Gordon Cox Theater Editor The composer (“Once Upon a Mattress”), young adult author (“Freaky Friday”) and philanthropist Mary Rodgers wanted to write a memoir that was candid, cutting, dishy and vanity-free — the exact opposite of the books penned by her father, the legendary Broadway composer Richard Rodgers, and her mother Dorothy Rodgers. “Mary didn’t want it to be fake like her parents’ memoirs had been,” said Jesse Green, the co-author of Mary Rodgers’ recently released memoir “Shy.” Speaking on the new episode of Stagecraft, Variety‘s theater podcast, Green explained, “She wanted it to spark with the actual sound of people enjoying thinking about their lives.” So in “Shy,” Rodgers and Green get real about a life lived among the biggest names in the history of musical theater, starting with Richard Rodgers and including Stephen Sondheim, Oscar Hammerstein, Hal Prince, Arthur Laurents and many, many more.
The book’s biggest bombshell lies in a revealing story about a failed “trial marriage” arrangement between Rodgers and Sondheim, whom she met as a teenager and loved all her life. “Clearly the story about the trial marriage with Sondheim is the biggest surprise of the book, and it really knocked me to the floor when she told me about it,” Green said.
It’s so intimate a story that many readers assume that Green and his publishers waited to release “Shy” until after Sondheim’s death. “That’s not true,” Green revealed. “I was talking to Sondheim all along about various things in the memoir, although I never got to [the story of the trial marriage] because Mary was so uncertain about talking to him about it.” (Sondheim died in November at 91.) Green added, “We talked a lot about when to talk to Sondheim about it.
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