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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat

Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Dreamcoat
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.jpg
1991 Revivals Logo
Music Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lyrics Tim Rice
Basis The story of Joseph in Genesis
Premiere 1970
Productions 1968 Colet Court cantata
1970 Cathedral College
1971 Young Vic company
1973 West End
1978 West End
1979 West End
1982 Broadway
1991 West End revival
1992 Toronto
1993 Australia
1993 Broadway revival
2003 West End revival
2005, 2007 United States tour
2007 West End revival
2010–? UK tour
2014 United States tour
2014–15 UK tour
2015-2016 North American tour
2016 UK tour

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is a musical or operetta with lyrics by Tim Rice and music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The story is based on the "coat of many colors" story of Joseph from the Bible's Book of Genesis. This was the first Lloyd Webber and Rice musical to be performed publicly (the first, The Likes of Us, written in 1965, was not performed until 2005).

The show has little spoken dialogue; it is completely sung-through. Its family-friendly storyline, universal themes and catchy music have resulted in numerous productions of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat; according to the Really Useful Group, by 2008 more than 20,000 schools and amateur theatre groups had successfully put on productions.

Joseph was first presented as a 15-minute pop cantata at Colet Court School in London in 1968 and was recorded as a concept album in 1969. After the success of the next Lloyd Webber and Rice piece, Jesus Christ Superstar, Joseph received stage productions beginning in 1970 and expanded recordings in 1971 and 1972. While still undergoing various transformations and expansions, the musical was produced in the West End in 1973, and in its full format was recorded in 1974 and opened on Broadway in 1982. Several major revivals and a 1999 straight-to-video film, starring Donny Osmond, followed.

Lloyd Webber's composer father, William, felt the show had the seeds of greatness. He encouraged and arranged for a second performance — at his church, Westminster Central Hall — with a revised and expanded format. The boys of Colet Court sang at this performance in May 1968, which also included the Mixed Bag. It received positive reviews: London's Sunday Times said it was a new pop oratorio. By its third performance at St Paul's Cathedral in November 1968, it had been expanded to 35 minutes and included songs such as "Potiphar".


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