Sally Bowles, sitting cross-legged, stockinged and bowler-hatted, bids you willkommen, bienvenue, welcome to the Kit Kat Club and the Cabaret!
This Cabaret illustration is available for licensing to theatre companies and their designers to incorporate into publicity material (posters, leaflets, playbills, programmes, tickets etc.).
Please contact me if you would like to license this artwork or require any help or further information.
These hi-res poster templates are available for you to add your own details to, or I can layout the poster or customise the design for you. All are also available without any title lettering if you'd prefer your own style. See the prices page for more information.
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Additional graphics include two pickpockets, a portly gentleman, a street seller, and the London skyline.
Cabaret started life as a short novel by Christopher Isherwood, Goodbye to Berlin (1939). In 1951 this was dramatised for the stage by John Van Druten, under the title of I Am a Camera and this, in turn, became the musical, Cabaret, written by Joe Masteroff and with music and lyrics by John Kander and Fred Ebb. It opened on Broadway in 1966 and had its West End debut in 1968 (with Judi Dench as Sally Bowles). A particularly successful restaging starring Jane Horrocks and Alan Cumming was directed by Sam Mendes in 1993, though probably the most widely known version is the multi-Oscar-winning 1972 film, directed by Bob Fosse and starting Liza Minelli, Michael York and Joel Grey.