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Annie
Annie Annie became a global phenomenon based on the prominent comic strip formed by Harold Gray, and it was the winner of seven Tony Awards and Best Musical. It is the beloved book scored by the Tony Award winners Charles Strouse, Thomas Meehan, and Martin Charnin, featuring a couple of the greatest musical theater hits ever written, including Tomorrow.
The Plot
Charnin initially approached Meehan to write a book on music related to Little Orphan Annie in 1972. After rereading the comic strip prints, Meehan could not locate satisfactory material for the musical other than the characters of Oliver Warbucks, Annie, and Sandy. Therefore, he decided to write his own story.
Charnin and Strouse, like Meehan, were from New York. Given what he experienced during the Nixon era of the Vietnam War, Meehan created his story in New York during the downbeat of the Great Depression.
Meehan witnessed the character of Annie as a 20th-century American female version of the titular orphan character Charles Dickens had created in the works such as David Copperfield and Oliver Twist. Meehan underlined Annie's character with the mysteries, like her abandonment of the unknown parenthood with consistencies and a more extraordinary strand of mysteries than Dickens’ tales.
The book got accepted by Charnin and Strouse; however, they trimmed out considerable portions with ideas that would later restore this novelization.
Spunky Annie believed that her parents were still alive and would one day return claiming her, unlike most of the other kids at the orphanage of Miss Hannigan. Therefore, when Mr. Warbucks offers to adopt her, she asks the most potential men in America to aid in finding the real mom and dad, and he agrees.
Warbucks' whooping reward for the parents of Annie attracted the attention of the con artists Rooster, wicked Hannigan, and Lily. They created the plot to kidnap Annie and take $50,000 as a reward. However, it would be best if you never fretted about the classical family musical having a happier ending for Annie with Daddy Warbucks with the entire gang.
Annie had escaped running into the stray dog in a friendly way while she was informing him that better days were yet to come. She even fools the police into believing that Sandy is her dog. Later on, Sandy and Annie stumbled upon Hooverville, a shanty town filled with former well-off people whom the Great Depression suddenly rendered homeless.
Annie is the ideal family-friendly musical and the perfect show for the massive female casting.