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Michael Bitterman &  Dennis Drogseth : Rasputin-The Magic Reality Show
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Based on extensive research in which fact routinely outstripped fantasy, “Rasputin the Magic Reality Show” takes a satirical approach to how history is written in this carnival-like attempt to get at the “truth” behind Rasputin’s story.
Genre: Easy Listening: Musicals/Broadway
Release Date: 2009
Rasputin-The Magic Reality Show Record Label: Michael Bitterman & Dennis Drogseth
  • Buy CD - $12.97
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Smoke & Mirrors 2:45 Album Only
Changing Times 3:38 Album Only
What I See 2:20 Album Only
Power 2:28 Album Only
Good Thoughts 2:27 Album Only
What We Need 1:51 Album Only
Vision 5:24 Album Only
Song To A City 8:54 Album Only
Entr'acte 1:28 Album Only
I Came To Learn 3:24 Album Only
Staircase Notes 3:58 Album Only
Woman, Oh Woman 2:04 Album Only
Green People 2:02 Album Only
Someplace Pleasant 1:52 Album Only
Youssoupov's Song 4:34 Album Only
What Does It Feel Like? 2:47 Album Only
The World Outside 3:32 Album Only

Album Notes

Not everyone has a chance to revisit their lives to seek a new verdict on how they lived – but in this show, Grigori Rasputin and his assassin, Prince Felix Youssoupov do. The results replay history with ironic and unexpected twists. Loosely framed in a parody of contemporary “Reality TV” – an energetically comic emcee/magician (“Felix”) struts out examine the life of Grigori Rasputin, who is brought out from the audience, a figure of unassuming stature, much like the historical Rasputin. It is immediately clear that he and Felix share something unusual between them.

The musical, which is based on extensive research around the life of Rasputin from various points of view (and there are quite a few here) explores the factors surrounding how history, itself, is created through media, narrative, rumor and superstition. Flamboyant Youssoupov, once the wealthiest man in Russia, a cabaret performer and cross dresser whose hero was Oscar Wilde, tries to orchestrate once again the life narrative of the man he killed nearly 100 years before. In parallel, the musical examines the troubling contradictions of Rasputin himself, a man who, had he been intellectually and morally stronger, might have conceivably been a powerful force for good. In a style that combines farce and tragedy (in accordance with actual historical events), “Rasputin the Magic Reality Show,” becomes in the end an affirming statement of what human beings can achieve, just as it warns of stereotypes, prejudice and convenience in response to the astonishing complexity and contradictions within us.

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