The play Chicago was Watkins' retelling of two very public trials for murder that occurred in Chicago in 1924, those of Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner. Watkins had been a reporter for the Chicago Tribune and later wrote a play based on her coverage.
Gwen Verdon read the play and asked her ex-husband Bob Fosse about the possibility of creating a musical based on it. Fosse approached Watkins for permission to adapt her play but was consistently refused. He obtained the rights from her estate following her death in 1969 leading to the development of Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville, which made the play's comparison between "justice" and "show-business" explicit by conceptualizing the plot as a series of vaudeville acts.
The play was produced in 1975, starring Chita Rivera[?] as Velma Kelly, Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart, and Jerry Orbach[?] as Billy Flynn. Liza Minnelli served as a replacement for Gwen Verdon for a month in 1975, and her Broadway "comeback" generated publicity which helped lengthen the run of the show. When Verdon left the show, Fosse's girlfriend Ann Reinking[?] stepped into the role.
The show was revived in 1997 in a minimalist, stripped-down version, directed by Walter Bobbie[?] and choreographed "in the style of Bob Fosse" by Ann Reinking, and starring Joel Grey[?], James Naughton[?], Bebe Neuwirth[?], and Ann Reinking. This version was still running as of April 2003.
The musical was adapted for the movie Chicago in 2002 by staging the vaudeville acts as fantasies of the characters, by eliminating some songs, and by changing the role of Mary Sunshine from male to female.
The Numbers and the Vaudeville acts they were modelled on
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