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Musical Theatre: A History: Introduction: "Let's Start at The Very Beginning"

The document provides a history of musical theatre from ancient times to the early 20th century. It discusses the origins of musical theatre in ancient Greece and Rome and how it evolved through various genres like operas, operettas, and musical comedies. A key development was The Beggar's Opera in 1728, one of the earliest long-running musical theatre hits. In the late 19th and early 20th century, influential composers and productions emerged like Franz Lehar's The Merry Widow, the works of Victor Herbert, George M. Cohan, Irving Berlin, and Florenz Ziegfeld's lavish Follies productions. Jerome Kern helped establish American musical theatre in the 1910s

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Erika Bailey
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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
480 views

Musical Theatre: A History: Introduction: "Let's Start at The Very Beginning"

The document provides a history of musical theatre from ancient times to the early 20th century. It discusses the origins of musical theatre in ancient Greece and Rome and how it evolved through various genres like operas, operettas, and musical comedies. A key development was The Beggar's Opera in 1728, one of the earliest long-running musical theatre hits. In the late 19th and early 20th century, influential composers and productions emerged like Franz Lehar's The Merry Widow, the works of Victor Herbert, George M. Cohan, Irving Berlin, and Florenz Ziegfeld's lavish Follies productions. Jerome Kern helped establish American musical theatre in the 1910s

Uploaded by

Erika Bailey
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 15

Musical Theatre: A History

John Kenrick

Introduction: “Let’s Start at the Very Beginning”


 History – hard to define, what is actually true? Especially for theatre, when we like to
reshape and fix scripts as often as possible.
 A musical (noun) is a stage, screen, or television production using popular style songs to
either tell a story (book musical) or showcase the talents of songwriters and performers
(revues) – dialogue options.
 Musicals…
o Vividly reflect the popular culture of their time
o Help you know how the art form got to where it is now
o Aid in enriching your theatergoing
o Make you realize that your heroes/heroines are flawed as human beings
 Musicals thrive in communities where…
o A population large and prosperous enough to support live theatre
o Thriving artistic community that nurtures successive generations of artists
o A shared sense of optimism about that community and its future
o No extensive government censorship and oppression
 Key elements of a musical:
o Music and lyrics
o Book/libretto (expressed in script and dialogue)
o Choreography
o Staging
o Physical production
o Technical aspects
 A GREAT musical must have
o Brains
o Heart
o Courage

I: Ancient Times to 1800: “Playgoers, I Bid You Welcome!”


 About 2,500 years old (Greeks)
 Dithyrambs – musical retellings of mythological tales
 Three types of drama evolved
o Tragedy (Greek mythology tales)
o Comedy (Old/Attic, Middle, Late)
o Satyr (half beast, half human – sexual arousal)
 Performances in daylight
 Masks were a way for the audience to tell one character from the other as well as
allowing performers to play more than one character
 The Birds (Aristophanes, 414 BCE)
o Chorus as birds
o Offer three songs with alternating speeches (parabasis)
 Romans and the first tap shoes (?)
 Plautus (Roman playwright) and his characters – A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum
 Church musicals became popular in the 12th and 13th centuries
 Medieval music-dramas:
o Mystery play (Bible drama)
o Miracle play (lives of saints)
o Morality play (seven deadly sins)
o Folk play (popular myths)
 Opera as a descendant of musical theatre…
 Three different genres of musical theatre in the 1700s
o Comic operas
o Pantomimes
o Ballad operas
 Walpole and corruption under George I
 John Gay and The Beggar’s Opera (1728)
o Designed to attack the corrupt system
o 69 songs (all of them stolen in some degree)
o lyrics original and specific
o 62 performances (first long running “big hit”)

7: The Merry Widow: Refusing to Say “I Love You”


 Franz Lehar
o Vienna
o Composer full time after stint at the Theatre an der Wein with The Tinker (1902)
o Story about a couple who is in love but too stubborn to admit it (directed by
Victor Leon and Leo Stein
o Received honors from Nazis
o Was Hitler his friend? The man protected his wife as an “honorary Aryan”…
 The Merry Widow – two lovers refusing; men looking to marry into her money; selling
dances
o Lehar as well
o First English production in 1907 in London
o In London, they cast musical comedy performers instead of opera singers
o Sales boomed (money didn’t quite reach the creators and composers…)
 Original Broadway production…
o Directed by Henry Savage at the New Amsterdam in 1907 (416 performances)
o Ethel Jackson and Donald Brian
 The Merry Widow Burlesque – comedian Joe Weber (hit in itself)
 The Merry Widow performed around 500,000 times during its first 60 years
 Silent film, ballet, touring show…
 Only musical from the first decade in the 1900s to be regularly performed today
 Best gift to musical theatre? – dance as a respectable expression of sexual passion
 Introduced subplots
 EMPOWERED WOMEN

8: A New Century: Herbert, Cohan, and Berlin (1900 – 1913)


 Girls on Broadway were hits for men (charm, looks, wit, etc.)
 Florodora
o Sextet of girls
o Mainly for simply dressed hot women
o Each woman stood at 5’4’’ and weighed 130 pounds
 The invention of the subway made going to the theatre much easier and made much more
money
 Times Square was once Union Square
 The first Wizard of Oz (L. Frank Baum) had Dorothy accompanied by a cow, Imogene,
and there was no Wicked Witch of the West
o Staged by Julian Mitchell
 Victor Herbert
o Began composing operettas
o Good melodies, bad lyrics
o Babes in Toyland w/ Julian Mitchell
o Scores combined elements of operettas and musical comedy
o Created the American Society of American Composers, Authors and Publishers –
protect the rights
 Opera and operettas bridged in Herbert’s naught Marietta
o Commissioned by Oscar Hammerstein I
 Steps to succeed as an operetta…
o Historic/exotic setting
o Music matters the most
o Romance (not sex) is the main ingredient
o Heroine must be indecisive – hero is stalwart and macho
o Class difference between two leads is preferred
o Lavish sets and costumes
o Humor is required, but the stress is on the romance
 George M. Cohan
o Broadway in the early 1900s
o Came from a talented family – had much stage experience by the time he was 10
o Was at one time blacklisted from all vaudeville theatres
o Four Cohans act
o Was a tap dancing leading man (unheard of in American Broadway theatre)
o Little Johnny Jones – third Broadway show and he starred
 Sam, Lee, and Jacob Shubert – owners of Broadway
 Cohan – Yankee Doodle Dandy
 Began touring shows and then coming back to Broadway for a more successful run
 Strong patriotic sense and conversational ease in Cohan’s lyrics
 Cohanization
o Was asked to help revise shows that weren’t doing well
 “We never work with that son of a bitch again. Until we need him.”
 Cohan did not agree with unionization of the business
 Never signed an Equity contract – was the only person on Broadway who that has
pertained to
 Played FDR in I’d Rather Be Right in his last real hoorah
 “Thank you” speech.
 Irving Berlin – Israel Baline
o couldn’t read or notate music
o specialized in ethnic comedies
o hailed as the “King of Ragtime” after 1911
o rhythm was his main thing

9: Florenz Ziegfeld: The Follies and Beyond

 show business was his passion from Buffalo Bill


 what a life he lived (pg. 117/118)
 produced 75 productions on Broadway
 THE FOLLIES
 Discovered that even negative controversy would sell tickets
 Unionized (as husband and wife) with Anna Held from Europe
 Held and having to bathe in milk controversy – Ziegfeld playing the system and claiming
rancid milk
 The Parisian Model and “It’s Delightful to be Married” was Held’s most successful
production
 The follies is basically a high class variation of vaudeville
 Clean humor
 At first, couldn’t afford to hire vaudeville stars, so Ziegfeld made the chorus girls the
main focus (not dressed fully)
 The Ziegfeld Girl’s
o Ziegfeld walk to balance headdresses
o Beauty was talent enough
 Bert Williams
o Black actor in Ziegfeld’s Follies
o Wore blackface
o “Funniest man I ever knew, but also the saddest.”
o Dealt with a heavily racist cast and environment
o Ziegfeld backed him up and defended him with the other cast members
 Fanny Brice appeared in more Follies productions than anyone else
o First Jewish American actor to wear her ethnicity proudly and as a trademark
 Scandily clad girls became a popular tradition
 Ziegfeld bought an elephant – Herman
 Extravagant and spontaneous spender
10: Jerome Kern and American Ascendance (1914 – 1919)

 German things lost its lust on Broadway during WWI


 Was a behind the scenes character for a decade before stepping out into the limelight
 Big composer of interpolations
 “They Didn’t Believe Me” – new transition of Broadway songs (easy and natural)
 Kern was supposed to be on the Lusitania – would have changed the progression of
musical theatre in history
 Very Good Eddie
 Oh Boy was the most successful stints at the Princess Theatre – trio of Kern, Wodehouse,
and Bolton
o Broadway production charged $3.50 for tickets – scalpers charged up to $50
 Leave It to Jane
 Kern wrote 5 staged scores alone in 1917
 Princess trio ended their stint in 1918, but the trio remained friends – but their roar of
their musicals was done by the 1920s (too predictable? Old news?)
 Why did the Princess musicals succeed as well as they did?
o Intimacy of the theatre (natural)
o First series of musicals set in NYC
o Every element was organic
o Kern – he had a special thing about him which made his musicals his
o Can still entertain today (well written)
o Inspired the next greats of Broadway
o Full entertainment for hours
 Irving Berlin is drafted – eventually relieved of regular duties and writes the show Yip,
Yip, Yaphank! (1917)
 Deaths from the war and Spanish Flu decimated towns, populations, and people –
Broadway suffered and many theatre were on the brink of financial ruin
 A group of 112 actors create the Actor’s Equity Association in 1913
o However, the Producer’s Managing Association retaliated and refused to
recognize the AEA
o On August 7, 1919, the casts of 12 Broadway shows walked out
o Theatre comes to a standstill after other unions join
o Ends on September 6 with a begrudgingly willing PMA

12: The 1920s, Part I: Hot Times and Great Talent (1920 – 1929)

 Jazz was the craze, prohibition, scandals, people mostly living in cities…
 An average of 50 new musicals premiered each season
 Irene was a postwar musical hit – Cinderella story
 Cohan’s run of Cinderella was Mary
o Schubert brothers made a small hit with Sally, Irene, and Mary
 Irving Berlin helped build The Music Box theatre
o Music Box Revues
 Cole Porter
o Gay man
o Yale – born into wealth
o Still married a wealthy woman from Paris – Linda Lee Thomas (easy marriage)
o His trick? Writing Jewish tunes – very Mediterranean sounding melodies
o Sexual, funny songs in nature?
o Friends with Irving Berlin
 Rodgers and Hart met in college (kind of?) – complete opposites
 Hart was a closeted homosexual
 First hit together was The Garrick Gaieties in 1925 for the Theatre Guild’s new theatre
 A Connecticut Yankee is their biggest hit to date
 Team mostly remembered for their songs
 First long-lasting team (worked together for 25 years)
 Noel Coward
o British star
o Helped write songs for London Calling
 Charles Cochran was the British Ziegfeld – worked with ^ a lot
 Ira and George Gershwin
o Actually named Israel and Jacob
o George was a go getter – played piano at a young age
o Played on Tin Pan Alley as a song plugger (played for Fred and Adele Astaire)
o Staccato rhythms, jazz, and playful rhymes (from Ira)
o Lady Be Good w/ the Astaire’s
 Comedy becoming more and more popular – sex as well (in songs)
 Shuffle Along was the first all black musical on Broadway (1921)
 Blackbirds was popular for a couple of year – blacks performing materials created by
whites
 Romberg – composer that the Schubert brothers hired
 ^^^ a lot of the times took something that already existed and switched it up
 The Student Prince
 Friml
 Rose Marie teamed up with Friml, Arthur Hammerstein, and Harbach – unrevivable
today due to political incorrectness
 Operettas never truly made a full comeback
 Kurt Weill and Berthold Brecht – Threepenny Opera (adaption of John Gay’s The
Beggar’s Opera)

13: The 1920s, Part II: Show Boat – Premature Revolution

 First use of the N word on stage (nowadays that is not true)


 Show boats were not self propelled – towboats
 Would offer multiple shows a night if staying in town for awhile
 Usually shows that have good triumph over evil
 Show Boats started out as a book written by Edna Ferber in 1926
 Broadway had not encountered something “epic” – i.e. going against the unity of time,
place, and action
 Kern and Hammerstein II did not obtain the rights from the author or financial stability
from a producer (two vital things) – they threw caution to the wind and went for it
o Eventually they did get Ferber and Ziegfeld on board
 A myriad of musical styles – negro folk songs, spirituals, operetta, musical comedy,
vaudeville, tin pan alley originals
 Helen Morgan and Paul Robeson most celebrated cast members
 Racist “Aunt Jemima” role…
 Great response
 Stock market crashed and Broadway was hit bad
 Ziegfeld put on his most costly Follies in 1930 - $250,000 and was a failure

The Black Crook is important!

14: Depression Era Miracles (1930 – 1939): “I Guess I’ll Have to Change My
Plan”

 Shubert’s had to close their theatres after bankruptcy during the depression
o HOWEVER Lee Shubert created “Select Theatre Incorporated” and bought the
company solely – leaving his brother Jacob behind
 Broadway barely kept alive
 While the shows were smaller, they were funnier, involved more spectacle, and were
sharper
 Shubert succeed with continuing on with the Follies
o Fanny Brice and Bob Hope
 The Little Show
o Material over spectacle
o “I Guess I’ll Have to Change my Plan”
 Stars and composer of Broadway barely making it by
 Hellzapoppin (chaos on stage) was the longest running show in the 1930s
 Operettas are getting lost – jazz is still taking over
 Kern helps keep operetta interesting
 The Great Waltz 1934 was the most extravagant production of its time – over 200 in the
cast
 British operettas and stars are still present, but not quite thriving
o Noel Coward and
 Gershwin and Girl Crazy – “I Got Rhythm” “But Not For Me” ETHEL MERMAN
o Political comedies
o Jazz integrated on Broadway
o Pulitzer Prize for Of Thee I Sing in 1998…100 years after it was originally handed
out
 Jazz infused Broadway opera – PORGY AND BESS – GERSHWIN AND HEYWARD
1935
o Mixed reviews (white writer – black stars)
o Summertime
o First Broadway musical done at the Met
 Gershwin dies at 37
 Cole Porter
o Pretty wealthy
o Didn’t care for critics
o Had a horse riding accident in 1937, basically crippling both of his legs – used
work as a distraction
o King of musical comedy of his time
 Gay Divorce w/ Fred Astaire
 Anything Goes will be the most popular musical performed in the 30s
 The Federal Theatre Project passes
o Attempts to put affordable theatre in people’s backyards (federally funded)
o Many conservatives not happy with the content that is being performed
o The Cradle Will Rock received funding and then was pulled opening night – still
found a way to perform
 Rodgers and Hart were unsuccessful in Hollywood, came back with Jumbo – not a good
show, but the music proved they were still hot
 Wrote the book for Babes in Arms
o A NEW PLOT!?!
o My Funny Valentine, Lady is a Tramp
 Collaborations with Rogers, Hart, and Abbot
 Very Warm For May was the beginning and end for many composers and stars
o Hammerstein’s “All the Things You Are” caught the attention of Rodgers…

15: Rodgers and Hammerstein, A New Beginning (1940 – 1960): “They


Couldn’t Pick a Better Time”

 1940s…fluff and fun was the genre people wanted to see (war was waging in Europe and
the US was about to enter)
 fantasy shows? – Vernon Duke
 Gene Kelly – big break in Pal Joey
o I Could Write a Book
o Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered
 By Jupiter was Rodgers and Hart’s longest running production – after Pearl Harbor
 Hart drank himself to death, Rodgers moved on with Hammerstein II
o Both were familiar with Tin Pan Alley – wrote the music first and then the lyrics
o BUT with Away We Go they decided to write the lyrics first
o Theatre Guild was in debt and they looked to unknown talent
o Rodgers and Hammerstein had a lot of creative control
 WHAT IT BECAME
o Added a big chorus number – received a standing ovation and encore
o Received a new name – Oklahoma (1943)
o Was the first organic musical play with every element of dance, song, and
dialogue serving as a crucial part of moving the story along
o Unbroken narrative line – need in that day of age!
o Became the longest running musical of that time
o First true cast recording as heard in the theatre
 With Hammerstein – you heard the character, not he lyrics
 Carousel was next in 1945 – translation was actually done ten years earlier by Hart
 Hammerstein begins playing with what he can get away with – musical tragedy, certain
songs, etc. etc.
 South Pacific – 1949; best musical in the 1950s Tony’s
o Ticket prices are getting higher – politicians even have to pay the same price and
people are outraged
o Shubert’s lose their monopoly over the theatres as the government forces them to
sell many theatres and give up control of the box offices
 1950S – PROSPERITY – ENTERING A GOLDEN AGE FOR MUSICAL THEATRE
 The King and I (1951)
o new content
o pushing the boundaries
 movies are being made of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s production
 The Sound of Music
 Hammerstein dies of stomach cancer ten months into the run

16: After Oklahoma! (post-1943): Broadway’s Golden Age

 “business as usual” musicals were no longer making to cut


 needed something different
 many new musicals had all of the integrated elements, but were lacking something…
o it required consistent dramatization that made human experience timeless and
compelling
o it was more than just a simple form to follow
o CHARACTER DRIVEN DRAMATIZATION BACKED BY THE MUSIC
 Revues are losing their popularity – most of the talent was moving to film and radio
(eventually television)
 American musicals really started to hit London – London gives us nothing until much
later
 Annie Get Your Gun (1946)
o Musical comedy could thrive when organically integrated
o Kern was supposed to do the score, but he died so it went to Berlin
o Ethel Merman
o However dance was not a huge component here
 Kiss Me Kate (1948)
o Porter’s longest running show
o He could get in with the new form of musical theatre (integrated)
o First use of eleven o’clock number???
 Found out that operetta and this new musical comedy could be merged in Brigadoon
(1957) by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe (My Fair Lady…)
19: Abbot, Robbins, and Fosse (1950 – 1963)

 Julian Mitchell was the first director to integrate things…he was much ahead of his time
 Broadway was getting worldwide coverage
 George Abbot
o Directed 22 Broadway hits
o Jumbo to A Funny Thing Happened…
o Wasn’t the best at directing serious things…he would use the same techniques as
comedy
o Loved to integrate dance
o Wonderful Town
o Once Upon a Mattress
o Fiorello was his last big hit
o Died at 107
 On the Town (1944)
o DANCE IS THE MAIN THING
o Jerome Robbins, Abbot, Berstein, and Green
o Strong military presence…we are in WWII as well
 COMDEN AND GREEN
 Is the darker material kind of taking a back seat to romance and comedy???
 Jerome Robbins
o Dancer/choreographer
o Asshole – threw people under the bus in the gov’t to save his career
o Fantastic show doctor
o Towards the end of his life, people were publically rude to him
o No public memorial service after his death
o Gypsy
 A lot of the original choreography is still used today
o WEST SIDE STORY – huge ambitious dance show
 Bernstein, Sondheim
 Gangs are actually starting to be a real issue…
 Mary Martin and Peter Pan (Robbins)
o Live broadcasts became more popular in the mid 50s and 60s…with Peter Pan
 Adler, Ross, Abbot, and Fosse (choreographer) teamed up for Damn Yankees (1955)
o Still a very upbeat
o Musical comedy formula
 Michael Kidd – choreographer (Guys and Dolls) – foot stomping style
 LOOK UP REDHEAD
 Farces are becoming popular…Funny Thing Happened and “Comedy Tonight”
 Political shows…yikes. No Communists!

20: More Golden Age Musicals (1950s – 1960s)

 The rise of television!!


 Musicals being Broadcast (not the same) but they are the most popular things of the time
 Guys and Dolls (1950)
o Kaufman, Burrows, Loesser
o Remains the model organic musical comedy
 Berlin was in the film world, but eventually returned to Broadway
 Berlin retired after rewriting a song for Annie Get Your Gun – ended on a high note
 Porter basically only has three musicals performed still (Kiss Me Kate, Anything Goes,
Can-Can) many songs are in the Great American Songbook
 Meredith Wilson and Music Man (1957)
 Operettas have not disappeared…just in a different spot. Some on musicals
 British musicals have not succeeded in America (but the opposite is true)
o The Boy Friend did – Julie Andrews
o Oliver by Lionel Bart (the father of the modern British musical)
 Rock and roll is hitting the world…how will musicals survive???

21: The 1960s: “The Paradise Passes By”

 NYC losing its glamour


 Race riots
 Broadway musicals took a longer time to admit that something in the world was
different…
 Off-broadway musicals becoming important
o The Fantasticks (1960)
o over 17,000 performances
 Bye Bye Birdie – brought early rock and roll to Broadway
 Hello Dolly (1964)
o Carol Channing
o Champion’s crazy staging (good audience reactions!)
o Originally written for Ethel Merman
 Intimate shows like I Do I Do! – didn’t really succeed; rock and roll taking over?
 Golden Boy challenges interracial marriage
 Funny Girl 1964) – ruling the world
o Jerome Robbins in uncredited
 Fiddler on the Roof – ethnic, but universal nature
 MAN OD LA MANCHA
 Cabaret
 ^^^^ sextet of good musicals…pg. 255 (speak to the heart of the human experience)
 late 60s and Broadway was losing its touch. No more hits topping the charts…that
belongs to rock and roll
 first rock musical – Your own Thing
 Hair’s popularity with hit songs unfortunately didn’t last
 1776 - violin song
22: The 1970s, Part I: Sondheim and Prince

 Sondheim
o Friends with sons of Oscar Hammerstein II (HUGE influence)
 Hal Prince (adopted son of stock broker)
o Served in the army for two years
o Served as George Abbott’s assistant (where he learned how to direct)
o Produced WSS, She Loves Me, Cabaret, Fiddler, Zobra
 Both wanted to try a concept musical: a book musical built around a central concept – an
event, place, problem, etc. – allowing the audience to focus simultaneously on multiple
characters and related plots. The central focus can be almost anything.
o Each character has a story to tell
 Are the Prince-Sondheim musicals self-reflexive and not a concept show?
 Company
o All the songs serve as a commentary or as a self-contained soliloquy or musical
scene
 Prince and Sondheim’s Follies didn’t make money
 A Little Night Music
o Send in the Clowns
o Feels like an operetta
 Dark themes coming back to Broadway – Sweeney Todd
 Merrily We Roll Along in the 70s ended the collaboration

23: The 1970s, Part II: “You Gotta Hang on till Tomorrow” (1970-1979)

 Times Square becoming more grungy and adult


 Violent crime outside of the Broadway theatres
 Times Square was kind of a ghost town
 Cut ticket prices out of a trailer in Times Square (still there today, but updated a little bit)
 Rock musicals coming to domination?
o Bringing the voice of today rather than yesterday (Hair)
o However many fiascos ensured and many shows closed quickly
 The Me Nobody Knows (1970) – letters from ghetto kids
 Godspell
 Jesus Christ Superstar - Tom O’Horgan (1971) – rock opera
o Did extremely well in London
 Pippin – included a minstrel cake walk
o Marked Bob Fosse’s return to Broadway
 Grease was the most successful rock musical in the 70s
 Black musicals in the 70s – Purlie, Raisin, and The Wiz (this one was extremely
successful)
 Rockabye Hamlet – extreme disaster and the rock musical collapsed
 Teens turned Rocky Horror into a cult classic
 Bob Fosse pulls off a director’s trifecta with awards (1972)
 Delved into Chicago next
 Dancin’ was Fosse’s last hit (no author – just dancing to hits)
 A Chorus Line became a huge hit
 Nostalgia swept the early 70s culture – revivals (denial of cultural change)
o Scrambled to find old movie stars and old hits to revamp
o Longest and most profitable was The King and I in 1977
 Many new musicals couldn’t find their footing
 Annie (1976) – good reviews and reaction
 Broadway is operating in a cultural vacuum
 Production costs are SOARING
 Evita becoming a hit – Patti LuPone!
o Ran three times longer than Sweeney Todd
 MEGA MUSICAL IS BORN
o Sung through with little dialogue
o Songs and emotions are big, loud, and bombastic
o Substance took a backseat to spectacle, lush melody, and soap opera style
sentiment
o Characterization is explained rather than dramatized: characters tell you who they
are rather than showing who they are by their actions
o Music is rock-pop but can incorporate various styles; may reflect the sound of a
particular era
o Plots are melodramatic with little humor
o All major professional productions are carbon copies
o PRODUCTION IS THE STAR

24: 1980s: “And the Wind Begins to Moan”

 AIDs hits
 42nd Street and all of the drama surrounding it – Merrick and Champion (died opening
night)
 many successful shows, but the albums did not sell well (precursor?)
 the price to keep a show on Broadway became staggering and doomed for failure – many
shows simply closed on opening night because it cost so much money and the show was
not strong
 Cats
o Based on Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats
o Webber
o 21 year run in London
o MARKETING AND SOUVENIERS – this show bumped up their game
o Could take children to this show
 We have the old dogs retiring because they can’t make a hit, and the new composers are
coming in ill-advised and awaiting disaster???
 Millions of dollars were being lost
 Forbidden Broadway, Nunsense, and Forever Plaid were three small scale shows that
found some success on Broadway
 Joseph never speaks of deity
 Starlight Express by Webber was a mega musical spectacular event will roller skates and
SPEED
 Les Mis is the first pop-opera??
 Michael Bennett dies in 1987 (44y.o.) from AIDs
 CARRIE IS THE MEGA MUSICAL DISASTER
 The British were back on top – Webber’s shows are pushing American shows out of their
theatre (Phantom)
 Marketing item – the Phantom’s mask
 Into the Woods released the same year
 WOW PAGE 289 – Kendrick saying that mega musicals are for dummies

Chapter 25: The 1990s: “The American Dream”

 Commercializing the 42nd Street district? Little shops being closed, national chains
coming in, theatres being reestablished
 Once on This Island (1990)
o Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens
 Theatre dying out? – less than 5% of Americans attending the theatre on a regular basis –
not a lot of new shows
 Theatre aimed at aging suburbanites, tourists, and gay men (and students!)
 Miss Saigon (1991) – from the Brits
o Great marketing
o Jonathan Pryce (white man) as the engineer…won the Tony for best actor in a
musical…
 Many failed attempts at British mega-musicals occurred
 Americans wanted something less gloomy!!!
 The Corporate Musical…
o Beauty and the Beast (1994) was the first Walt Disney production!
o A genre of shows conceived, produced, and managed by a multifunctional
entertainment corporation; shows are born in boardrooms; pop ballads!; no
need for stars
o The Lion King (1997)
o Disney ready to show Broadway a new way of doing things, even if critics
brushed the show off
 Rent (1996)
o A new beginning of musical theatre?
o Not a huge running cost…made a profit!
o Appealed to Generation X
o CD did well
 AIDs crisis was becoming better…still a death sentence, but treatments were better and
more accessible
 Hedwig!
 Chicago was revived again in 1996 – LONG RUNNING WOW!
 Cabaret in 1998 – much darker
 Frank Wildhorn gaining some notoriety
o Jekyll and Hyde
o The Scarlet’s Pimpernel
o The Civil War
o The Wild Party
 The best musical of the late 90s? (to Kenrick)…Titanic (1997)
o Won quite a few Tonys and had great reviews
 Ragtime (1998)… a corporate musical?
 Fosse (1999) was the seasons longest hit (not much competition…)
 PEOPLE WERE HUNGRY FOR HUMOR! WHAT A CONCEPT – TO LAUGH IN
THE THEATRE!

Chapter 26: The 2000s, Where Did We Go Right?

 Aida premieres in 2000, huge success from Disney


 Contact
 Full Monty
 The Producers
 Ticket prices going up
 Re-emergence of American musical comedy
 Mamma Mia begins the wave of jukebox musicals
 mega musicals going out of style (Pirate Queen), but revivals going strong of them?
 Broadway was a huge tourist attraction – that is what buys the tickets

27: The 2010s: Tourists Reign Supreme


 Tourists came back after 9/11
 Lots of violent productions (Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson, Scotsboro Boys
 Book of Mormon becomes a hit in 2011
 Spiderman is a flop, takes expenses to new heights
 The Lyric theatre – selling/renting to the highest bidder…
 Once ineligible for the score Tony because most songs were from the movie (did not
mean it didn’t win any Tonys – it actually won eight)
 jukebox musicals were still appealing to tourists, but it no longer meant instant success
 Fun Home finds success
 Hamilton proved that musical theatre can still be exciting and new

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