Broadway
 
 A Streetcar Named Desire
 After the Night and the Music
 All shook up
 Avenue Q
 Beauty and the Beast
 Billy Crystal: 700 sundays
 Broadway Resources
 Brooklyn: The Musical
 Chicago
 Chitty chitty bang bang
 Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
 Doubt
 Fiddler on the roof
 Glengarry Glen Ross
 Good Vibrations
 Hairspray
 Jackie Mason: Freshly Squeezed
 Julius Caesar
 La Cage Aux Folles
 Little Women
 Mamma Mia!
 Movin' Out
 On Golden Pond
 Rent
 Spamalot
 Steel Magnolias
 Sweet Charity
 The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
 The Glass Menagerie
 The Light in the Piazza
 The Lion King
 The Phantom of the Opera
 The Pillowman
 The Producers
 Twelve Angry Men
 Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf
 Wicked
 Advertise on this site
 
 Affiliates
 Las Vegas

Spamalot

Monty Python's Spamalot is a musical based on the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Its title combines a reference to the popular Spam sketch from Monty Python's Flying Circus with a reference to the 1960 musical Camelot. The title also brings to mind a line from a song in the Holy Grail film: "We dine well here in Camelot / We eat ham and jam and SPAM a lot."

Eric Idle of Monty Python wrote the musical's script, and he collaborated with John Du Prez for the music and lyrics. It was directed by Mike Nichols, but features none of the original Python actors, with the sole exception of an audio recording of John Cleese as God. Top-billed actors include David Hyde Pierce as Sir Robin, Tim Curry as King Arthur, and Hank Azaria as Sir Lancelot; all of these characters being adapted almost directly from their counterparts in the source film. Sara Ramirez appears as the Lady of the Lake, a role that was added in order to create a female lead. In addition, all of these performers (apart from Tim Curry) fulfill a variety of ensemble roles.

The show officially opened in Chicago on January 9, 2005 (previews began on December 21, 2004). The grand Broadway opening was on March 17, 2005, with previews beginning February 14, 2005. As of April 2005, it was sold out for most performances. One scene (a musical version of the famous witch-hunting scene) was removed in the Broadway version, supposedly to cut down on time, although the scene had been called by many the "low point of the play".

Spamalot includes many references to other Monty Python material, including a line sung from The Lumberjack Song, a nod to the "Ministry of Silly Walks" routine, and a singalong of "Always Look On The Bright Side of Life" from Monty Python's Life of Brian.

Broadway tickets to Spamalot

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Spamalot".