with Effie’s legendary showstopper: “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.” Act II Effie’s career crumbles. She discovers she is pregnant with Curtis’s child, but he rejects her. She gives birth to a daughter, Magic, and struggles to make ends meet.
C.C. writes a new, raw song for Effie: A club DJ plays the disco version without permission. Curtis tries to steal the song for Deena, leading to a legal battle. Effie stands her ground.
Eventually, Deena realizes Curtis has manipulated her entire image. She leaves him. The Dreams reunite one last time for a televised special, with Effie singing alongside Deena and Lorrell. dreamgirls
Curtis pushes The Dreams toward a more polished, pop-friendly sound (like Diana Ross & The Supremes), abandoning R&B roots. Effie resists, and her diva behavior grows. Curtis replaces her with a new, more compliant singer, . In a devastating climax, Effie is thrown out of the group mid-rehearsal.
The Dreams (now Deena, Lorrell, Michelle) become international superstars. Deena marries Curtis, but their marriage is cold and controlling. C.C., Effie’s brother and songwriter, grows disgusted with Curtis’s exploitation of Black artists. James “Thunder” Early, pushed to a drug-fueled breakdown, dies of an overdose. with Effie’s legendary showstopper: “And I Am Telling
2006 film → Original Broadway cast recording → YouTube clips of Jennifer Holliday’s live performances → Then seek out a local stage production.
“And I am telling you… you’re going to love this show.” Effie stands her ground
Curtis strong-arms Early’s manager, Marty, out of the way. To appeal to white audiences, Curtis makes the lighter-skinned, less vocally powerful the new lead singer—relegating Effie, the powerhouse vocalist, to backup. Effie is devastated but stays.