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FINALE by D.T. Max

FINALE

Late Conversations With Stephen Sondheim

by D.T. Max

Pub Date: Nov. 22nd, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-06-327981-0
Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Final interviews with the greatest composer and lyricist in Broadway history.

New Yorker staff writer Max had wanted to meet Stephen Sondheim (1930-2021) ever since, in 1977, the author’s mother brought home a signed copy of the album Side by Side by Sondheim. Falling in love with the “tricky rhythms and harmonic improbabilities” and characters who “were made of doubt, of missteps, of ambivalence,” Max became a lifelong fan. In 2016, he wrote to Sondheim’s assistant to propose a profile and a short piece for the New Yorker. To the author’s surprise, Sondheim responded and agreed to what would become a series of interviews from 2017 to 2019. Those interviews form the bulk of this book. It’s a little crass when Max says he felt he had a better chance than previous journalists of getting the famously guarded Sondheim to open up because “he was old now. Coming to the end, to state it plainly.” He admits that, before the first interview, “I could not recall even the most rudimentary things about him,” and that, thanks to his lack of knowledge, “I would be able to push him just far enough out of his routine to get a fresh glimpse of who he was.” That’s a dubious theory and, as this book proves, a flawed one. Much of the information has been documented elsewhere. But Sondheim was a fascinating raconteur, and the book shines when Max allows him to discuss his work. Among the best sections are those about Sondheim’s difficulties trying to compose a musical based on films by Luis Buñuel, a project he didn’t complete; a long conversation on the genesis of the original Merrily We Roll Along; and little-known tidbits—e.g., that A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Sondheim’s Broadway debut as composer and lyricist, was the first show ever to be workshopped.

An adoring but surprisingly ill-informed book about a Broadway legend.