ONTD

3:50 pm - 01/20/2013

'Les Miserables' standout 'I Dreamed a Dream': The history of this sob-inducing song



Perhaps you recently saw the film Les Miserables. Perhaps you got a little caught up in the story of Fantine, the fired factory worker whose desperation to take care of her daughter fuels much of the early plot. Perhaps you made it to the moment where Fantine — played by Anne Hathaway — sings her signature ode to lost love and dashed hopes, “I Dreamed a Dream.” Perhaps you, like much of the rest of the sentient universe, broke down into a blubbering pile of raw-throated eye-gush emotional goo. You are not alone. Hathaway’s version of the song — which recently earned her an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe win — has gotten everyone talking about a tune that was already one of Les Miz‘s most popular standards. “What [director] Tom [Hooper] and Annie have done is created a really raw, pure version of the song,” says Working Title co-chairman Eric Fellner, one of the movie’s producers. “There have been many great versions of the song, but I don’t think anybody has performed it this way, because it’s never been acted on screen before. It’s just very, very emotional.”

As Fellner points out, there have been plenty of memorable takes on “I Dreamed a Dream” since composer Claude-Michel Schonberg and lyricist Alain Boublil wrote the song in Paris in 1979.

Read on for a few of our favorites, along with some memories from people involved!

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The Original French-Language Version of “I Dreamed a Dream,” performed by Rose Laurens



The original “I Dreamed a Dream” was first heard on a French concept album based on Victor Hugo’s book. It was one of two tunes sung by Fantine, who was voiced by a French singer named Rose Laurens. (The other Fantine song, “L’Air de la Misere,” would later become “On My Own,” which in the English-language musical is sung by Eponine.) “[I Dreamed a Dream] came late in the process of the creation, because we thought we needed another song for Fantine,” says Schonberg, who wrote “Dream” on a white piano in his small Paris apartment. The composer started with just a single line from the Hugo book, teasing out a melody and hoping for inspiration. “When I’m writing something, I sit down at the piano the same way I will be sitting down in the theater,” he says. “I say, ‘I’m in the dark in my seat, the curtain is open, she is arriving onstage. What am I going to see and what am I going hear?’ When I try to visualize what’s going to happen onstage, I might sometimes feel kind of a sparkle of light on the other side of the tunnel. To feel that there is something coming…that’s the best moment of the creation. Because you don’t share it with anybody. You’re on your own, and it’s a very intense moment of joy when you feel that you’re starting to catch some music in the air and this music makes sense and you know that the power of this music will drive you from the first bar to the last bar of the song. That’s a fantastic moment.”

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“I Dreamed a Dream” performed by Patti LuPone, from the first English-language production of Les Miz



In 1985, theater producer Cameron Mackintosh brought Les Miz to London, now with English lyrics (courtesy of Herbert Kretzmer) and Broadway star Patti LuPone in the Fantine role. LuPone says that at first she didn’t quite grasp the song’s power. “When I started working on ‘I Dreamed a Dream’ with Claude-Michel and Alain — I’m not the type of person who has an immediate response,” says LuPone. “I’m a truly an organic actor singer, and it takes a while for it to get into my body, to know whether it’s a good song. When you’re in rehearsal, you’re rehearsing. Then all of a sudden you’re in performance, and then you understand what the effect is of the song. A stage actor performs for an audience. Your performance is only half done until an audience gets in and informs the rest of the performance. The first night of the very first preview was something that I will never forget, because the audience stood up [at the end of the show] and was screaming ‘bravo!’ and clapping with their hands above their heads. We all discovered the power of this piece in the playing of it.”

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“I Dreamed a Dream” performed by Ruthie Henshall at the 10th Anniversary Concert of Les Miz



Les Miz proved to be a massive hit, and to celebrate its 10th anniversary Mackintosh assembled a “dream cast” to perform the show’s music in concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall. London theater star Ruthie Henshall sang “I Dreamed a Dream.” “We all knew we were part of something very, very special,” says Henshall. “Everybody just stepped up to the plate. We all performed it like it was the last time it was ever going to be sung. We all were so nervous. I remember walking to the mic and thinking to myself, ‘Come on darling, stop your legs from shaking.’ I was talking to myself as I walked up to the mic. And then as I started singing, I don’t remember anything else but just falling into the song. It will remain one of the most exciting nights of my career.”

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Go to the source to see the rest of the list (including Anne Hathaway's version). :P

Source - EW.com

Ruthie Henshall's performance of this song is probably my fav. Who's your favorite Fantine, ONTD?
bodyline 20th-Jan-2013 11:11 pm (UTC)
I love listening to Anne's take, but tbh I was cringing watching it on screen. The shot was too long, damn.

I really like Sierra Boggess's version as well.

But god lord I am so pressed that the soundtrack doesn't have Do You Hear the People Sing? and that they trimmed down Drink With Me so much. SMH I want to hear Grantaire lament, goddamnit.
ellenpage 20th-Jan-2013 11:27 pm (UTC)
I just wanted the camera to zoom out for the whole movie. I mean, come on. They did such an amazing job setting up the scenes and creating the whole world, and then did all those stupid long, single-take close ups. "I Dreamed a Dream" was the worst. I thought her performance was amazing, but the directing was horrible.
bodyline 20th-Jan-2013 11:38 pm (UTC)
IFKR?! All the ensemble scenes were filmed beautifully but the solos were a mess. A M E S S

ps YOUR ICON IS FLAWLESS
ellenpage 21st-Jan-2013 12:16 am (UTC)
Seriously! I was so frustrated the whole movie wanting to actually, you know, see the beautiful scenery and get to take in the various characters as they were responding to what was going on... which is one of the best things about seeing the show on stage. You could hardly even tell that Eponine was dying because it was so zoomed in on their faces.

Ikr, Hayley is flawless.
cabernet 21st-Jan-2013 04:48 am (UTC)
I hate you so much for pointing this out. I'm watching right now and it's all I can see lol
ellenpage 21st-Jan-2013 04:54 am (UTC)
Ughhh I'm sorry, I know. I read a few reviews before seeing it and once they pointed it out, there was no going back. Still a good movie though!
silverstarry 21st-Jan-2013 12:11 pm (UTC)
ITA - I kept pulling my neck back, thinking that would help zoom out a few inches so that I wasn't counting each individual freckle, pore, or sprout of stubble.

When they zoomed in on Mme Thernardier as she was coming down the stairs at the tavern, I legit started to get motion sick because they were so zoomed in and the camera was totally shaky.
sadisticsidhe 20th-Jan-2013 11:31 pm (UTC)
Her shot was too long. Some songs must be really hard to film. Like in Phantom I love Music of the Night but in the movie (in addition to a bunch of other problems) I was just so damn bored while he was singing.
berry_wish 20th-Jan-2013 11:37 pm (UTC)
I was so pissed Do You Hear The People Sing wasn't on the soundtrack
hrhobo 21st-Jan-2013 03:38 am (UTC)
isn't it at the end of the epilogue track?

/idk tbh.
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