бұрын
@@reneekujawskibauernfeind4523 I just watched a version where they lowered a huge mirror to cover the stage so when the lights when out, what the audience saw was themselves. Geesh! THANKS!
@reneekujawskibauernfeind45232 жыл бұрын
@@MoonPhantom WOW, now THAT is brilliant! If I were still directing, that's what I would do, instead of lowering the curtain on the silhouette of the boxcars, etc.
@finleyforevermore2 ай бұрын
Was listening to this while on the bus ride to school one morning. Right as Emcee says, "Where are your troubles now?", I saw a house with a Trump flag in front of it. Just thought it was worth sharing.
@CarolanIvey10 жыл бұрын
He has the most amazing face. I sense channeling of a tiny bit of Tim Curry, but with so much more complexity.
@aeonflux38649 жыл бұрын
Absolutely
@jeniferjoseph92008 жыл бұрын
Carolan Ivey On a good day Tim Curry can also be pretty moving. He never gets roles for it though.
@JeffFreemanPresents7 жыл бұрын
I had the privilege of seeing Tim Curry play Mozart in Amadeus opposite Ian McKellan and Jane Seymour. Believe me, there is no more complexity than the face, and talent, of Tim Curry. Years later, I worked on an independent film in Louisiana that he was in. When he got to the office, I was to take him to the grocery, then to his apartment. We started talking, and I ended up telling him I loved him in the play. He gasped and said, "Oh! I'm glad you said that show. The other stuff is fun, but that is the work that really matters." He was nominated for a Tony for Amadeus, and lost to Sir Ian, whose performance is seared into my memory for all time.
@idadudenmanner6 жыл бұрын
Jeff Freeman I bet that was FABULOUS!!!
@idadudenmanner6 жыл бұрын
Jenifer Joseph Tim curry's also been recovering from a stroke that put him in a wheelchair for like 5 years now and he's rather frail I hear.
@brucekemp2578Ай бұрын
The performances are quite chilling. The performers put a lot of intensity into their roles. The memories and emotions that this performance evokes are quite striking. The extent to which "Just Politics" can effect everyday life gives one food for thought,
@greekfreak143615 күн бұрын
His goodbye at the end killed me. I didn’t expect them to reference his welcome again like that. It’s like he knew he was dead.
@jackieshaw9256 Жыл бұрын
I saw this production at the Donmar Warehouse in London. It was deeply moving and took a great emotional toll on both Alan Cumming and Jane Horrocks (Sally Bowles). I don’t know how he managed to play the role for so long on Broadway, but I’m very glad he did. A theatrical milestone, for sure. ❤
@stephaniemccullough77252 жыл бұрын
Alan IS the Emcee. There will be other great actors who have played and will play this role, but none come close to Alan’s portrayal. It’s like Gene Wilder as as Willy Wonka; just iconic.
@heather837411 ай бұрын
so many little moments where Alan says so much without actual words. his grin when he steps up behind Bradshaw. the paranoid quick glance around when Fraulein Schneider says '...if the Nazis come...' the sardonic chuckle when Herr Schultz insists 'what am i? a German.' the way he drops the 'fun-time-guy' facade at '...no troubles *here*, the air quotes when he says '...happy to see you...', and of course when he drops the coat. and thus the whole act. and the others get their moment: Cliff has become so disillusioned that the novel he was so excited to write is now a bleak shadow of itself. Fraulein Schneider being resigned to her fate. Sally's bit of mania that fades with her death the orchestra being a discordant mess after the EmCee just said it's beautiful.
@jennaheaney12554 жыл бұрын
I love how the ending is made for the director to be free to do whatever they want with it. It’s always different. I’ve seen shocking endings, terribly sad endings, and even more light hearted. This one is so magical
@juliasings61313 ай бұрын
Absolutelyyy As an aspiring director, this has quickly become one of my favorite new thought experiments, of, what would I do with the ending of cabaret The concept of an ever changing ending is so fascinating to me and I love it so much
@johnjeromson34719 жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking to watch isnt it? Youve seen the film you know how it is going to finish yet still... Bam. Brilliant performance.
@veergauba9 жыл бұрын
***** well ya they do. Not those specific Nazis and not right then. But in time.
@JohnDoe-gk7ok3 жыл бұрын
Even the Emcee could not hang on to the fantasy world that lived within the confines of the cabaret.
@howtubeable3 жыл бұрын
Yes, the cabaret was a fantasy world, cut off from objective reality.
@OreadNYC3 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Germany was a very grim place even before the Nazis took control. The Cabaret (much like the films of the period) offers a brief respite from the harsh world outside and a faint semblance of glamour but it's all an illusion and a pretence which can't last.
@JohnDoe-gk7ok3 жыл бұрын
@@OreadNYC I’ve also been fascinated by the nature of the Emcee’s presence in the show. Is he actually a physical character in the same universe as the others, or is he like an outside narrator who simply embodies the internal struggles of the characters within the narrative? For example, in I Don’t Care Much, he dresses like Sally and narrates her internal dialogue. So maybe this ending is geared towards representing not that there was an Emcee killed in a concentration camp, but rather the false sense of security that many Germans had?
@maddieadams341310 жыл бұрын
alan is probably the most beautiful man to walk the earth
@mrbungeealwaysrhymes90233 жыл бұрын
I’ve gotta be honest I agree
@abydosianchulac2 Жыл бұрын
First production I saw was a community theater production in a rural area. During this final scene, as the Emcee is giving his lines, the rest of the Kit Kat Klub performers stumbled onto stage, costumes torn, faces cut and bruised, limping, crying. On his last two lines, the Emcee rolled out a drum and hit it in a sudden, fast roll as the line of dancers were mowed down by the implied machine gun fire. Then, looking sadly from them to the audience, he gave one more hit on the drum and fell down dead. Lights out. Not bad for community theater.
@Gee-xb7rt6 ай бұрын
oh the dramaturgy, Cabaret is not remotely historically accurate. the source material is about the effects of the depression on Germany that gave rise to all sorts of extremism. For historical accuracy when Hitler became chancellor in 33 he closed cabarets and opened Dachau, an abandoned munition factory that became a makeshift prison for political dissidents, mostly communists. The prison badge system didn't start until 1937, Kristallnacht was 1938. Isherwood left Berlin in 33, many of his gay friends died in Germany, but much later. There were Jewish people serving in the SA and SS until 1940.
@benbailey89286 ай бұрын
Your comments also seem to infer that the Nazis were “cool with the Jews” util late in the war. Jews were banned from serving in the SS. The only exceptions were partial Jews who were made “honorary aryans”, when Himmler wanted to expel them. In the most notable case because one of them was already friends with Hitler from before his rise to power. I don’t know your motives but you’re giving a very strange impression
@astrwolf55073 ай бұрын
@@Gee-xb7rtthe musical exists outside of a timeline and isn’t meant to be an exact replica of the time. ESPECIALLY emcee, as he exists not as a person but as a concept. the cabaret as well is generally considered both a physical place in the musical but it’s also there to reflect the descent into fascism “under peoples noses” and exists as a concept itself. i dont think you know the purpose of this musical and you should probably stay out of critiquing it
@astrwolf55073 ай бұрын
i honestly can’t believe you’re shocked that a musical isn’t a history book and that it’s… dramatic? no shit
@Gee-xb7rt3 ай бұрын
@@astrwolf5507 Of course i know Zionist propaganda when I see it, sorry that bothers you, not my problem. Much like Parade, some people just can't stop lying.
@smnoy233 жыл бұрын
“And it was the end of the world.” is the line that always gets me.
@howtubeable3 жыл бұрын
But it wasn't the end of the world. It was the end of their tiny narcissistic pleasuredome.
@Loki_K Жыл бұрын
@@howtubeableno. The end of the world doesn't always mean "the end of the world", like "happy [quotes] to see you" doesn't mean happy. But it was the end of that world. Stormtroopers. Nazis. Gender conformity that wouldn't break molds for another century, only to face hate again. The atom bomb. The end of samurai and the Japanese Emperor. Fck, all of AUSTRIA.
@jamsguitars248 ай бұрын
If you were a Jew in Berlin in the 1930s it was 100% the end of the world
@MelanieStewart-ft8tj6 ай бұрын
@@howtubeableSounds like something a Nazi would say
@nataliedingdong42872 ай бұрын
2024 reporting for duty
@HobbitForming10 жыл бұрын
The switch to a minor key is really interesting....
@BabyBoomerChannel7 жыл бұрын
Listen to the Revival Cast Album - it's much more pronounced and dramatic - representing the change from Freedom to repression. In the original revival production - when the curtain opens to show the orchestra - there's no one playing the instruments only the sound of the dissonant orchestra (playing in the pit). The audience is all, like - "what the heck's going on?" - only to be lead into the Concentration Camps with the actors.
@hahaohno3296 жыл бұрын
Sarah LaPidus And absolutely terrifying
@jamsguitars24 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Songs in major key signatures often sound happy and bright, like a warm and sunny day. Comparatively, songs in minor keys sound uncertain, like a dark, and cold night.
@3114bsad4 ай бұрын
Fuck that last bit hits hard, what an amazing show
@jayrose29332 ай бұрын
I wish the current Broadway revival kept the ending. It hits way harder imo
@finleyforevermore2 ай бұрын
@@jayrose2933 YESS SAME! 💚
@Acetrainergold968 күн бұрын
Genuinely upset that this show is still relevant. But god damn is it brilliant
@carmenmichaels7186 Жыл бұрын
My daughter and I got to see this when it was at 54 in New York City. I don’t think there was a dry eye in the house at the end it was a standing ovation. It was amazing and I had chills. He’s an excellent actor
@norse._.3 ай бұрын
0:50
@tiredalot50122 жыл бұрын
No matter how many times I watch it, the ending always gets me. Truly an amazing performance from all of them.
@MrJojowasaman7 ай бұрын
I saw Alan perform live at the old studio 54 venue and the entire production was magnificent, especially Alan.
@Angelicwings111 жыл бұрын
What an amazing actor! I adore him completely. Our local theatre group did this last night and they used this remarkable performance as inspiration for theirs. The cabaret girls and mc all went into a gas chamber together. I was so close to crying.
@hannahfarnhill815411 жыл бұрын
This is so powerful.... It gives me shivers: Alan Cumming you are remarkable. Your characterisation couldn't be better. This is such a incredible performance BRAVO!!!! I wish....so much that I could've seen this in person.
@U2QuoZepplin4 жыл бұрын
This is an entirely creepier version of The Master of Ceremonies character. A whole lot more ghoulish! And I love it that Jane Horrocks’ version of Sally Bowles is totally unlike the famous Liza Minnelli version. This is how each successive musical production should be. Similar because it’s the same story and framework, but different enough to make it a new experience for the punter.
@aylaeh Жыл бұрын
Jane Horrocks is amazing. I would have loved to have seen her in this but I loved her in the movie little voice. She blew me away in that movie.
@Sugarwater52210 жыл бұрын
I love all the versions he's performed for this musical, but this is my favorite. Here he appears to represent all people- female, male, predator, victim. ... it's a genius portrayal. Alan Cumming fan fuheva!
@stephenholmes5362 Жыл бұрын
Mr. Alan Cummings is brilliant!! The whole cast is beautiful, even the orchestra is beautiful!!
@bestoftheworstsАй бұрын
Not many people realize that Cliff is Eliot from Breaking Bad
@prahslra Жыл бұрын
This Donmar Warehouse production by Sam Mendes was groundbreaking and breathtaking. The entire cast was sensational but in particular Jane Horrocks gave a very brave and touching performance. In one fell swoop she obliterated the until-then supposedly definitive Fosse-directed Minelli performance, which had dominated the landscape for more than 20 years, and paved the way for the many truer Sally Bowles interpretations which followed.
@bemiatto672 ай бұрын
Get ready America, this is your future.
@BabyBoomerChannel7 жыл бұрын
I saw this play right after the move to Studio 54 with Cummings and Mary McCormick. I guess is was around 1999. The ending was different then. Where the curtain opens to show the orchestra - there's no one there - just the music playing, and rising to a disjointed cacophony. And the volume kept rising - with very harsh lighting - and the players stood there - with Cummings making a final spin - ripping off his coat - to the striped prisoners outfit and reaching his hands to the harsh spot light - somehow changing his expression into one of a Concentration Camp victim. All at the same time - it was almost like a magic trick - It scared the crap out of me - but was stirring and impactful and beautiful, all at the same time. (listen to the cast album - it's played out there - audio only) It changed my life. I don;'t know why they changed the ending into the one showed in this video. This was much less dramatic.
@alisonclark95717 жыл бұрын
Saw the UK tour of this the other day and the end of it was truly harrowing. Cabaret has such an art at being both eccentric and fun while still being so heartbreaking.
@poisonedivysaur8 жыл бұрын
I saw this in an independent theater it was amazing. The ending depresses me to no end. And I will never look at Alan Cumming the same way again. Haha he's awesome.
@alchemist4evr8 жыл бұрын
Anybody found the ending for the 2012 London revival? I heard the cast huddles together naked at the end and it's implied they're in a gas chamber
@irisw71638 жыл бұрын
Julia Day they did that at the production I recently saw but I haven't seen the revival version anywhere, if I were you I'd keep looking it is truely one of the creepiest, most harrowing things I have ever seen
@PhantomFandoms7 жыл бұрын
Iris Warren it really was, I saw it today in San Jose and I was so out of breath with how powerful it was.
@sarahx62257 жыл бұрын
Iris W were they actually naked? Thats harrowing
@bubblellama-gq8rj7 жыл бұрын
Where they seriously naked ?!
@artemisredican87577 жыл бұрын
Late but. I've just came back from the UK Tour which I think is based on the London revival and yes. The KABARET letters were knocked over and the Emcee stood in front of the A. He sang the ladies are beautiful, even the men are beautiful in a broken whisper and could barely say even the orchestra. He then knocked the A down and went to the back of the stage. There, the ensemble had their backs turned, after we'd seen them crouching on the floor, fully clothed when the letters were knocked. They were fully naked and the Emcee dropped his coat, naked also, linking arms in a goose step way almost, them all huddling together. The back of the stage, that they were against, a dirty white wall with a copper pipe running across. A hiss. Like a gas chamber. The most harrowing sight to imagine live.
@julieporter7805 Жыл бұрын
One could interpret that they are in the concentration camp this whole time and singing to cheer themselves up. The Emcee taking off his coat shows the reality of the situation that they are in. His final moments is courageous showing that he'd rather die being himself and mocking the world around him, getting the last laugh against those that overpowered him rather than conform to being something that he is not.
@kyndallthompson34535 жыл бұрын
So I just watched CSU’s rendition of this and it was so eerie- when they said the orchestra is beautiful, the orchestra was gone, and a recording was instead being played at that time. Then all the people just came up and started taking of their coats instead of singing and there wasn’t the star and prison wear but there was this ominous rumbling sound and they just lined up at the exit of the stage and stood still for a bit. Very eerie ending, very different than this!!
@dhwiiakenebjdidism Жыл бұрын
It's powerful how everything gets more sad as it goes on. Everyone hates eachother and loses hope. Even the orchestra becomes broken. Even the emcee becomes sad
@Fuhehua5 жыл бұрын
In the version I saw, the apartments were transformed into gas chambers with everyone walking into them and I've never seen another performance quite so impactful as that one. It was truly a fantastic piece and remains to be a top favorite of mine. Also Alan is just a treat ❤️
@Dbdbe1 Жыл бұрын
This gives you an absolute punch in the gut even if you’ve seen it 100 times. Brilliant but chilling.
@SymphonyBrahms6 жыл бұрын
What an incredibly powerful ending. Our regional theater group put on this version recently, and when the master of ceremonies took off his coat and revealed the concentration camp uniform underneath, there was an audible gasp from the audience.
@Griffologee11 жыл бұрын
Alan Cumming. Just... his face. He's amazing.
@brynnanashton28653 жыл бұрын
I know that the ending is supposed to be chilling no matter which version you’re watching given that we all know what’s coming next but that moment Alan Cumming takes his coat off and sheds the last of himself and is wearing a CC uniform is fucking bone chilling.
@nickg53413 жыл бұрын
I first saw this show the day after Trump was inaugurated. Needless to say, the entire 2nd act had the audience breathless. No laughter, just the occasional gasp and stunned silence. At the end of the show, hardly anyone was clapping because we were all so shocked and moved. That’s the moment I fell in love with musical theater and the power the art form can hold. Cabaret is the best musical of all time.
@chazarcola7639 Жыл бұрын
CABARET REMAINS RELEVANT IN 2023. 1930S BERLIN IS AMERICA UNDER BIDEN. CONGRATULATIONS.
@noramulvehill97504 жыл бұрын
Sam Mendes is an absolute genius and I would watch anything he directed. The Ferryman has a similarly terrifying, abrupt ending as this version of Cabaret, and it works brilliantly.
@aleksandrastockhold21312 жыл бұрын
I saw The Ferryman and I saw this Cabaret production with Natasha Richardson as Sally. Sam Mendes has not only made some of my favorite films, 1917 and Road to Perdition, but also my favorite broadway shows! Bravo, Sam!
@katanaki30597 ай бұрын
Alan Cummings was masterful. I am so glad to have seen him on Broadway in this. Such a great story
@hauntsoulhorror41956 ай бұрын
The shadow of alan cummings nose giving a Hitler mustache shadow is such a spooky touch
@nigelbilsby3826 Жыл бұрын
I once went to a stage performance of cabaret in Blackpool grand theatre, with Wayne sleep, thay sang the end song and at the end they slipped off stage, then you saw the curtain rise up and the cast was in a pile on top of each other naked, and someone dressed as a German soldier came on with a gas mask and had tins of cyclon b in a small trolly, as you can guess, the audience was silent except for some people took a sharp intake of breath!
@stahppls22937 жыл бұрын
Alan's face at 3:17 saying like, "... it'll be ok, let's have fun."
@captainbeamng65817 ай бұрын
My interpretation was that he was laughing at the idea of the Jew being a true German.
@gretep6 ай бұрын
@@captainbeamng6581with the reveal at the end that the emcee is jewish himself, i saw that smirk as more bitter and sardonic than anything. like he knew that the nazis would not see it that way, rather than him actually believing it himself
@captainbeamng65816 ай бұрын
@@gretep "He" as in a greater representation of the Nazis. Essentially what I was trying to say, just better articulated.
@iDontShareMyData Жыл бұрын
I saw this at Studio 54 in 2000, it was one of the best things I ever saw on a stage.
@kathybuhler360 Жыл бұрын
I too saw it at studio 54 but Neil Patrick Harris play the MC and Mr Cunningham from Happy Days was also in it it was great at that venue wasn't it
@Sars1-k6f5 ай бұрын
I also saw it un studio 54, although in 2002. I was 12 years old. It was the most incredible thing I’ve ever seen on stage.
@flyinghow2 жыл бұрын
Cabaret is so haunting. My favorite musical of all time. Alan Cumming is amazing!
@herrschultz74138 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love this alternate ending, much more powerful than the original one.
@finleyforevermore7 ай бұрын
What's the original ending?
@herrschultz74137 ай бұрын
@@finleyforevermore Didn't have the last musical ensemble.
@finleyforevermore6 ай бұрын
@@herrschultz7413 A.) So so awesome that you replied to this all these years later! B.) I kinda forgot i made this comment but i know about the two endings now, yeah! And i absolutely agree with you, this ending is so much more impactful. I know they say "less is more" and that may be true, but the haunting callbacks to earlier lines, the way "Willkomen" sounds even MORE ominous and discordant than in the other ending, the way Emcee's final goodbye sounds more tragic with the higher key...when the cast comes in with "Willkomen, bievenue, welcome!", it feels like such a gut punch..it's genuinely perfection, and I wish more productions did this ending, the shorter one just doesn't have the same effect at all.
@finleyforevermore6 ай бұрын
The 1966/1987 version of the ending is so much more powerful and effective than the 1998 ending. I really wish this one was used in more professional productions, the only productions I've seen use this ending are non professional ones.
@DaneMetzger2 ай бұрын
Ameeica after the 2024 election
@kristin71212 жыл бұрын
Saw him in this with Jennifer Jason Leigh at Studio 54. He was outstanding
@playlistnation4232 жыл бұрын
I knew what was going to happen and it still broke me.
@jamsguitars248 ай бұрын
Objective completed. The Emcee, being Jewish himself, led the other characters, as well as the audience into the story just to destroy them
@therookieyoutubers937310 жыл бұрын
I love cabaret so much My school performed it this year and it was really good It's a great musical
@peternighswander96292 жыл бұрын
I am particularly haunted by this- totally breathtaking. Alan and the cast are brilliant. I had just finished Ken Burns US and the Holocaust. I guess this is appropriate
@MrDavey2010 Жыл бұрын
Alan Cummings is spell-binding. Amazing performance!
@maybethistime68138 жыл бұрын
I'm finding this video incredibly relevant here on Inauguration Day.
@Moreorlesss9968 жыл бұрын
Maybe This Time And How?
@meowmeowflappyhands25257 жыл бұрын
Maybe This Time its interesting because my school actually produced this play a couple months ago and I really think it was picked because of the election.
@seraphicsignal7 жыл бұрын
I only think so because we were all laughing at trump until because we didn't think he'd win and when he did it was a huge shock like when the emcee took his coat off
@currentresident37755 жыл бұрын
Maybe This Time 🍷Cheers. 😣😞
@JH-kw8zy5 жыл бұрын
He put babies in cages because America is moral exhausted, greedy, and/ or filled with displaced hate. He is a prophet of doom ad history repeats itself.
@rayrae204 Жыл бұрын
I saw this at Studio 54...! Wow! What a show!
@Casey56937 жыл бұрын
I saw this musical for the first time today. It’s truly about the tragedy of cowardice and how by ignoring the world’s problems in favor of fun people end up in tragedy.
@ellieperforms152 жыл бұрын
Just watched this as a class project. The ending was absolutely haunting, I looked up and everyone’s mouths were hanging open. Bravo 👏👏
@lydiahenderson24364 жыл бұрын
ive watched this like six times today and cried every time
@lydiahenderson24364 жыл бұрын
now eleven
@matth3w200211 ай бұрын
I don’t think Cliffs character is talked about nearly enough. Mind you he has dealt with and witnessed: His first friend in Germany, a man he trusted, turn out to be a Nazi, his other friends lose pretty much everything, and his girlfriend completely turning her back on him and ABORTING THEIR CHILD. Dude has been put through the wringer.
@melissawickersham99127 ай бұрын
And he gets to go home while his girl stays in Germany. The only consolation for him is that he is likely to survive the war.
@S-pw2jh6 ай бұрын
I agree throwing In the fact that Cliff and Ernest are somewhat implied to be lovers of a sort. though I can’t fault Sally for the abortion she was right
@melissawickersham99126 ай бұрын
@S-pw2jh If Cliff and Ernest were lovers, then it’s not a healthy romance for Cliff because Ernest was deceiving Cliff about Ernest’s political affiliations and Ernest was just using Cliff to provide financial support for the Nazis. Cliff would be the victim of an abusive sexual relationship in this case as well as an abusive financial relationship since Ernest was not being honest with Cliff.
@S-pw2jh6 ай бұрын
@@melissawickersham9912 I wasn’t saying it was healthy sorry just that it’s kinda implied you know?
@Gobear13 жыл бұрын
When I saw Cabaret in DC in 2002, there was a blackout after Sally's reprise, then a scrim rose to show Auschwitz and you could hear the roar of the crematoria as the Emcee reveals himself as a gay, Jewish prisoner. That broke me.
@rubbermannequin6595 Жыл бұрын
Anyone who has worked in theater in any capacity, at any level, knows Cabaret. And if you think of Alan Cumming and Cabaret, one's mind instantly goes to the Emcee.
@MegDoesStuff07 жыл бұрын
oh my god i did not know that was how it ended.. crying my eyes out
@glennvader88534 жыл бұрын
I saw the show. When I saw it at the end was silence, and in the background all you heard was the Furnaces burning where the nazis burned the bodies. It chilled you to the bone.
@reynadejesus93493 жыл бұрын
Good art comforts the disturbed and disturbs the comfortable
@oldaccount61528 жыл бұрын
Alan is goals in every way
@Vinnystarssss Жыл бұрын
I have been studying the holocaust and I highly doubt this was intentional but the miserable looks on the orchestra’s faces you can only barely make out and the near ear piercing sounds you begin to hear made this just even more upsetting. I have heard stories of the nazi’s forcing people in concentration camps to perform in order to humiliate them and to drown out sounds of executions. They would beat and torture them if they were even slightly incorrect on how it was performed And hearing the orchestra at the beginning and the general feeling the music puts out just makes it so much more disturbing to me I could just be wrong and it was completely unintentional but i feel like it is horrific either way
@nedraleggett90883 жыл бұрын
I had forgotten the ending. It's been years since I have seen the movie or any productions Cabaret. I was overwhelmed very fast.