Chess (musical)
Chess is a musical with lyrics by Tim Rice and music by Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, formerly of ABBA. The story involves a romantic triangle between two players in a world chess championship, and a woman who manages one and falls in love with the other...
The studio album
Principal cast
- Florence - Elaine Paige
- The American - Murray Head
- The Russian - Tommy Körberg
- Molokov - Denis Quilley
- Svetlana - Barbara Dickson
- The Arbiter - Björn Skifs
Songs
- "Merano"
- "The Russian and Molokov" / "Where I Want to Be"
- "Opening Ceremony"
- "Quartet (A Model of Decorum and Tranquility)"
- "The American and Florence" / "Nobody's Side"
- "Chess"
- "Mountain Duet"
- "Florence Quits"
- "Embassy Lament"
- "Anthem"
- "Bangkok" / "One Night in Bangkok"
- "Heaven Help My Heart"
- "Argument"
- "I Know Him So Well"
- "The Deal (No Deal)"
- "Pity the Child"
- "Endgame"
- "Epilogue: You and I" / "The Story of Chess"
Plot synopsis
Act 1
The world chess championship is being held in the northern Italian town of Merano. The brash American champion relishes the crowd's affection, while his Russian challenger and Molokov, his second (actually a KGB agent), watch with curiosity and disdain on TV. The opening ceremony features an arbiter insisting on holding the proceedings together, US and Soviet diplomats vowing their side will win, and marketers just looking to make a buck. The American storms out of a rules meeting, leaving his second, Florence, in an argument with the Arbiter and the Russians. She later scolds him, but he insists that she, a child emigre who escaped Hungary during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, should support him. Instead, she reflects that "nobody's on nobody's side". The first game of the match goes badly, with dirty tricks nearly evolving into a brawl. A meeting to smooth things over goes badly and strands the Russian and Florence together, where they quickly develop feelings for one another. As the matches continue, the American flounders and blames Florence, who leaves him. The Russian wins the championship, then defects to the west. Answering reporters' questions about his loyalties, his "Anthem" declares that "my land's only borders/ lie around my heart."
Related Topics:
KGB - 1956 Hungarian Revolution
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Act 2
A year later, the Russian is set to defend his championship in Bangkok, Thailand. The American is already there, chatting up locals about the nightlife. Florence and the Russian are now lovers, and worry about the situation. Molokov, meanwhile, has trained a new protege to challenge the Russian. The American interviews the Russian on TV and makes obvious attempts to rattle him, even declaring that the Russian's wife is being allowed to leave the USSR to attend the match. She and Florence both reflect on their relationships with him. The American goes to the Russian with information about Florence's long-lost father, claiming that instead of being a hero as she believed, he was instead a collaborator. The Russian, and later Florence, dismiss him, unwilling to hear what he has to say. He reflects on his life and his obsession with chess as a way to escape an unhappy childhood. In the deciding game of the match, The Russian manages an exceptional victory, and realizes that it may be the only success he can achieve - Svetlana castigates him for wallowing in the crowd's empty praise. Both acknowledge they are doomed to care only for themselves. Later, he and Florence reflect on their story that seemed so promising, and how they "go on pretending/ stories like ours/ have happy endings."
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | The studio album |
| ► | Broadway cast album |
| ► | The "Chess In Concert" album |
| ► | The Danish tour album |
| ► | The 2002 Stockholm Version |
| ► | Production history |
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