Richard Maltby Jr. was the son of bandleader, songwriter, and arranger
Richard Maltby; he also turned to music, but as a lyricist and director for stage musicals. While attending Yale in the mid-'50s, he met composer
David Shire, a fellow student who also was the son of a bandleader, and they formed a partnership to write songs for musicals. Their musical version of Cyrano de Bergerac was produced by the Yale Dramatic Association in 1958, then mounted by the prestigious Williamstown Summer Theatre. One song from the score, "Autumn," was recorded by
Barbra Streisand on her number one album
People in 1964. On subsequent albums,
Streisand recorded the
Maltby/
Shire compositions "No More Songs for Me," "Starting Here, Starting Now," and "The Morning After."
Maltby and
Shire worked throughout the 1960s on musicals and revues that played off-Broadway or in regional theater, or went unproduced. Their first Broadway credit came on May 2, 1968, when their song "The Girl of the Minute" was used in the revue New Faces of 1968. Meanwhile,
Shire also composed film scores, and
Maltby developed a career as a stage director. In 1977, at the behest of the Manhattan Theatre Club, he directed a revue of songs he and
Shire had written for a variety of projects. It opened off-Broadway on March 7 as Starting Here, Starting Now and ran 120 performances, resulting in a cast album that earned a Grammy nomination.
Maltby and
Shire finally reached Broadway with their own musical with Baby, directed by
Maltby, which opened on December 4, 1983, and ran 241 performances. They returned to off-Broadway with the musical revues Urban Blight (which had a limited run at the Manhattan Theatre Club beginning June 19, 1988) and Closer Than Ever (which began a 288-performance run on November 6, 1989, and also produced a cast album). Their second Broadway musical was Big, an adaptation of the successful film, which opened in April 28, 1996, and ran 193 performances. Apart from his work with
Shire,
Maltby conceived and directed the revue Ain't Misbehavin', which used the songs of
Fats Waller, and he wrote new lyrics to some of
Waller's tunes for the production. It opened off-Broadway on May 9, 1978, and eventually transferred to Broadway, running a total of 1,632 performances.
Maltby won the Tony Award for best director for the show. He helped
Andrew Lloyd Webber and British lyricist
Don Black Americanize the lyrics for the musical Song and Dance, and also directed the Broadway production. It opened August 30, 1985, and ran 474 performances. He adapted the French lyrics of
Alain Boublil into English for the musical Miss Saigon, which opened on Broadway on April 11, 1991, and ran 4,125 performances. He wrote the lyrics to
Charles Strouse's music for the Broadway musical Nick and Nora, based on The Thin Man, which ran only a week after opening on December 8, 1991. And he conceived the dance revue Fosse, which opened on Broadway January 14, 1999, and ran 1,100 performances. All of these efforts produced cast albums. ~ William Ruhlmann