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Wikipedia

Musical theatre

Musical theatre is a form of theatrical performance that combines songs, spoken dialogue, acting and dance. The story and emotional content of a musical – humor, pathos, love, anger – are communicated through words, music, movement and technical aspects of the entertainment as an integrated whole. Although musical theatre overlaps with other theatrical forms like opera and dance, it may be distinguished by the equal importance given to the music as compared with the dialogue, movement and other elements. Since the early 20th century, musical theatre stage works have generally been called, simply, musicals.

The Black Crook was a hit musical on Broadway in 1866.[1]

Although music has been a part of dramatic presentations since ancient times, modern Western musical theatre emerged during the 19th century, with many structural elements established by the works of Gilbert and Sullivan in Britain and those of Harrigan and Hart in America. These were followed by the numerous Edwardian musical comedies and the musical theatre works of American creators like George M. Cohan at the turn of the 20th century. The Princess Theatre musicals (1915–1918) were artistic steps forward beyond revues and other frothy entertainments of the early 20th century and led to such groundbreaking works as Show Boat (1927), Of Thee I Sing (1931) and Oklahoma! (1943). Some of the most famous musicals through the decades that followed include My Fair Lady (1956), The Fantasticks (1960), Hair (1967), A Chorus Line (1975), Les Misérables (1985), The Phantom of the Opera (1986), Rent (1996), The Producers (2001), Wicked (2003) and Hamilton (2015).

Musicals are performed around the world. They may be presented in large venues, such as big-budget Broadway or West End productions in New York City or London. Alternatively, musicals may be staged in smaller venues, such as fringe theatre, off-Broadway, off-off-Broadway, regional theatre, or community theatre productions, or on tour. Musicals are often presented by amateur and school groups in churches, schools and other performance spaces. In addition to the United States and Britain, there are vibrant musical theatre scenes in continental Europe, Asia, Australasia, Canada and Latin America.

Definitions and scope

Book musicals

 
A Gaiety Girl (1893) was one of the first hit musicals

Since the 20th century, the "book musical" has been defined as a musical play where songs and dances are fully integrated into a well-made story with serious dramatic goals and which is able to evoke genuine emotions other than laughter.[2][3] The three main components of a book musical are its music, lyrics and book. The book or script of a musical refers to the story, character development and dramatic structure, including the spoken dialogue and stage directions, but it can also refer to the dialogue and lyrics together, which are sometimes referred to as the libretto (Italian for "little book"). The music and lyrics together form the score of a musical and include songs, incidental music and musical scenes, which are "theatrical sequence[s] set to music, often combining song with spoken dialogue."[4] The interpretation of a musical is the responsibility of its creative team, which includes a director, a musical director, usually a choreographer and sometimes an orchestrator. A musical's production is also creatively characterized by technical aspects, such as set design, costumes, stage properties (props), lighting and sound. The creative team, designs and interpretations generally change from the original production to succeeding productions. Some production elements, however, may be retained from the original production, for example, Bob Fosse's choreography in Chicago.

There is no fixed length for a musical. While it can range from a short one-act entertainment to several acts and several hours in length (or even a multi-evening presentation), most musicals range from one and a half to three hours. Musicals are usually presented in two acts, with one short intermission, and the first act is frequently longer than the second. The first act generally introduces nearly all of the characters and most of the music and often ends with the introduction of a dramatic conflict or plot complication while the second act may introduce a few new songs but usually contains reprises of important musical themes and resolves the conflict or complication. A book musical is usually built around four to six main theme tunes that are reprised later in the show, although it sometimes consists of a series of songs not directly musically related. Spoken dialogue is generally interspersed between musical numbers, although "sung dialogue" or recitative may be used, especially in so-called "sung-through" musicals such as Jesus Christ Superstar, Falsettos, Les Misérables, Evita and Hamilton. Several shorter musicals on Broadway and in the West End in the 21st century have been presented in one act.

Moments of greatest dramatic intensity in a book musical are often performed in song. Proverbially, "when the emotion becomes too strong for speech, you sing; when it becomes too strong for song, you dance."[5] In a book musical, a song is ideally crafted to suit the character (or characters) and their situation within the story; although there have been times in the history of the musical (e.g. from the 1890s to the 1920s) when this integration between music and story has been tenuous. As The New York Times critic Ben Brantley described the ideal of song in theatre when reviewing the 2008 revival of Gypsy: "There is no separation at all between song and character, which is what happens in those uncommon moments when musicals reach upward to achieve their ideal reasons to be."[6] Typically, many fewer words are sung in a five-minute song than are spoken in a five-minute block of dialogue. Therefore, there is less time to develop drama in a musical than in a straight play of equivalent length, since a musical usually devotes more time to music than to dialogue. Within the compressed nature of a musical, the writers must develop the characters and the plot.

The material presented in a musical may be original, or it may be adapted from novels (Wicked and Man of La Mancha), plays (Hello, Dolly! and Carousel), classic legends (Camelot), historical events (Evita) or films (The Producers and Billy Elliot). On the other hand, many successful musical theatre works have been adapted for musical films, such as West Side Story, My Fair Lady, The Sound of Music, Oliver! and Chicago.

Comparisons with opera

Musical theatre is closely related to the theatrical form of opera, but the two are usually distinguished by weighing a number of factors. First, musicals generally have a greater focus on spoken dialogue.[7] Some musicals, however, are entirely accompanied and sung-through, while some operas, such as Die Zauberflöte, and most operettas, have some unaccompanied dialogue.[7] Second, musicals usually include more dancing as an essential part of the storytelling, particularly by the principal performers as well as the chorus. Third, musicals often use various genres of popular music or at least popular singing and musical styles.[8]

Finally, musicals usually avoid certain operatic conventions. In particular, a musical is almost always performed in the language of its audience. Musicals produced on Broadway or in the West End, for instance, are invariably sung in English, even if they were originally written in another language. While an opera singer is primarily a singer and only secondarily an actor (and rarely needs to dance), a musical theatre performer is often an actor first but must also be a singer and dancer. Someone who is equally accomplished at all three is referred to as a "triple threat". Composers of music for musicals often consider the vocal demands of roles with musical theatre performers in mind. Today, large theatres that stage musicals generally use microphones and amplification of the actors' singing voices in a way that would generally be disapproved of in an operatic context.[9]

Some works (e.g. by George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim) have been made into both "musical theatre" and "operatic" productions.[10][11] Similarly, some older operettas or light operas (such as The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan) have been produced in modern adaptations that treat them as musicals. For some works, production styles are almost as important as the work's musical or dramatic content in defining into which art form the piece falls.[12] Sondheim said, "I really think that when something plays Broadway it's a musical, and when it plays in an opera house it's opera. That's it. It's the terrain, the countryside, the expectations of the audience that make it one thing or another."[13] There remains an overlap in form between lighter operatic forms and more musically complex or ambitious musicals. In practice, it is often difficult to distinguish among the various kinds of musical theatre, including "musical play", "musical comedy", "operetta" and "light opera".[14]

Like opera, the singing in musical theatre is generally accompanied by an instrumental ensemble called a pit orchestra, located in a lowered area in front of the stage. While opera typically uses a conventional symphony orchestra, musicals are generally orchestrated for ensembles ranging from 27 players down to only a few players. Rock musicals usually employ a small group of mostly rock instruments,[15] and some musicals may call for only a piano or two instruments.[16] The music in musicals uses a range of "styles and influences including operetta, classical techniques, folk music, jazz [and] local or historical styles [that] are appropriate to the setting."[4] Musicals may begin with an overture played by the orchestra that "weav[es] together excerpts of the score's famous melodies."[17]

Eastern traditions and other forms

 
Chinese opera performers

There are various Eastern traditions of theatre that include music, such as Chinese opera, Taiwanese opera, Japanese Noh and Indian musical theatre, including Sanskrit drama, Indian classical dance, Parsi theatre and Yakshagana.[18] India has, since the 20th century, produced numerous musical films, referred to as "Bollywood" musicals, and in Japan a series of 2.5D musicals based on popular anime and manga comics has developed in recent decades.

Shorter or simplified "junior" versions of many musicals are available for schools and youth groups, and very short works created or adapted for performance by children are sometimes called minimusicals.[19][20]

History

Early antecedents

The antecedents of musical theatre in Europe can be traced back to the theatre of ancient Greece, where music and dance were included in stage comedies and tragedies during the 5th century BCE.[21][22] The music from the ancient forms is lost, however, and they had little influence on later development of musical theatre.[23] In the 12th and 13th centuries, religious dramas taught the liturgy. Groups of actors would use outdoor Pageant wagons (stages on wheels) to tell each part of the story. Poetic forms sometimes alternated with the prose dialogues, and liturgical chants gave way to new melodies.[24]

 
A view of Rhodes by John Webb, to be painted on a backshutter for the first performance of The Siege of Rhodes (1656)

The European Renaissance saw older forms evolve into two antecedents of musical theatre: commedia dell'arte, where raucous clowns improvised familiar stories, and later, opera buffa. In England, Elizabethan and Jacobean plays frequently included music,[25] and short musical plays began to be included in an evenings' dramatic entertainments.[26] Court masques developed during the Tudor period that involved music, dancing, singing and acting, often with expensive costumes and a complex stage design.[27][28] These developed into sung plays that are recognizable as English operas, the first usually being thought of as The Siege of Rhodes (1656).[29] In France, meanwhile, Molière turned several of his farcical comedies into musical entertainments with songs (music provided by Jean-Baptiste Lully) and dance in the late 17th century. These influenced a brief period of English opera[30] by composers such as John Blow[31] and Henry Purcell.[29]

From the 18th century, the most popular forms of musical theatre in Britain were ballad operas, like John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, that included lyrics written to the tunes of popular songs of the day (often spoofing opera), and later pantomime, which developed from commedia dell'arte, and comic opera with mostly romantic plot lines, like Michael Balfe's The Bohemian Girl (1845). Meanwhile, on the continent, singspiel, comédie en vaudeville, opéra comique, zarzuela and other forms of light musical entertainment were emerging. The Beggar's Opera was the first recorded long-running play of any kind, running for 62 successive performances in 1728. It would take almost a century afterwards before any play broke 100 performances, but the record soon reached 150 in the late 1820s.[32] Other musical theatre forms developed in England by the 19th century, such as music hall, melodrama and burletta, which were popularized partly because most London theatres were licensed only as music halls and not allowed to present plays without music.

Colonial America did not have a significant theatre presence until 1752, when London entrepreneur William Hallam sent a company of actors to the colonies managed by his brother Lewis.[33] In New York in the summer of 1753, they performed ballad-operas, such as The Beggar's Opera, and ballad-farces.[33] By the 1840s, P. T. Barnum was operating an entertainment complex in lower Manhattan.[34] Other early musical theatre in America consisted of British forms, such as burletta and pantomime,[23] but what a piece was called did not necessarily define what it was. The 1852 Broadway extravaganza The Magic Deer advertised itself as "A Serio Comico Tragico Operatical Historical Extravaganzical Burletical Tale of Enchantment."[35] Theatre in New York moved from downtown gradually to midtown from around 1850, and did not arrive in the Times Square area until the 1920s and 1930s. New York runs lagged far behind those in London, but Laura Keene's "musical burletta" Seven Sisters (1860) shattered previous New York musical theatre record, with a run of 253 performances.[36]

1850s to 1880s

 
Poster, c. 1879

Around 1850, the French composer Hervé was experimenting with a form of comic musical theatre he called opérette.[37] The best known composers of operetta were Jacques Offenbach from the 1850s to the 1870s and Johann Strauss II in the 1870s and 1880s.[23] Offenbach's fertile melodies, combined with his librettists' witty satire, formed a model for the musical theatre that followed.[37] Adaptations of the French operettas (played in mostly bad, risqué translations), musical burlesques, music hall, pantomime and burletta dominated the London musical stage into the 1870s.[38]

In America, mid-19th century musical theatre entertainments included crude variety revue, which eventually developed into vaudeville, minstrel shows, which soon crossed the Atlantic to Britain, and Victorian burlesque, first popularized in the US by British troupes.[23] A hugely successful musical that premiered in New York in 1866, The Black Crook, was an original musical theatre piece that conformed to many of the modern definitions of a musical, including dance and original music that helped to tell the story. The spectacular production, famous for its skimpy costumes, ran for a record-breaking 474 performances.[39] The same year, The Black Domino/Between You, Me and the Post was the first show to call itself a "musical comedy." Comedians Edward Harrigan and Tony Hart produced and starred in musicals on Broadway between 1878 (The Mulligan Guard Picnic) and 1885. These musical comedies featured characters and situations taken from the everyday life of New York's lower classes and represented a significant step forward towards a more legitimate theatrical form. They starred high quality singers (Lillian Russell, Vivienne Segal and Fay Templeton) instead of the ladies of questionable repute who had starred in earlier musical forms.

As transportation improved, poverty in London and New York diminished, and street lighting made for safer travel at night, the number of patrons for the growing number of theatres increased enormously. Plays ran longer, leading to better profits and improved production values, and men began to bring their families to the theatre. The first musical theatre piece to exceed 500 consecutive performances was the French operetta The Chimes of Normandy in 1878.[32] English comic opera adopted many of the successful ideas of European operetta, none more successfully than the series of more than a dozen long-running Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas, including H.M.S. Pinafore (1878) and The Mikado (1885).[37] These were sensations on both sides of the Atlantic and in Australia and helped to raise the standard for what was considered a successful show.[40] These shows were designed for family audiences, a marked contrast from the risqué burlesques, bawdy music hall shows and French operettas that sometimes drew a crowd seeking less wholesome entertainment.[38] Only a few 19th-century musical pieces exceeded the run of The Mikado, such as Dorothy, which opened in 1886 and set a new record with a run of 931 performances. Gilbert and Sullivan's influence on later musical theatre was profound, creating examples of how to "integrate" musicals so that the lyrics and dialogue advanced a coherent story.[41][42] Their works were admired and copied by early authors and composers of musicals in Britain[43][44] and America.[40][45]

1890s to the new century

 
Cover of the Vocal Score of Sidney Jones' The Geisha

A Trip to Chinatown (1891) was Broadway's long-run champion (until Irene in 1919), running for 657 performances, but New York runs continued to be relatively short, with a few exceptions, compared with London runs, until the 1920s.[32] Gilbert and Sullivan were widely pirated and also were imitated in New York by productions such as Reginald De Koven's Robin Hood (1891) and John Philip Sousa's El Capitan (1896). A Trip to Coontown (1898) was the first musical comedy entirely produced and performed by African Americans on Broadway (largely inspired by the routines of the minstrel shows), followed by ragtime-tinged shows. Hundreds of musical comedies were staged on Broadway in the 1890s and early 20th century, composed of songs written in New York's Tin Pan Alley, including those by George M. Cohan, who worked to create an American style distinct from the Gilbert and Sullivan works. The most successful New York shows were often followed by extensive national tours.[46]

Meanwhile, musicals took over the London stage in the Gay Nineties, led by producer George Edwardes, who perceived that audiences wanted a new alternative to the Savoy-style comic operas and their intellectual, political, absurdist satire. He experimented with a modern-dress, family-friendly musical theatre style, with breezy, popular songs, snappy, romantic banter, and stylish spectacle at the Gaiety and his other theatres. These drew on the traditions of comic opera and used elements of burlesque and of the Harrigan and Hart pieces. He replaced the bawdy women of burlesque with his "respectable" corps of Gaiety Girls to complete the musical and visual fun. The success of the first of these, In Town (1892) and A Gaiety Girl (1893) set the style for the next three decades. The plots were generally light, romantic "poor maiden loves aristocrat and wins him against all odds" shows, with music by Ivan Caryll, Sidney Jones and Lionel Monckton. These shows were immediately widely copied in America, and Edwardian musical comedy swept away the earlier musical forms of comic opera and operetta. The Geisha (1896) was one of the most successful in the 1890s, running for more than two years and achieving great international success.

The Belle of New York (1898) became the first American musical to run for over a year in London. The British musical comedy Florodora (1899) was a popular success on both sides of the Atlantic, as was A Chinese Honeymoon (1901), which ran for a record-setting 1,074 performances in London and 376 in New York. After the turn of the 20th century, Seymour Hicks joined forces with Edwardes and American producer Charles Frohman to create another decade of popular shows. Other enduring Edwardian musical comedy hits included The Arcadians (1909) and The Quaker Girl (1910).[47]

Early 20th century

Virtually eliminated from the English-speaking stage by competition from the ubiquitous Edwardian musical comedies, operettas returned to London and Broadway in 1907 with The Merry Widow, and adaptations of continental operettas became direct competitors with musicals. Franz Lehár and Oscar Straus composed new operettas that were popular in English until World War I.[48] In America, Victor Herbert produced a string of enduring operettas including The Fortune Teller (1898), Babes in Toyland (1903), Mlle. Modiste (1905), The Red Mill (1906) and Naughty Marietta (1910).

In the 1910s, the team of P. G. Wodehouse, Guy Bolton and Jerome Kern, following in the footsteps of Gilbert and Sullivan, created the "Princess Theatre shows" and paved the way for Kern's later work by showing that a musical could combine light, popular entertainment with continuity between its story and songs.[41] Historian Gerald Bordman wrote:

These shows built and polished the mold from which almost all later major musical comedies evolved. ... The characters and situations were, within the limitations of musical comedy license, believable and the humor came from the situations or the nature of the characters. Kern's exquisitely flowing melodies were employed to further the action or develop characterization. ... [Edwardian] musical comedy was often guilty of inserting songs in a hit-or-miss fashion. The Princess Theatre musicals brought about a change in approach. P. G. Wodehouse, the most observant, literate and witty lyricist of his day, and the team of Bolton, Wodehouse and Kern had an influence felt to this day.[49]

The theatre-going public needed escapist entertainment during the dark times of World War I, and they flocked to the theatre. The 1919 hit musical Irene ran for 670 performances, a Broadway record that held until 1938.[50] The British theatre public supported far longer runs like that of The Maid of the Mountains (1,352 performances) and especially Chu Chin Chow. Its run of 2,238 performances was more than twice as long as any previous musical, setting a record that stood for nearly forty years.[51] Revues like The Bing Boys Are Here in Britain, and those of Florenz Ziegfeld and his imitators in America, were also extraordinarily popular.[35]

 
Sheet music from Sally, 1920

The musicals of the Roaring Twenties, borrowing from vaudeville, music hall and other light entertainments, tended to emphasize big dance routines and popular songs at the expense of plot. Typical of the decade were lighthearted productions like Sally; Lady, Be Good; No, No, Nanette; Oh, Kay!; and Funny Face. Despite forgettable stories, these musicals featured stars such as Marilyn Miller and Fred Astaire and produced dozens of enduring popular songs by Kern, George and Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and Rodgers and Hart. Popular music was dominated by musical theatre standards, such as "Fascinating Rhythm", "Tea for Two" and "Someone to Watch Over Me". Many shows were revues, series of sketches and songs with little or no connection between them. The best-known of these were the annual Ziegfeld Follies, spectacular song-and-dance revues on Broadway featuring extravagant sets, elaborate costumes and beautiful chorus girls.[23] These spectacles also raised production values, and mounting a musical generally became more expensive.[35] Shuffle Along (1921), an all-African American show was a hit on Broadway.[52] A new generation of composers of operettas also emerged in the 1920s, such as Rudolf Friml and Sigmund Romberg, to create a series of popular Broadway hits.[53]

In London, writer-stars such as Ivor Novello and Noël Coward became popular, but the primacy of British musical theatre from the 19th century through 1920 was gradually replaced by American innovation, especially after World War I, as Kern and other Tin Pan Alley composers began to bring new musical styles such as ragtime and jazz to the theatres, and the Shubert Brothers took control of the Broadway theatres. Musical theatre writer Andrew Lamb notes, "The operatic and theatrical styles of nineteenth-century social structures were replaced by a musical style more aptly suited to twentieth-century society and its vernacular idiom. It was from America that the more direct style emerged, and in America that it was able to flourish in a developing society less hidebound by nineteenth-century tradition."[54] In France, comédie musicale was written between in the early decades of the century for such stars as Yvonne Printemps.[55]

Show Boat and the Great Depression

Progressing far beyond the comparatively frivolous musicals and sentimental operettas of the decade, Broadway's Show Boat (1927), represented an even more complete integration of book and score than the Princess Theatre musicals, with dramatic themes told through the music, dialogue, setting and movement. This was accomplished by combining the lyricism of Kern's music with the skillful libretto of Oscar Hammerstein II. One historian wrote, "Here we come to a completely new genre – the musical play as distinguished from musical comedy. Now ... everything else was subservient to that play. Now ... came complete integration of song, humor and production numbers into a single and inextricable artistic entity."[56]

As the Great Depression set in during the post-Broadway national tour of Show Boat, the public turned back to mostly light, escapist song-and-dance entertainment.[49] Audiences on both sides of the Atlantic had little money to spend on entertainment, and only a few stage shows anywhere exceeded a run of 500 performances during the decade. The revue The Band Wagon (1931) starred dancing partners Fred Astaire and his sister Adele, while Porter's Anything Goes (1934) confirmed Ethel Merman's position as the First Lady of musical theatre, a title she maintained for many years. Coward and Novello continued to deliver old fashioned, sentimental musicals, such as The Dancing Years, while Rodgers and Hart returned from Hollywood to create a series of successful Broadway shows, including On Your Toes (1936, with Ray Bolger, the first Broadway musical to make dramatic use of classical dance), Babes in Arms (1937) and The Boys from Syracuse (1938). Porter added Du Barry Was a Lady (1939). The longest-running piece of musical theatre of the 1930s was Hellzapoppin (1938), a revue with audience participation, which played for 1,404 performances, setting a new Broadway record.[50]

Still, a few creative teams began to build on Show Boat's innovations. Of Thee I Sing (1931), a political satire by the Gershwins, was the first musical awarded the Pulitzer Prize.[23][57] As Thousands Cheer (1933), a revue by Irving Berlin and Moss Hart in which each song or sketch was based on a newspaper headline, marked the first Broadway show in which an African-American, Ethel Waters, starred alongside white actors. Waters' numbers included "Supper Time", a woman's lament for her husband who has been lynched.[58] The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess (1935) featured an all African-American cast and blended operatic, folk and jazz idioms. The Cradle Will Rock (1937), directed by Orson Welles, was a highly political pro-union piece that, despite the controversy surrounding it, ran for 108 performances.[35] Rodgers and Hart's I'd Rather Be Right (1937) was a political satire with George M. Cohan as President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Kurt Weill's Knickerbocker Holiday depicted New York City's early history while good-naturedly satirizing Roosevelt's good intentions.

The motion picture mounted a challenge to the stage. Silent films had presented only limited competition, but by the end of the 1920s, films like The Jazz Singer could be presented with synchronized sound. "Talkie" films at low prices effectively killed off vaudeville by the early 1930s.[59] Despite the economic woes of the 1930s and the competition from film, the musical survived. In fact, it continued to evolve thematically beyond the gags and showgirls musicals of the Gay Nineties and Roaring Twenties and the sentimental romance of operetta, adding technical expertise and the fast-paced staging and naturalistic dialogue style led by director George Abbott.[23]

The Golden Age (1940s to 1960s)

 
Rodgers and Hammerstein (left and right) and Irving Berlin (center) at the St. James Theatre in 1948

1940s

The 1940s would begin with more hits from Porter, Irving Berlin, Rodgers and Hart, Weill and Gershwin, some with runs over 500 performances as the economy rebounded, but artistic change was in the air.

Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma! (1943) completed the revolution begun by Show Boat, by tightly integrating all the aspects of musical theatre, with a cohesive plot, songs that furthered the action of the story, and featured dream ballets and other dances that advanced the plot and developed the characters, rather than using dance as an excuse to parade scantily clad women across the stage.[3] Rodgers and Hammerstein hired ballet choreographer Agnes de Mille, who used everyday motions to help the characters express their ideas. It defied musical conventions by raising its first act curtain not on a bevy of chorus girls, but rather on a woman churning butter, with an off-stage voice singing the opening lines of Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin' unaccompanied. It drew rave reviews, set off a box-office frenzy and received a Pulitzer Prize.[60] Brooks Atkinson wrote in The New York Times that the show's opening number changed the history of musical theater: "After a verse like that, sung to a buoyant melody, the banalities of the old musical stage became intolerable."[61] It was the first "blockbuster" Broadway show, running a total of 2,212 performances, and was made into a hit film. It remains one of the most frequently produced of the team's projects. William A. Everett and Paul R. Laird wrote that this was a "show, that, like Show Boat, became a milestone, so that later historians writing about important moments in twentieth-century theatre would begin to identify eras according to their relationship to Oklahoma!".[62]

 
Mary Martin starred in several Broadway hits of this era

"After Oklahoma!, Rodgers and Hammerstein were the most important contributors to the musical-play form... The examples they set in creating vital plays, often rich with social thought, provided the necessary encouragement for other gifted writers to create musical plays of their own".[56] The two collaborators created an extraordinary collection of some of musical theatre's best loved and most enduring classics, including Carousel (1945), South Pacific (1949), The King and I (1951) and The Sound of Music (1959). Some of these musicals treat more serious subject matter than most earlier shows: the villain in Oklahoma! is a suspected murderer and psychopath with a fondness for lewd post cards; Carousel deals with spousal abuse, thievery, suicide and the afterlife; South Pacific explores miscegenation even more thoroughly than Show Boat; and the hero of The King and I dies onstage.

The show's creativity stimulated Rodgers and Hammerstein's contemporaries and ushered in the "Golden Age" of American musical theatre.[61] Americana was displayed on Broadway during the "Golden Age", as the wartime cycle of shows began to arrive. An example of this is On the Town (1944), written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, composed by Leonard Bernstein and choreographed by Jerome Robbins. The story is set during wartime and concerns three sailors who are on a 24-hour shore leave in New York City, during which each falls in love. The show also gives the impression of a country with an uncertain future, as the sailors and their women also have. Irving Berlin used sharpshooter Annie Oakley's career as a basis for his Annie Get Your Gun (1946, 1,147 performances); Burton Lane, E. Y. Harburg and Fred Saidy combined political satire with Irish whimsy for their fantasy Finian's Rainbow (1947, 725 performances); and Cole Porter found inspiration in William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew for Kiss Me, Kate (1948, 1,077 performances). The American musicals overwhelmed the old-fashioned British Coward/Novello-style shows, one of the last big successes of which was Novello's Perchance to Dream (1945, 1,021 performances). The formula for the Golden Age musicals reflected one or more of four widely held perceptions of the "American dream": That stability and worth derives from a love relationship sanctioned and restricted by Protestant ideals of marriage; that a married couple should make a moral home with children away from the city in a suburb or small town; that the woman's function was as homemaker and mother; and that Americans incorporate an independent and pioneering spirit or that their success is self-made.[63]

1950s

 
Julie Andrews with Richard Burton in Camelot (1960)

The 1950s were crucial to the development of the American musical.[64] Damon Runyon's eclectic characters were at the core of Frank Loesser's and Abe Burrows' Guys and Dolls, (1950, 1,200 performances); and the Gold Rush was the setting for Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's Paint Your Wagon (1951). The relatively brief seven-month run of that show didn't discourage Lerner and Loewe from collaborating again, this time on My Fair Lady (1956), an adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion starring Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews, which at 2,717 performances held the long-run record for many years. Popular Hollywood films were made of all of these musicals. Two hits by British creators in this decade were The Boy Friend (1954), which ran for 2,078 performances in London and marked Andrews' American debut, and Salad Days (1954), with a run of 2,283 performances.[51]

Another record was set by The Threepenny Opera, which ran for 2,707 performances, becoming the longest-running off-Broadway musical until The Fantasticks. The production also broke ground by showing that musicals could be profitable off-Broadway in a small-scale, small orchestra format. This was confirmed in 1959 when a revival of Jerome Kern and P. G. Wodehouse's Leave It to Jane ran for more than two years. The 1959–1960 off-Broadway season included a dozen musicals and revues including Little Mary Sunshine, The Fantasticks and Ernest in Love, a musical adaptation of Oscar Wilde's 1895 hit The Importance of Being Earnest.[65]

West Side Story (1957) transported Romeo and Juliet to modern day New York City and converted the feuding Montague and Capulet families into opposing ethnic gangs, the Jets and the Sharks. The book was adapted by Arthur Laurents, with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by newcomer Stephen Sondheim. It was embraced by the critics, but failed to be a popular choice for the "blue-haired matinee ladies", who preferred the small town River City, Iowa of Meredith Willson's The Music Man (1957) to the alleys of Manhattan's Upper West Side. Apparently Tony Award voters were of a similar mind, since they favored the former over the latter. West Side Story had a respectable run of 732 performances (1,040 in the West End), while The Music Man ran nearly twice as long, with 1,375 performances. However, the 1961 film of West Side Story was extremely successful.[66] Laurents and Sondheim teamed up again for Gypsy (1959, 702 performances), with Jule Styne providing the music for a backstage story about the most driven stage mother of all-time, stripper Gypsy Rose Lee's mother Rose. The original production ran for 702 performances, and was given four subsequent revivals, with Angela Lansbury, Tyne Daly, Bernadette Peters and Patti LuPone later tackling the role made famous by Ethel Merman.

Although directors and choreographers have had a major influence on musical theatre style since at least the 19th century,[67] George Abbott and his collaborators and successors took a central role in integrating movement and dance fully into musical theatre productions in the Golden Age.[68] Abbott introduced ballet as a story-telling device in On Your Toes in 1936, which was followed by Agnes de Mille's ballet and choreography in Oklahoma!.[69] After Abbott collaborated with Jerome Robbins in On the Town and other shows, Robbins combined the roles of director and choreographer, emphasizing the story-telling power of dance in West Side Story, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962) and Fiddler on the Roof (1964). Bob Fosse choreographed for Abbott in The Pajama Game (1956) and Damn Yankees (1957), injecting playful sexuality into those hits. He was later the director-choreographer for Sweet Charity (1968), Pippin (1972) and Chicago (1975). Other notable director-choreographers have included Gower Champion, Tommy Tune, Michael Bennett, Gillian Lynne and Susan Stroman. Prominent directors have included Hal Prince, who also got his start with Abbott,[68] and Trevor Nunn.[70]

During the Golden Age, automotive companies and other large corporations began to hire Broadway talent to write corporate musicals, private shows only seen by their employees or customers.[71][72] The 1950s ended with Rodgers and Hammerstein's last hit, The Sound of Music, which also became another hit for Mary Martin. It ran for 1,443 performances and shared the Tony Award for Best Musical. Together with its extremely successful 1965 film version, it has become one of the most popular musicals in history.

1960s

In 1960, The Fantasticks was first produced off-Broadway. This intimate allegorical show would quietly run for over 40 years at the Sullivan Street Theatre in Greenwich Village, becoming by far the longest-running musical in history. Its authors produced other innovative works in the 1960s, such as Celebration and I Do! I Do!, the first two-character Broadway musical. The 1960s would see a number of blockbusters, like Fiddler on the Roof (1964; 3,242 performances), Hello, Dolly! (1964; 2,844 performances), Funny Girl (1964; 1,348 performances) and Man of La Mancha (1965; 2,328 performances), and some more risqué pieces like Cabaret, before ending with the emergence of the rock musical. Two men had considerable impact on musical theatre history beginning in this decade: Stephen Sondheim and Jerry Herman.

 
Bernadette Peters (shown in 2008) has starred in five Sondheim musicals

The first project for which Sondheim wrote both music and lyrics was A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962, 964 performances), with a book based on the works of Plautus by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart, starring Zero Mostel. Sondheim moved the musical beyond its concentration on the romantic plots typical of earlier eras; his work tended to be darker, exploring the grittier sides of life both present and past. Other early Sondheim works include Anyone Can Whistle (1964, which ran only nine performances, despite having stars Lee Remick and Angela Lansbury), and the successful Company (1970), Follies (1971) and A Little Night Music (1973). Later, Sondheim found inspiration in unlikely sources: the opening of Japan to Western trade for Pacific Overtures (1976), a legendary murderous barber seeking revenge in the Industrial Age of London for Sweeney Todd (1979), the paintings of Georges Seurat for Sunday in the Park with George (1984), fairy tales for Into the Woods (1987), and a collection of presidential assassins in Assassins (1990).

While some critics have argued that some of Sondheim's musicals lack commercial appeal, others have praised their lyrical sophistication and musical complexity, as well as the interplay of lyrics and music in his shows. Some of Sondheim's notable innovations include a show presented in reverse (Merrily We Roll Along) and the above-mentioned Anyone Can Whistle, in which the first act ends with the cast informing the audience that they are mad.

Jerry Herman played a significant role in American musical theatre, beginning with his first Broadway production, Milk and Honey (1961, 563 performances), about the founding of the state of Israel, and continuing with the blockbuster hits Hello, Dolly! (1964, 2,844 performances), Mame (1966, 1,508 performances), and La Cage aux Folles (1983, 1,761 performances). Even his less successful shows like Dear World (1969) and Mack and Mabel (1974) have had memorable scores (Mack and Mabel was later reworked into a London hit). Writing both words and music, many of Herman's show tunes have become popular standards, including "Hello, Dolly!", "We Need a Little Christmas", "I Am What I Am", "Mame", "The Best of Times", "Before the Parade Passes By", "Put On Your Sunday Clothes", "It Only Takes a Moment", "Bosom Buddies" and "I Won't Send Roses", recorded by such artists as Louis Armstrong, Eydie Gormé, Barbra Streisand, Petula Clark and Bernadette Peters. Herman's songbook has been the subject of two popular musical revues, Jerry's Girls (Broadway, 1985) and Showtune (off-Broadway, 2003).

The musical started to diverge from the relatively narrow confines of the 1950s. Rock music would be used in several Broadway musicals, beginning with Hair, which featured not only rock music but also nudity and controversial opinions about the Vietnam War, race relations and other social issues.[73]

Social themes

After Show Boat and Porgy and Bess, and as the struggle in America and elsewhere for minorities' civil rights progressed, Hammerstein, Harold Arlen, Yip Harburg and others were emboldened to write more musicals and operas that aimed to normalize societal toleration of minorities and urged racial harmony. Early Golden Age works that focused on racial tolerance included Finian's Rainbow and South Pacific. Towards the end of the Golden Age, several shows tackled Jewish subjects and issues, such as Fiddler on the Roof, Milk and Honey, Blitz! and later Rags. The original concept that became West Side Story was set in the Lower East Side during Easter-Passover celebrations; the rival gangs were to be Jewish and Italian Catholic. The creative team later decided that the Polish (white) vs. Puerto Rican conflict was fresher.[74]

Tolerance as an important theme in musicals has continued in recent decades. The final expression of West Side Story left a message of racial tolerance. By the end of the 1960s, musicals became racially integrated, with black and white cast members even covering each other's roles, as they did in Hair.[75] Homosexuality has also been explored in musicals, starting with Hair, and even more overtly in La Cage aux Folles, Falsettos, Rent, Hedwig and the Angry Inch and other shows in recent decades. Parade is a sensitive exploration of both anti-Semitism and historical American racism, and Ragtime similarly explores the experience of immigrants and minorities in America.

1970s to present

1970s

After the success of Hair, rock musicals flourished in the 1970s, with Jesus Christ Superstar, Godspell, The Rocky Horror Show, Evita and Two Gentlemen of Verona. Some of those began as "concept albums" which were then adapted to the stage, most notably Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita. Others had no dialogue or were otherwise reminiscent of opera, with dramatic, emotional themes; these sometimes started as concept albums and were referred to as rock operas. Shows like Raisin, Dreamgirls, Purlie and The Wiz brought a significant African-American influence to Broadway. More varied musical genres and styles were incorporated into musicals both on and especially off-Broadway. At the same time, Stephen Sondheim found success with some of his musicals, as mentioned above.

 
A Chorus Line was one of 55 productions that Joseph Papp's Public Theatre has brought to Broadway

In 1975, the dance musical A Chorus Line emerged from recorded group therapy-style sessions Michael Bennett conducted with "gypsies" – those who sing and dance in support of the leading players – from the Broadway community. From hundreds of hours of tapes, James Kirkwood Jr. and Nick Dante fashioned a book about an audition for a musical, incorporating many real-life stories from the sessions; some who attended the sessions eventually played variations of themselves or each other in the show. With music by Marvin Hamlisch and lyrics by Edward Kleban, A Chorus Line first opened at Joseph Papp's Public Theater in lower Manhattan. What initially had been planned as a limited engagement eventually moved to the Shubert Theatre on Broadway[76] for a run of 6,137 performances, becoming the longest-running production in Broadway history up to that time. The show swept the Tony Awards and won the Pulitzer Prize, and its hit song, What I Did for Love, became a standard.[77]

Broadway audiences welcomed musicals that varied from the golden age style and substance. John Kander and Fred Ebb explored the rise of Nazism in Germany in Cabaret, and murder and the media in Prohibition-era Chicago, which relied on old vaudeville techniques. Pippin, by Stephen Schwartz, was set in the days of Charlemagne. Federico Fellini's autobiographical film became Maury Yeston's Nine. At the end of the decade, Evita and Sweeney Todd were precursors of the darker, big budget musicals of the 1980s that depended on dramatic stories, sweeping scores and spectacular effects. At the same time, old-fashioned values were still embraced in such hits as Annie, 42nd Street, My One and Only, and popular revivals of No, No, Nanette and Irene. Although many film versions of musicals were made in the 1970s, few were critical or box office successes, with the notable exceptions of Fiddler on the Roof, Cabaret and Grease.[78]

1980s

The 1980s saw the influence of European "megamusicals" on Broadway, in the West End and elsewhere. These typically feature a pop-influenced score, large casts and spectacular sets and special effects – a falling chandelier (in The Phantom of the Opera); a helicopter landing on stage (in Miss Saigon) – and big budgets. Some were based on novels or other works of literature. The British team of composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and producer Cameron Mackintosh started the megamusical phenomenon with their 1981 musical Cats, based on the poems of T. S. Eliot, which overtook A Chorus Line to become the longest-running Broadway show. Lloyd Webber followed up with Starlight Express (1984), performed on roller skates; The Phantom of the Opera (1986; also with Mackintosh), derived from the novel of the same name; and Sunset Boulevard (1993), from the 1950 film of the same name. Phantom would surpass Cats to become the longest-running show in Broadway history, a record it still holds.[79][80] The French team of Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil wrote Les Misérables, based on the novel of the same name, whose 1985 London production was produced by Mackintosh and became, and still is, the longest-running musical in West End and Broadway history. The team produced another hit with Miss Saigon (1989), which was inspired by the Puccini opera Madama Butterfly.[79][80]

The megamusicals' huge budgets redefined expectations for financial success on Broadway and in the West End. In earlier years, it was possible for a show to be considered a hit after a run of several hundred performances, but with multimillion-dollar production costs, a show must run for years simply to turn a profit. Megamusicals were also reproduced in productions around the world, multiplying their profit potential while expanding the global audience for musical theatre.[80]

1990s

In the 1990s, a new generation of theatrical composers emerged, including Jason Robert Brown and Michael John LaChiusa, who began with productions off-Broadway. The most conspicuous success of these artists was Jonathan Larson's show Rent (1996), a rock musical (based on the opera La bohème) about a struggling community of artists in Manhattan. While the cost of tickets to Broadway and West End musicals was escalating beyond the budget of many theatregoers, Rent was marketed to increase the popularity of musicals among a younger audience. It featured a young cast and a heavily rock-influenced score; the musical became a hit. Its young fans, many of them students, calling themselves RENTheads], camped out at the Nederlander Theatre in hopes of winning the lottery for $20 front row tickets, and some saw the show dozens of times. Other shows on Broadway followed Rent's lead by offering heavily discounted day-of-performance or standing-room tickets, although often the discounts are offered only to students.[81]

The 1990s also saw the influence of large corporations on the production of musicals. The most important has been Disney Theatrical Productions, which began adapting some of Disney's animated film musicals for the stage, starting with Beauty and the Beast (1994), The Lion King (1997) and Aida (2000), the latter two with music by Elton John. The Lion King is the highest-grossing musical in Broadway history.[82] The Who's Tommy (1993), a theatrical adaptation of the rock opera Tommy, achieved a healthy run of 899 performances but was criticized for sanitizing the story and "musical theatre-izing" the rock music.[83]

Despite the growing number of large-scale musicals in the 1980s and 1990s, a number of lower-budget, smaller-scale musicals managed to find critical and financial success, such as Falsettoland and Little Shop of Horrors, Bat Boy: The Musical and Blood Brothers. The topics of these pieces vary widely, and the music ranges from rock to pop, but they often are produced off-Broadway, or for smaller London theatres, and some of these stagings have been regarded as imaginative and innovative.[84]

2000s–present

Trends

In the new century, familiarity has been embraced by producers and investors anxious to guarantee that they recoup their considerable investments. Some took (usually modest-budget) chances on new and creative material, such as Urinetown (2001), Avenue Q (2003), The Light in the Piazza (2005), Spring Awakening (2006), In the Heights (2008), Next to Normal (2009), American Idiot (2010) and The Book of Mormon (2011). Hamilton (2015), transformed "under-dramatized American history" into an unusual hip-hop inflected hit.[85] In 2011, Sondheim argued that of all forms of "contemporary pop music", rap was "the closest to traditional musical theatre" and was "one pathway to the future."[86]

However, most major-market 21st-century productions have taken a safe route, with revivals of familiar fare, such as Fiddler on the Roof, A Chorus Line, South Pacific, Gypsy, Hair, West Side Story and Grease, or with adaptations of other proven material, such as literature (The Scarlet Pimpernel, Wicked and Fun Home), hoping that the shows would have a built-in audience as a result. This trend is especially persistent with film adaptations, including (The Producers, Spamalot, Hairspray, Legally Blonde, The Color Purple, Xanadu, Billy Elliot, Shrek, Waitress and Groundhog Day).[87] Some critics have argued that the reuse of film plots, especially those from Disney (such as Mary Poppins and The Little Mermaid), equate the Broadway and West End musical to a tourist attraction, rather than a creative outlet.[35]

 
The cast of Hamilton meets President Obama in 2015

Today, it is less likely that a sole producer, such as David Merrick or Cameron Mackintosh, backs a production. Corporate sponsors dominate Broadway, and often alliances are formed to stage musicals, which require an investment of $10 million or more. In 2002, the credits for Thoroughly Modern Millie listed ten producers, and among those names were entities composed of several individuals.[88] Typically, off-Broadway and regional theatres tend to produce smaller and therefore less expensive musicals, and development of new musicals has increasingly taken place outside of New York and London or in smaller venues. For example, Spring Awakening, Fun Home and Hamilton were developed off-Broadway before being launched on Broadway.

Several musicals returned to the spectacle format that was so successful in the 1980s, recalling extravaganzas that have been presented at times, throughout theatre history, since the ancient Romans staged mock sea battles. Examples include the musical adaptations of Lord of the Rings (2007), Gone with the Wind (2008) and Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark (2011). These musicals involved songwriters with little theatrical experience, and the expensive productions generally lost money. Conversely, The Drowsy Chaperone, Avenue Q, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Xanadu and Fun Home, among others, have been presented in smaller-scale productions, mostly uninterrupted by an intermission, with short running times, and enjoyed financial success. In 2013, Time magazine reported that a trend off-Broadway has been "immersive" theatre, citing shows such as Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 (2012) and Here Lies Love (2013) in which the staging takes place around and within the audience.[89] The shows set a joint record, each receiving 11 nominations for Lucille Lortel Awards,[90] and feature contemporary scores.[91][92]

In 2013, Cyndi Lauper was the "first female composer to win the [Tony for] Best Score without a male collaborator" for writing the music and lyrics for Kinky Boots. In 2015, for the first time, an all-female writing team, Lisa Kron and Jeanine Tesori, won the Tony Award for Best Original Score (and Best Book for Kron) for Fun Home,[93] although work by male songwriters continues to be produced more often.[94]

Jukebox musicals

Another trend has been to create a minimal plot to fit a collection of songs that have already been hits. Following the earlier success of Buddy – The Buddy Holly Story, these have included Movin' Out (2002, based on the tunes of Billy Joel), Jersey Boys (2006, The Four Seasons), Rock of Ages (2009, featuring classic rock of the 1980s) and many others. This style is often referred to as the "jukebox musical".[95] Similar but more plot-driven musicals have been built around the canon of a particular pop group including Mamma Mia! (1999, based on the songs of ABBA), Our House (2002, based on the songs of Madness) and We Will Rock You (2002, based on the songs of Queen).

Film and TV musicals
 
Zac Efron and Zendaya (pictured), along with Hugh Jackman, brought star power to The Greatest Showman

Live-action film musicals were nearly dead in the 1980s and early 1990s, with exceptions of Victor/Victoria, Little Shop of Horrors and the 1996 film of Evita.[96] In the new century, Baz Luhrmann began a revival of the film musical with Moulin Rouge! (2001). This was followed by Chicago (2002); Phantom of the Opera (2004); Rent (2005); Dreamgirls (2006); Hairspray, Enchanted and Sweeney Todd (all in 2007); Mamma Mia! (2008); Nine (2009); Les Misérables and Pitch Perfect (both in 2012), Into The Woods, The Last Five Years (2014), La La Land (2016), The Greatest Showman (2017), A Star Is Born and Mary Poppins Returns (both 2018), Rocketman (2019) and In the Heights and Steven Spielberg's version of West Side Story (both in 2021), among others. Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (2000) and The Cat in the Hat (2003), turned children's books into live-action film musicals. After the immense success of Disney and other houses with animated film musicals beginning with The Little Mermaid in 1989 and running throughout the 1990s (including some more adult-themed films, like South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999)), fewer animated film musicals were released in the first decade of the 21st century.[96] The genre made a comeback beginning in 2010 with Tangled (2010), Rio (2011) and Frozen (2013). In Asia, India continues to produce numerous "Bollywood" film musicals, and Japan produces "Anime" and "Manga" film musicals.

Made for TV musical films were popular in the 1990s, such as Gypsy (1993), Cinderella (1997) and Annie (1999). Several made for TV musicals in the first decade of the 21st century were adaptations of the stage version, such as South Pacific (2001), The Music Man (2003) and Once Upon a Mattress (2005), and a televised version of the stage musical Legally Blonde in 2007. Additionally, several musicals were filmed on stage and broadcast on Public Television, for example Contact in 2002 and Kiss Me, Kate and Oklahoma! in 2003. The made-for-TV musical High School Musical (2006), and its several sequels, enjoyed particular success and were adapted for stage musicals and other media.

 
Dove Cameron has starred in such TV musicals as Descendants, Hairspray Live! and Schmigadoon!

In 2013, NBC began a series of live television broadcasts of musicals with The Sound of Music Live![97] Although the production received mixed reviews, it was a ratings success.[98] Further broadcasts have included Peter Pan Live! (NBC 2014), The Wiz Live! (NBC 2015),[99] a UK broadcast, The Sound of Music Live (ITV 2015)[100] Grease: Live (Fox 2016),[101][102] Hairspray Live! (NBC, 2016), A Christmas Story Live! (Fox, 2017),[103] and Rent: Live (Fox 2019).[104]

Some television shows have set episodes as a musical. Examples include episodes of Ally McBeal, Xena: Warrior Princess ("The Bitter Suite" and "Lyre, Lyre, Heart's On Fire"), Psych ("Psych: The Musical"), Buffy the Vampire Slayer ("Once More, with Feeling"), That's So Raven, Daria, Dexter's Laboratory, The Powerpuff Girls, The Flash, Once Upon a Time, Oz, Scrubs (one episode was written by the creators of Avenue Q), Batman: The Brave and the Bold ("Mayhem of the Music Meister") and That '70s Show (the 100th episode, "That '70s Musical"). Others have included scenes where characters suddenly begin singing and dancing in a musical-theatre style during an episode, such as in several episodes of The Simpsons, 30 Rock, Hannah Montana, South Park, Bob's Burgers and Family Guy.[105] Television series that have extensively used the musical format have included Cop Rock, Flight of the Conchords, Glee, Smash and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.

There have also been musicals made for the internet, including Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, about a low-rent super-villain played by Neil Patrick Harris. It was written during the WGA writer's strike.[106] Since 2006, reality TV shows have been used to help market musical revivals by holding a talent competition to cast (usually female) leads. Examples of these are How Do You Solve a Problem like Maria?, Grease: You're the One That I Want!, Any Dream Will Do, Legally Blonde: The Musical – The Search for Elle Woods, I'd Do Anything and Over the Rainbow. In 2021, Schmigadoon! was a parody of, and homage to, Golden Age musicals of the 1940s and 1950s.[107]

2020–2021 theatre shutdown
 
Marquee of the In the Heart of the Beast Theatre in Minneapolis, Minnesota, during the COVID-19 pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic caused the closure of theatres and theatre festivals around the world in early 2020, including all Broadway[108] and West End theatres.[109] Many performing arts institutions attempted to adapt, or reduce their losses, by offering new (or expanded) digital services. In particular this resulted in the online streaming of previously recorded performances of many companies,[110][111][112] as well as bespoke crowdsourcing projects.[113][114] For example, The Sydney Theatre Company commissioned actors to film themselves at home discussing, then performing, a monologue from one of the characters they had previously played on stage.[115] The casts of musicals, such as Hamilton and Mamma Mia! united on Zoom calls to entertain individuals and the public.[116][117] Some performances were streamed live, or presented outdoors or in other "socially distanced" ways, sometimes allowing audience members to interact with the cast.[118] Radio theatre festivals were broadcast.[119] Virtual, and even crowd-sourced musicals were created, such as Ratatouille the Musical.[120][121] Filmed versions of major musicals, like Hamilton, were released on streaming platforms.[122] Andrew Lloyd Webber released recordings of his musicals on YouTube.[123]

Due to the closures and loss of ticket sales, many theatre companies were placed in financial peril. Some governments offered emergency aid to the arts.[124][125][126] Some musical theatre markets began to reopen in fits and starts by early 2021,[127] with West End theatres postponing their reopening from June to July,[128] and Broadway starting in September.[129] Throughout 2021, however, spikes in the pandemic have caused some closures even after markets reopened.[130][131]

International musicals

The U.S. and Britain were the most active sources of book musicals from the 19th century through much of the 20th century (although Europe produced various forms of popular light opera and operetta, for example Spanish Zarzuela, during that period and even earlier). However, the light musical stage in other countries has become more active in recent decades.

Musicals from other English-speaking countries (notably Australia and Canada) often do well locally and occasionally even reach Broadway or the West End (e.g., The Boy from Oz and The Drowsy Chaperone). South Africa has an active musical theatre scene, with revues like African Footprint and Umoja and book musicals, such as Kat and the Kings and Sarafina! touring internationally. Locally, musicals like Vere, Love and Green Onions, Over the Rainbow: the all-new all-gay... extravaganza and Bangbroek Mountain and In Briefs – a queer little Musical have been produced successfully.

 
Japan's all-female Takarazuka Revue in a 1930 performance of "Parisette"

Successful musicals from continental Europe include shows from (among other countries) Germany (Elixier and Ludwig II), Austria (Tanz der Vampire, Elisabeth, Mozart! and Rebecca), Czech Republic (Dracula), France (Starmania, Notre-Dame de Paris, Les Misérables, Roméo et Juliette and Mozart, l'opéra rock) and Spain (Hoy no me puedo levantar and The Musical Sancho Panza).

Japan has recently seen the growth of an indigenous form of musical theatre, both animated and live action, mostly based on Anime and Manga, such as Kiki's Delivery Service and Tenimyu. The popular Sailor Moon metaseries has had twenty-nine Sailor Moon musicals, spanning thirteen years. Beginning in 1914, a series of popular revues have been performed by the all-female Takarazuka Revue, which currently fields five performing troupes. Elsewhere in Asia, the Indian Bollywood musical, mostly in the form of motion pictures, is tremendously successful.[132]

Beginning with a 2002 tour of Les Misérables, various Western musicals have been imported to mainland China and staged in English.[133] Attempts at localizing Western productions in China began in 2008 when Fame was produced in Mandarin with a full Chinese cast at the Central Academy of Drama in Beijing.[134] Since then, other western productions have been staged in China in Mandarin with a Chinese cast. The first Chinese production in the style of Western musical theatre was The Gold Sand in 2005.[133] In addition, Li Dun, a well-known Chinese producer, produced Butterflies, based on a classic Chinese love tragedy, in 2007 as well as Love U Teresa in 2011.[133]

Amateur and school productions

Musicals are often presented by amateur and school groups in churches, schools and other performance spaces.[135][136] Although amateur theatre has existed for centuries, even in the New World,[137] François Cellier and Cunningham Bridgeman wrote, in 1914, that prior to the late 19th century, amateur actors were treated with contempt by professionals. After the formation of amateur Gilbert and Sullivan companies licensed to perform the Savoy operas, professionals recognized that the amateur societies "support the culture of music and the drama. They are now accepted as useful training schools for the legitimate stage, and from the volunteer ranks have sprung many present-day favourites."[138] The National Operatic and Dramatic Association was founded in the UK in 1899. It reported, in 1914, that nearly 200 amateur dramatic societies were producing Gilbert and Sullivan works in Britain that year.[138] Similarly, more than 100 community theatres were founded in the US in the early 20th century. This number has grown to an estimated 18,000 in the US.[137] The Educational Theater Association in the US has nearly 5,000 member schools.[139]

Relevance

 
The Lion King on Broadway

The Broadway League announced that in the 2007–08 season, 12.27 million tickets were purchased for Broadway shows for a gross sale amount of almost a billion dollars.[140] The League further reported that during the 2006–07 season, approximately 65% of Broadway tickets were purchased by tourists, and that foreign tourists were 16% of attendees.[141] The Society of London Theatre reported that 2007 set a record for attendance in London. Total attendees in the major commercial and grant-aided theatres in Central London were 13.6 million, and total ticket revenues were £469.7 million.[142] The international musicals scene has been increasingly active in recent decades. Nevertheless, Stephen Sondheim commented in the year 2000:

You have two kinds of shows on Broadway – revivals and the same kind of musicals over and over again, all spectacles. You get your tickets for The Lion King a year in advance, and essentially a family ... pass on to their children the idea that that's what the theater is – a spectacular musical you see once a year, a stage version of a movie. It has nothing to do with theater at all. It has to do with seeing what is familiar. ... I don't think the theatre will die per se, but it's never going to be what it was. ... It's a tourist attraction."[143]

However, noting the success in recent decades of original material, and creative re-imaginings of film, plays and literature, theatre historian John Kenrick countered:

Is the Musical dead? ... Absolutely not! Changing? Always! The musical has been changing ever since Offenbach did his first rewrite in the 1850s. And change is the clearest sign that the musical is still a living, growing genre. Will we ever return to the so-called 'golden age', with musicals at the center of popular culture? Probably not. Public taste has undergone fundamental changes, and the commercial arts can only flow where the paying public allows.[35]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Morley, p. 15
  2. ^ Everett and Laird, p. 137
  3. ^ a b Rubin and Solórzano, p. 438
  4. ^ a b Shepherd, John; Horn, David (2012). Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 8: Genres: North America. A&C Black. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-4411-4874-2.
  5. ^ Wattenberg, Ben. The American Musical, Part 2, PBS.org, May 24, 2007, accessed February 7, 2017
  6. ^ Brantley, Ben. "Curtain Up! It's Patti's Turn at Gypsy", The New York Times, March 28, 2008, accessed May 26, 2009
  7. ^ a b Cohen and Sherman, p. 233
  8. ^ Tommasini, Anthony. "Opera? Musical? Please Respect the Difference", The New York Times, July 7, 2011, accessed December 13, 2017
  9. ^ Gamerman, Ellen. "Broadway Turns Up the Volume", The Wall Street Journal, Ellen, October 23, 2009, accessed December 13, 2017
  10. ^ "Porgy and Bess: That old black magic" The Independent, October 27, 2006, accessed December 27, 2018
  11. ^ Lister, David. "The Royal Opera opens a window on Sondheim", The Independent, April 5, 2003, accessed December 27, 2018
  12. ^ Teachout, Terry. "Sweeney Todd" 2008-04-18 at the Wayback Machine, National Endowment for the Arts, accessed November 1, 2009
  13. ^ White, Michael. "Something for the weekend, sir?", The Independent, London, December 15, 2003, accessed May 26, 2009
  14. ^ Kowalke, Kim H. "Theorizing the Golden Age Musical: Genre, Structure, Syntax" in A MusicTheoretical Matrix: Essays in Honor of Allen Forte (Part V), ed. David Carson Berry, Gamut 6/2 (2013), pp. 163–169
  15. ^ These may include electric guitar, electric bass synthesizer and drum kit.
  16. ^ Show index with links to orchestration information 2010-02-13 at the Wayback Machine, MTIshows.com, accessed October 4, 2015
  17. ^ Elliot, Susan (August 17, 2008). "Off the Stage, What's Behind the Music". The New York Times. Retrieved October 6, 2015.
  18. ^ Gokulsing, 2004, p. 98.
  19. ^ "Mini Musicals", labyrinth.net.au, Cenarth Fox, 2001, accessed 22 January 2010
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Cited books

  • Allain, Paul; Harvie, Jen (2014). The Routledge Companion to Theatre and Performance. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4156-3631-5.
  • Allen, Robert C. (c. 1991). Horrible Prettiness: Burlesque and American Culture. University of North Carolina. ISBN 978-0-8078-1960-9.
  • Bradley, Ian (2005). Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516700-7.
  • Buelow, George J. (2004). A History of Baroque Music. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34365-9.
  • Carter, Tim; Butt, John, eds. (2005). The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Music. The Cambridge History of Music. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. p. 591. ISBN 978-0-521-79273-8. Archived from the original on 2013-01-12. Retrieved 2009-05-26.
  • Cohen, Robert; Sherman, Donovan (2020). Theatre: Brief (Twelfth ed.). New York City: McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN 978-1-260-05738-6. OCLC 1073038874.
  • Everett, William A.; Laird, Paul R., eds. (2002). The Cambridge Companion to the Musical. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79189-2.
  • Gokulsing, K. Moti; Dissanayake, Wimal (2004) [1998]. Indian popular cinema : a narrative of cultural change (Revised and updated ed.). Stoke-on-Trent: Trentham. p. 161. ISBN 978-1-85856-329-9.
  • Hoppin, Richard H., ed. (1978). Anthology of Medieval Music. Norton introduction to music history. New York: Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-09080-2.
  • Horn, Barbara Lee (1991). The Age of Hair: Evolution and Impact of Broadway's First Rock Musical. New York: Greenwood Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-313-27564-7.
  • Jha, Subhash K. (2005). The Essential Guide to Bollywood. Roli Books. ISBN 81-7436-378-5.
  • Jones, John B. (2003). Our Musicals, Ourselves. Hanover: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-0-87451-904-4.
  • Lord, Suzanne (2003). Brinkman, David (ed.). Music from the Age of Shakespeare : A Cultural History. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-31713-2.
  • Lubbock, Mark (2002) [1962]. "American musical theatre: an introduction". The Complete Book of Light Opera (1st ed.). London: Putnam. pp. 753–756.
  • Morley, Sheridan (1987). Spread a little happiness: the first hundred years of the British musical. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-01398-4.
  • Parker, Roger, ed. (2001). The Oxford Illustrated History of Opera. Oxford Illustrated Histories (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 541. ISBN 978-0-19-285445-2.
  • Rubin, Don; Solórzano, Carlos, eds. (2000). The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: The Americas. New York City: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-05929-1.
  • Shakespeare, William (1998) [First published 1623]. Orgel, Stephen (ed.). The Tempest. The Oxford Shakespeare. Oxford University Press. p. 248. ISBN 978-0-19-283414-0.
  • Wilmeth, Don B.; Miller, Tice L., eds. (1996). Cambridge Guide to American Theatre (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56444-1.
  • Wollman, E. L. (2006). The Theater Will Rock: a History of the Rock Musical: From Hair to Hedwig. Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-11576-6.

Further reading

  • Bauch, Marc. The American Musical. Marburg, Germany: Tectum Verlag, 2003. ISBN 3-8288-8458-X
  • Bloom, Ken; Vlastnik, Frank (2004-10-01). Broadway Musicals : The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 1-57912-390-2.
  • Bordman, Gerald (1978). American Musical Theatre: a Chronicle. New York: Oxford University Press. viii, 749 p.ISBN 0-19-502356-0
  • Botto, Louis; Mitchell, Brian Stokes (2002). At This Theatre: 100 Years of Broadway Shows, Stories and Stars. New York; Milwaukee, WI: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books/Playbill. ISBN 978-1-55783-566-6.
  • Bryant, Jye (2018). Writing & Staging A New Musical: A Handbook. Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 9781730897412.
  • Citron, Stephen (1991). The Musical, from the Inside Out. Chicago, Illinois: I.R. Dee. 336 p. ISBN 0-929587-79-0
  • Ewen, David (1961). The Story of American Musical Theater. First ed. Philadelphia: Chilton. v, 208 p.
  • Gänzl, Kurt. The Encyclopedia of Musical Theatre (3 Volumes). New York: Schirmer Books, 2001.
  • Kantor, Michael; Maslon, Laurence (2004). Broadway: The American Musical. New York: Bulfinch Press. ISBN 0-8212-2905-2.
  • Mordden, Ethan (1999). Beautiful Mornin': The Broadway Musical in the 1940s. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512851-6.
  • Stempel, Larry. Showtime: A History of the Broadway Musical Theater (W. W. Norton, 2010) 826 pages; comprehensive history since the mid-19th century.
  • Traubner, Richard. Operetta: A Theatrical History. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1983

External links

  • Internet Broadway Database – Cast and production lists, song lists and award lists
  • Guidetomusicaltheatre.com – synopses, cast lists, song lists, etc.
  • The Broadway Musical Home
  • Castalbumdb – Musical Cast Album Database
  • Synopses and character descriptions of most major musicals (StageAgent.com)

musical, theatre, musical, comedy, redirects, here, film, genre, musical, film, experimental, genre, music, theatre, form, theatrical, performance, that, combines, songs, spoken, dialogue, acting, dance, story, emotional, content, musical, humor, pathos, love,. Musical comedy redirects here For the film genre see Musical film For the experimental genre see Music theatre Musical theatre is a form of theatrical performance that combines songs spoken dialogue acting and dance The story and emotional content of a musical humor pathos love anger are communicated through words music movement and technical aspects of the entertainment as an integrated whole Although musical theatre overlaps with other theatrical forms like opera and dance it may be distinguished by the equal importance given to the music as compared with the dialogue movement and other elements Since the early 20th century musical theatre stage works have generally been called simply musicals The Black Crook was a hit musical on Broadway in 1866 1 Although music has been a part of dramatic presentations since ancient times modern Western musical theatre emerged during the 19th century with many structural elements established by the works of Gilbert and Sullivan in Britain and those of Harrigan and Hart in America These were followed by the numerous Edwardian musical comedies and the musical theatre works of American creators like George M Cohan at the turn of the 20th century The Princess Theatre musicals 1915 1918 were artistic steps forward beyond revues and other frothy entertainments of the early 20th century and led to such groundbreaking works as Show Boat 1927 Of Thee I Sing 1931 and Oklahoma 1943 Some of the most famous musicals through the decades that followed include My Fair Lady 1956 The Fantasticks 1960 Hair 1967 A Chorus Line 1975 Les Miserables 1985 The Phantom of the Opera 1986 Rent 1996 The Producers 2001 Wicked 2003 and Hamilton 2015 Musicals are performed around the world They may be presented in large venues such as big budget Broadway or West End productions in New York City or London Alternatively musicals may be staged in smaller venues such as fringe theatre off Broadway off off Broadway regional theatre or community theatre productions or on tour Musicals are often presented by amateur and school groups in churches schools and other performance spaces In addition to the United States and Britain there are vibrant musical theatre scenes in continental Europe Asia Australasia Canada and Latin America Contents 1 Definitions and scope 1 1 Book musicals 1 2 Comparisons with opera 1 3 Eastern traditions and other forms 2 History 2 1 Early antecedents 2 2 1850s to 1880s 2 3 1890s to the new century 2 4 Early 20th century 2 5 Show Boat and the Great Depression 2 6 The Golden Age 1940s to 1960s 2 6 1 1940s 2 6 2 1950s 2 6 3 1960s 2 7 Social themes 2 8 1970s to present 2 8 1 1970s 2 8 2 1980s 2 8 3 1990s 2 8 4 2000s present 2 8 4 1 Trends 2 8 4 2 Jukebox musicals 2 8 4 3 Film and TV musicals 2 8 4 4 2020 2021 theatre shutdown 3 International musicals 4 Amateur and school productions 5 Relevance 6 See also 7 Notes and references 7 1 Cited books 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinitions and scope EditBook musicals Edit A Gaiety Girl 1893 was one of the first hit musicals Since the 20th century the book musical has been defined as a musical play where songs and dances are fully integrated into a well made story with serious dramatic goals and which is able to evoke genuine emotions other than laughter 2 3 The three main components of a book musical are its music lyrics and book The book or script of a musical refers to the story character development and dramatic structure including the spoken dialogue and stage directions but it can also refer to the dialogue and lyrics together which are sometimes referred to as the libretto Italian for little book The music and lyrics together form the score of a musical and include songs incidental music and musical scenes which are theatrical sequence s set to music often combining song with spoken dialogue 4 The interpretation of a musical is the responsibility of its creative team which includes a director a musical director usually a choreographer and sometimes an orchestrator A musical s production is also creatively characterized by technical aspects such as set design costumes stage properties props lighting and sound The creative team designs and interpretations generally change from the original production to succeeding productions Some production elements however may be retained from the original production for example Bob Fosse s choreography in Chicago There is no fixed length for a musical While it can range from a short one act entertainment to several acts and several hours in length or even a multi evening presentation most musicals range from one and a half to three hours Musicals are usually presented in two acts with one short intermission and the first act is frequently longer than the second The first act generally introduces nearly all of the characters and most of the music and often ends with the introduction of a dramatic conflict or plot complication while the second act may introduce a few new songs but usually contains reprises of important musical themes and resolves the conflict or complication A book musical is usually built around four to six main theme tunes that are reprised later in the show although it sometimes consists of a series of songs not directly musically related Spoken dialogue is generally interspersed between musical numbers although sung dialogue or recitative may be used especially in so called sung through musicals such as Jesus Christ Superstar Falsettos Les Miserables Evita and Hamilton Several shorter musicals on Broadway and in the West End in the 21st century have been presented in one act Moments of greatest dramatic intensity in a book musical are often performed in song Proverbially when the emotion becomes too strong for speech you sing when it becomes too strong for song you dance 5 In a book musical a song is ideally crafted to suit the character or characters and their situation within the story although there have been times in the history of the musical e g from the 1890s to the 1920s when this integration between music and story has been tenuous As The New York Times critic Ben Brantley described the ideal of song in theatre when reviewing the 2008 revival of Gypsy There is no separation at all between song and character which is what happens in those uncommon moments when musicals reach upward to achieve their ideal reasons to be 6 Typically many fewer words are sung in a five minute song than are spoken in a five minute block of dialogue Therefore there is less time to develop drama in a musical than in a straight play of equivalent length since a musical usually devotes more time to music than to dialogue Within the compressed nature of a musical the writers must develop the characters and the plot The material presented in a musical may be original or it may be adapted from novels Wicked and Man of La Mancha plays Hello Dolly and Carousel classic legends Camelot historical events Evita or films The Producers and Billy Elliot On the other hand many successful musical theatre works have been adapted for musical films such as West Side Story My Fair Lady The Sound of Music Oliver and Chicago Comparisons with opera Edit George Gershwin Musical theatre is closely related to the theatrical form of opera but the two are usually distinguished by weighing a number of factors First musicals generally have a greater focus on spoken dialogue 7 Some musicals however are entirely accompanied and sung through while some operas such as Die Zauberflote and most operettas have some unaccompanied dialogue 7 Second musicals usually include more dancing as an essential part of the storytelling particularly by the principal performers as well as the chorus Third musicals often use various genres of popular music or at least popular singing and musical styles 8 Finally musicals usually avoid certain operatic conventions In particular a musical is almost always performed in the language of its audience Musicals produced on Broadway or in the West End for instance are invariably sung in English even if they were originally written in another language While an opera singer is primarily a singer and only secondarily an actor and rarely needs to dance a musical theatre performer is often an actor first but must also be a singer and dancer Someone who is equally accomplished at all three is referred to as a triple threat Composers of music for musicals often consider the vocal demands of roles with musical theatre performers in mind Today large theatres that stage musicals generally use microphones and amplification of the actors singing voices in a way that would generally be disapproved of in an operatic context 9 Some works e g by George Gershwin Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim have been made into both musical theatre and operatic productions 10 11 Similarly some older operettas or light operas such as The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan have been produced in modern adaptations that treat them as musicals For some works production styles are almost as important as the work s musical or dramatic content in defining into which art form the piece falls 12 Sondheim said I really think that when something plays Broadway it s a musical and when it plays in an opera house it s opera That s it It s the terrain the countryside the expectations of the audience that make it one thing or another 13 There remains an overlap in form between lighter operatic forms and more musically complex or ambitious musicals In practice it is often difficult to distinguish among the various kinds of musical theatre including musical play musical comedy operetta and light opera 14 Like opera the singing in musical theatre is generally accompanied by an instrumental ensemble called a pit orchestra located in a lowered area in front of the stage While opera typically uses a conventional symphony orchestra musicals are generally orchestrated for ensembles ranging from 27 players down to only a few players Rock musicals usually employ a small group of mostly rock instruments 15 and some musicals may call for only a piano or two instruments 16 The music in musicals uses a range of styles and influences including operetta classical techniques folk music jazz and local or historical styles that are appropriate to the setting 4 Musicals may begin with an overture played by the orchestra that weav es together excerpts of the score s famous melodies 17 Eastern traditions and other forms Edit Chinese opera performers There are various Eastern traditions of theatre that include music such as Chinese opera Taiwanese opera Japanese Noh and Indian musical theatre including Sanskrit drama Indian classical dance Parsi theatre and Yakshagana 18 India has since the 20th century produced numerous musical films referred to as Bollywood musicals and in Japan a series of 2 5D musicals based on popular anime and manga comics has developed in recent decades Shorter or simplified junior versions of many musicals are available for schools and youth groups and very short works created or adapted for performance by children are sometimes called minimusicals 19 20 History EditEarly antecedents Edit Main article Development of musical theatre The antecedents of musical theatre in Europe can be traced back to the theatre of ancient Greece where music and dance were included in stage comedies and tragedies during the 5th century BCE 21 22 The music from the ancient forms is lost however and they had little influence on later development of musical theatre 23 In the 12th and 13th centuries religious dramas taught the liturgy Groups of actors would use outdoor Pageant wagons stages on wheels to tell each part of the story Poetic forms sometimes alternated with the prose dialogues and liturgical chants gave way to new melodies 24 A view of Rhodes by John Webb to be painted on a backshutter for the first performance of The Siege of Rhodes 1656 The European Renaissance saw older forms evolve into two antecedents of musical theatre commedia dell arte where raucous clowns improvised familiar stories and later opera buffa In England Elizabethan and Jacobean plays frequently included music 25 and short musical plays began to be included in an evenings dramatic entertainments 26 Court masques developed during the Tudor period that involved music dancing singing and acting often with expensive costumes and a complex stage design 27 28 These developed into sung plays that are recognizable as English operas the first usually being thought of as The Siege of Rhodes 1656 29 In France meanwhile Moliere turned several of his farcical comedies into musical entertainments with songs music provided by Jean Baptiste Lully and dance in the late 17th century These influenced a brief period of English opera 30 by composers such as John Blow 31 and Henry Purcell 29 From the 18th century the most popular forms of musical theatre in Britain were ballad operas like John Gay s The Beggar s Opera that included lyrics written to the tunes of popular songs of the day often spoofing opera and later pantomime which developed from commedia dell arte and comic opera with mostly romantic plot lines like Michael Balfe s The Bohemian Girl 1845 Meanwhile on the continent singspiel comedie en vaudeville opera comique zarzuela and other forms of light musical entertainment were emerging The Beggar s Opera was the first recorded long running play of any kind running for 62 successive performances in 1728 It would take almost a century afterwards before any play broke 100 performances but the record soon reached 150 in the late 1820s 32 Other musical theatre forms developed in England by the 19th century such as music hall melodrama and burletta which were popularized partly because most London theatres were licensed only as music halls and not allowed to present plays without music Colonial America did not have a significant theatre presence until 1752 when London entrepreneur William Hallam sent a company of actors to the colonies managed by his brother Lewis 33 In New York in the summer of 1753 they performed ballad operas such as The Beggar s Opera and ballad farces 33 By the 1840s P T Barnum was operating an entertainment complex in lower Manhattan 34 Other early musical theatre in America consisted of British forms such as burletta and pantomime 23 but what a piece was called did not necessarily define what it was The 1852 Broadway extravaganza The Magic Deer advertised itself as A Serio Comico Tragico Operatical Historical Extravaganzical Burletical Tale of Enchantment 35 Theatre in New York moved from downtown gradually to midtown from around 1850 and did not arrive in the Times Square area until the 1920s and 1930s New York runs lagged far behind those in London but Laura Keene s musical burletta Seven Sisters 1860 shattered previous New York musical theatre record with a run of 253 performances 36 1850s to 1880s Edit Poster c 1879 Around 1850 the French composer Herve was experimenting with a form of comic musical theatre he called operette 37 The best known composers of operetta were Jacques Offenbach from the 1850s to the 1870s and Johann Strauss II in the 1870s and 1880s 23 Offenbach s fertile melodies combined with his librettists witty satire formed a model for the musical theatre that followed 37 Adaptations of the French operettas played in mostly bad risque translations musical burlesques music hall pantomime and burletta dominated the London musical stage into the 1870s 38 In America mid 19th century musical theatre entertainments included crude variety revue which eventually developed into vaudeville minstrel shows which soon crossed the Atlantic to Britain and Victorian burlesque first popularized in the US by British troupes 23 A hugely successful musical that premiered in New York in 1866 The Black Crook was an original musical theatre piece that conformed to many of the modern definitions of a musical including dance and original music that helped to tell the story The spectacular production famous for its skimpy costumes ran for a record breaking 474 performances 39 The same year The Black Domino Between You Me and the Post was the first show to call itself a musical comedy Comedians Edward Harrigan and Tony Hart produced and starred in musicals on Broadway between 1878 The Mulligan Guard Picnic and 1885 These musical comedies featured characters and situations taken from the everyday life of New York s lower classes and represented a significant step forward towards a more legitimate theatrical form They starred high quality singers Lillian Russell Vivienne Segal and Fay Templeton instead of the ladies of questionable repute who had starred in earlier musical forms As transportation improved poverty in London and New York diminished and street lighting made for safer travel at night the number of patrons for the growing number of theatres increased enormously Plays ran longer leading to better profits and improved production values and men began to bring their families to the theatre The first musical theatre piece to exceed 500 consecutive performances was the French operetta The Chimes of Normandy in 1878 32 English comic opera adopted many of the successful ideas of European operetta none more successfully than the series of more than a dozen long running Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas including H M S Pinafore 1878 and The Mikado 1885 37 These were sensations on both sides of the Atlantic and in Australia and helped to raise the standard for what was considered a successful show 40 These shows were designed for family audiences a marked contrast from the risque burlesques bawdy music hall shows and French operettas that sometimes drew a crowd seeking less wholesome entertainment 38 Only a few 19th century musical pieces exceeded the run of The Mikado such as Dorothy which opened in 1886 and set a new record with a run of 931 performances Gilbert and Sullivan s influence on later musical theatre was profound creating examples of how to integrate musicals so that the lyrics and dialogue advanced a coherent story 41 42 Their works were admired and copied by early authors and composers of musicals in Britain 43 44 and America 40 45 1890s to the new century Edit Further information Edwardian musical comedy Cover of the Vocal Score of Sidney Jones The Geisha A Trip to Chinatown 1891 was Broadway s long run champion until Irene in 1919 running for 657 performances but New York runs continued to be relatively short with a few exceptions compared with London runs until the 1920s 32 Gilbert and Sullivan were widely pirated and also were imitated in New York by productions such as Reginald De Koven s Robin Hood 1891 and John Philip Sousa s El Capitan 1896 A Trip to Coontown 1898 was the first musical comedy entirely produced and performed by African Americans on Broadway largely inspired by the routines of the minstrel shows followed by ragtime tinged shows Hundreds of musical comedies were staged on Broadway in the 1890s and early 20th century composed of songs written in New York s Tin Pan Alley including those by George M Cohan who worked to create an American style distinct from the Gilbert and Sullivan works The most successful New York shows were often followed by extensive national tours 46 Meanwhile musicals took over the London stage in the Gay Nineties led by producer George Edwardes who perceived that audiences wanted a new alternative to the Savoy style comic operas and their intellectual political absurdist satire He experimented with a modern dress family friendly musical theatre style with breezy popular songs snappy romantic banter and stylish spectacle at the Gaiety and his other theatres These drew on the traditions of comic opera and used elements of burlesque and of the Harrigan and Hart pieces He replaced the bawdy women of burlesque with his respectable corps of Gaiety Girls to complete the musical and visual fun The success of the first of these In Town 1892 and A Gaiety Girl 1893 set the style for the next three decades The plots were generally light romantic poor maiden loves aristocrat and wins him against all odds shows with music by Ivan Caryll Sidney Jones and Lionel Monckton These shows were immediately widely copied in America and Edwardian musical comedy swept away the earlier musical forms of comic opera and operetta The Geisha 1896 was one of the most successful in the 1890s running for more than two years and achieving great international success The Belle of New York 1898 became the first American musical to run for over a year in London The British musical comedy Florodora 1899 was a popular success on both sides of the Atlantic as was A Chinese Honeymoon 1901 which ran for a record setting 1 074 performances in London and 376 in New York After the turn of the 20th century Seymour Hicks joined forces with Edwardes and American producer Charles Frohman to create another decade of popular shows Other enduring Edwardian musical comedy hits included The Arcadians 1909 and The Quaker Girl 1910 47 Early 20th century Edit Victor Herbert Virtually eliminated from the English speaking stage by competition from the ubiquitous Edwardian musical comedies operettas returned to London and Broadway in 1907 with The Merry Widow and adaptations of continental operettas became direct competitors with musicals Franz Lehar and Oscar Straus composed new operettas that were popular in English until World War I 48 In America Victor Herbert produced a string of enduring operettas including The Fortune Teller 1898 Babes in Toyland 1903 Mlle Modiste 1905 The Red Mill 1906 and Naughty Marietta 1910 In the 1910s the team of P G Wodehouse Guy Bolton and Jerome Kern following in the footsteps of Gilbert and Sullivan created the Princess Theatre shows and paved the way for Kern s later work by showing that a musical could combine light popular entertainment with continuity between its story and songs 41 Historian Gerald Bordman wrote These shows built and polished the mold from which almost all later major musical comedies evolved The characters and situations were within the limitations of musical comedy license believable and the humor came from the situations or the nature of the characters Kern s exquisitely flowing melodies were employed to further the action or develop characterization Edwardian musical comedy was often guilty of inserting songs in a hit or miss fashion The Princess Theatre musicals brought about a change in approach P G Wodehouse the most observant literate and witty lyricist of his day and the team of Bolton Wodehouse and Kern had an influence felt to this day 49 The theatre going public needed escapist entertainment during the dark times of World War I and they flocked to the theatre The 1919 hit musical Irene ran for 670 performances a Broadway record that held until 1938 50 The British theatre public supported far longer runs like that of The Maid of the Mountains 1 352 performances and especially Chu Chin Chow Its run of 2 238 performances was more than twice as long as any previous musical setting a record that stood for nearly forty years 51 Revues like The Bing Boys Are Here in Britain and those of Florenz Ziegfeld and his imitators in America were also extraordinarily popular 35 Sheet music from Sally 1920 The musicals of the Roaring Twenties borrowing from vaudeville music hall and other light entertainments tended to emphasize big dance routines and popular songs at the expense of plot Typical of the decade were lighthearted productions like Sally Lady Be Good No No Nanette Oh Kay and Funny Face Despite forgettable stories these musicals featured stars such as Marilyn Miller and Fred Astaire and produced dozens of enduring popular songs by Kern George and Ira Gershwin Irving Berlin Cole Porter and Rodgers and Hart Popular music was dominated by musical theatre standards such as Fascinating Rhythm Tea for Two and Someone to Watch Over Me Many shows were revues series of sketches and songs with little or no connection between them The best known of these were the annual Ziegfeld Follies spectacular song and dance revues on Broadway featuring extravagant sets elaborate costumes and beautiful chorus girls 23 These spectacles also raised production values and mounting a musical generally became more expensive 35 Shuffle Along 1921 an all African American show was a hit on Broadway 52 A new generation of composers of operettas also emerged in the 1920s such as Rudolf Friml and Sigmund Romberg to create a series of popular Broadway hits 53 In London writer stars such as Ivor Novello and Noel Coward became popular but the primacy of British musical theatre from the 19th century through 1920 was gradually replaced by American innovation especially after World War I as Kern and other Tin Pan Alley composers began to bring new musical styles such as ragtime and jazz to the theatres and the Shubert Brothers took control of the Broadway theatres Musical theatre writer Andrew Lamb notes The operatic and theatrical styles of nineteenth century social structures were replaced by a musical style more aptly suited to twentieth century society and its vernacular idiom It was from America that the more direct style emerged and in America that it was able to flourish in a developing society less hidebound by nineteenth century tradition 54 In France comedie musicale was written between in the early decades of the century for such stars as Yvonne Printemps 55 Show Boat and the Great Depression Edit Progressing far beyond the comparatively frivolous musicals and sentimental operettas of the decade Broadway s Show Boat 1927 represented an even more complete integration of book and score than the Princess Theatre musicals with dramatic themes told through the music dialogue setting and movement This was accomplished by combining the lyricism of Kern s music with the skillful libretto of Oscar Hammerstein II One historian wrote Here we come to a completely new genre the musical play as distinguished from musical comedy Now everything else was subservient to that play Now came complete integration of song humor and production numbers into a single and inextricable artistic entity 56 Rodgers and Hart As the Great Depression set in during the post Broadway national tour of Show Boat the public turned back to mostly light escapist song and dance entertainment 49 Audiences on both sides of the Atlantic had little money to spend on entertainment and only a few stage shows anywhere exceeded a run of 500 performances during the decade The revue The Band Wagon 1931 starred dancing partners Fred Astaire and his sister Adele while Porter s Anything Goes 1934 confirmed Ethel Merman s position as the First Lady of musical theatre a title she maintained for many years Coward and Novello continued to deliver old fashioned sentimental musicals such as The Dancing Years while Rodgers and Hart returned from Hollywood to create a series of successful Broadway shows including On Your Toes 1936 with Ray Bolger the first Broadway musical to make dramatic use of classical dance Babes in Arms 1937 and The Boys from Syracuse 1938 Porter added Du Barry Was a Lady 1939 The longest running piece of musical theatre of the 1930s was Hellzapoppin 1938 a revue with audience participation which played for 1 404 performances setting a new Broadway record 50 Still a few creative teams began to build on Show Boat s innovations Of Thee I Sing 1931 a political satire by the Gershwins was the first musical awarded the Pulitzer Prize 23 57 As Thousands Cheer 1933 a revue by Irving Berlin and Moss Hart in which each song or sketch was based on a newspaper headline marked the first Broadway show in which an African American Ethel Waters starred alongside white actors Waters numbers included Supper Time a woman s lament for her husband who has been lynched 58 The Gershwins Porgy and Bess 1935 featured an all African American cast and blended operatic folk and jazz idioms The Cradle Will Rock 1937 directed by Orson Welles was a highly political pro union piece that despite the controversy surrounding it ran for 108 performances 35 Rodgers and Hart s I d Rather Be Right 1937 was a political satire with George M Cohan as President Franklin D Roosevelt and Kurt Weill s Knickerbocker Holiday depicted New York City s early history while good naturedly satirizing Roosevelt s good intentions The motion picture mounted a challenge to the stage Silent films had presented only limited competition but by the end of the 1920s films like The Jazz Singer could be presented with synchronized sound Talkie films at low prices effectively killed off vaudeville by the early 1930s 59 Despite the economic woes of the 1930s and the competition from film the musical survived In fact it continued to evolve thematically beyond the gags and showgirls musicals of the Gay Nineties and Roaring Twenties and the sentimental romance of operetta adding technical expertise and the fast paced staging and naturalistic dialogue style led by director George Abbott 23 The Golden Age 1940s to 1960s Edit Rodgers and Hammerstein left and right and Irving Berlin center at the St James Theatre in 1948 1940s Edit The 1940s would begin with more hits from Porter Irving Berlin Rodgers and Hart Weill and Gershwin some with runs over 500 performances as the economy rebounded but artistic change was in the air Rodgers and Hammerstein s Oklahoma 1943 completed the revolution begun by Show Boat by tightly integrating all the aspects of musical theatre with a cohesive plot songs that furthered the action of the story and featured dream ballets and other dances that advanced the plot and developed the characters rather than using dance as an excuse to parade scantily clad women across the stage 3 Rodgers and Hammerstein hired ballet choreographer Agnes de Mille who used everyday motions to help the characters express their ideas It defied musical conventions by raising its first act curtain not on a bevy of chorus girls but rather on a woman churning butter with an off stage voice singing the opening lines of Oh What a Beautiful Mornin unaccompanied It drew rave reviews set off a box office frenzy and received a Pulitzer Prize 60 Brooks Atkinson wrote in The New York Times that the show s opening number changed the history of musical theater After a verse like that sung to a buoyant melody the banalities of the old musical stage became intolerable 61 It was the first blockbuster Broadway show running a total of 2 212 performances and was made into a hit film It remains one of the most frequently produced of the team s projects William A Everett and Paul R Laird wrote that this was a show that like Show Boat became a milestone so that later historians writing about important moments in twentieth century theatre would begin to identify eras according to their relationship to Oklahoma 62 Mary Martin starred in several Broadway hits of this era After Oklahoma Rodgers and Hammerstein were the most important contributors to the musical play form The examples they set in creating vital plays often rich with social thought provided the necessary encouragement for other gifted writers to create musical plays of their own 56 The two collaborators created an extraordinary collection of some of musical theatre s best loved and most enduring classics including Carousel 1945 South Pacific 1949 The King and I 1951 and The Sound of Music 1959 Some of these musicals treat more serious subject matter than most earlier shows the villain in Oklahoma is a suspected murderer and psychopath with a fondness for lewd post cards Carousel deals with spousal abuse thievery suicide and the afterlife South Pacific explores miscegenation even more thoroughly than Show Boat and the hero of The King and I dies onstage The show s creativity stimulated Rodgers and Hammerstein s contemporaries and ushered in the Golden Age of American musical theatre 61 Americana was displayed on Broadway during the Golden Age as the wartime cycle of shows began to arrive An example of this is On the Town 1944 written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green composed by Leonard Bernstein and choreographed by Jerome Robbins The story is set during wartime and concerns three sailors who are on a 24 hour shore leave in New York City during which each falls in love The show also gives the impression of a country with an uncertain future as the sailors and their women also have Irving Berlin used sharpshooter Annie Oakley s career as a basis for his Annie Get Your Gun 1946 1 147 performances Burton Lane E Y Harburg and Fred Saidy combined political satire with Irish whimsy for their fantasy Finian s Rainbow 1947 725 performances and Cole Porter found inspiration in William Shakespeare s The Taming of the Shrew for Kiss Me Kate 1948 1 077 performances The American musicals overwhelmed the old fashioned British Coward Novello style shows one of the last big successes of which was Novello s Perchance to Dream 1945 1 021 performances The formula for the Golden Age musicals reflected one or more of four widely held perceptions of the American dream That stability and worth derives from a love relationship sanctioned and restricted by Protestant ideals of marriage that a married couple should make a moral home with children away from the city in a suburb or small town that the woman s function was as homemaker and mother and that Americans incorporate an independent and pioneering spirit or that their success is self made 63 1950s Edit Further information Musical film Julie Andrews with Richard Burton in Camelot 1960 The 1950s were crucial to the development of the American musical 64 Damon Runyon s eclectic characters were at the core of Frank Loesser s and Abe Burrows Guys and Dolls 1950 1 200 performances and the Gold Rush was the setting for Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe s Paint Your Wagon 1951 The relatively brief seven month run of that show didn t discourage Lerner and Loewe from collaborating again this time on My Fair Lady 1956 an adaptation of George Bernard Shaw s Pygmalion starring Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews which at 2 717 performances held the long run record for many years Popular Hollywood films were made of all of these musicals Two hits by British creators in this decade were The Boy Friend 1954 which ran for 2 078 performances in London and marked Andrews American debut and Salad Days 1954 with a run of 2 283 performances 51 Another record was set by The Threepenny Opera which ran for 2 707 performances becoming the longest running off Broadway musical until The Fantasticks The production also broke ground by showing that musicals could be profitable off Broadway in a small scale small orchestra format This was confirmed in 1959 when a revival of Jerome Kern and P G Wodehouse s Leave It to Jane ran for more than two years The 1959 1960 off Broadway season included a dozen musicals and revues including Little Mary Sunshine The Fantasticks and Ernest in Love a musical adaptation of Oscar Wilde s 1895 hit The Importance of Being Earnest 65 Leonard Bernstein 1971 West Side Story 1957 transported Romeo and Juliet to modern day New York City and converted the feuding Montague and Capulet families into opposing ethnic gangs the Jets and the Sharks The book was adapted by Arthur Laurents with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by newcomer Stephen Sondheim It was embraced by the critics but failed to be a popular choice for the blue haired matinee ladies who preferred the small town River City Iowa of Meredith Willson s The Music Man 1957 to the alleys of Manhattan s Upper West Side Apparently Tony Award voters were of a similar mind since they favored the former over the latter West Side Story had a respectable run of 732 performances 1 040 in the West End while The Music Man ran nearly twice as long with 1 375 performances However the 1961 film of West Side Story was extremely successful 66 Laurents and Sondheim teamed up again for Gypsy 1959 702 performances with Jule Styne providing the music for a backstage story about the most driven stage mother of all time stripper Gypsy Rose Lee s mother Rose The original production ran for 702 performances and was given four subsequent revivals with Angela Lansbury Tyne Daly Bernadette Peters and Patti LuPone later tackling the role made famous by Ethel Merman Although directors and choreographers have had a major influence on musical theatre style since at least the 19th century 67 George Abbott and his collaborators and successors took a central role in integrating movement and dance fully into musical theatre productions in the Golden Age 68 Abbott introduced ballet as a story telling device in On Your Toes in 1936 which was followed by Agnes de Mille s ballet and choreography in Oklahoma 69 After Abbott collaborated with Jerome Robbins in On the Town and other shows Robbins combined the roles of director and choreographer emphasizing the story telling power of dance in West Side Story A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 1962 and Fiddler on the Roof 1964 Bob Fosse choreographed for Abbott in The Pajama Game 1956 and Damn Yankees 1957 injecting playful sexuality into those hits He was later the director choreographer for Sweet Charity 1968 Pippin 1972 and Chicago 1975 Other notable director choreographers have included Gower Champion Tommy Tune Michael Bennett Gillian Lynne and Susan Stroman Prominent directors have included Hal Prince who also got his start with Abbott 68 and Trevor Nunn 70 During the Golden Age automotive companies and other large corporations began to hire Broadway talent to write corporate musicals private shows only seen by their employees or customers 71 72 The 1950s ended with Rodgers and Hammerstein s last hit The Sound of Music which also became another hit for Mary Martin It ran for 1 443 performances and shared the Tony Award for Best Musical Together with its extremely successful 1965 film version it has become one of the most popular musicals in history 1960s Edit In 1960 The Fantasticks was first produced off Broadway This intimate allegorical show would quietly run for over 40 years at the Sullivan Street Theatre in Greenwich Village becoming by far the longest running musical in history Its authors produced other innovative works in the 1960s such as Celebration and I Do I Do the first two character Broadway musical The 1960s would see a number of blockbusters like Fiddler on the Roof 1964 3 242 performances Hello Dolly 1964 2 844 performances Funny Girl 1964 1 348 performances and Man of La Mancha 1965 2 328 performances and some more risque pieces like Cabaret before ending with the emergence of the rock musical Two men had considerable impact on musical theatre history beginning in this decade Stephen Sondheim and Jerry Herman Bernadette Peters shown in 2008 has starred in five Sondheim musicals The first project for which Sondheim wrote both music and lyrics was A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 1962 964 performances with a book based on the works of Plautus by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart starring Zero Mostel Sondheim moved the musical beyond its concentration on the romantic plots typical of earlier eras his work tended to be darker exploring the grittier sides of life both present and past Other early Sondheim works include Anyone Can Whistle 1964 which ran only nine performances despite having stars Lee Remick and Angela Lansbury and the successful Company 1970 Follies 1971 and A Little Night Music 1973 Later Sondheim found inspiration in unlikely sources the opening of Japan to Western trade for Pacific Overtures 1976 a legendary murderous barber seeking revenge in the Industrial Age of London for Sweeney Todd 1979 the paintings of Georges Seurat for Sunday in the Park with George 1984 fairy tales for Into the Woods 1987 and a collection of presidential assassins in Assassins 1990 While some critics have argued that some of Sondheim s musicals lack commercial appeal others have praised their lyrical sophistication and musical complexity as well as the interplay of lyrics and music in his shows Some of Sondheim s notable innovations include a show presented in reverse Merrily We Roll Along and the above mentioned Anyone Can Whistle in which the first act ends with the cast informing the audience that they are mad Jerry Herman played a significant role in American musical theatre beginning with his first Broadway production Milk and Honey 1961 563 performances about the founding of the state of Israel and continuing with the blockbuster hits Hello Dolly 1964 2 844 performances Mame 1966 1 508 performances and La Cage aux Folles 1983 1 761 performances Even his less successful shows like Dear World 1969 and Mack and Mabel 1974 have had memorable scores Mack and Mabel was later reworked into a London hit Writing both words and music many of Herman s show tunes have become popular standards including Hello Dolly We Need a Little Christmas I Am What I Am Mame The Best of Times Before the Parade Passes By Put On Your Sunday Clothes It Only Takes a Moment Bosom Buddies and I Won t Send Roses recorded by such artists as Louis Armstrong Eydie Gorme Barbra Streisand Petula Clark and Bernadette Peters Herman s songbook has been the subject of two popular musical revues Jerry s Girls Broadway 1985 and Showtune off Broadway 2003 The musical started to diverge from the relatively narrow confines of the 1950s Rock music would be used in several Broadway musicals beginning with Hair which featured not only rock music but also nudity and controversial opinions about the Vietnam War race relations and other social issues 73 Social themes Edit After Show Boat and Porgy and Bess and as the struggle in America and elsewhere for minorities civil rights progressed Hammerstein Harold Arlen Yip Harburg and others were emboldened to write more musicals and operas that aimed to normalize societal toleration of minorities and urged racial harmony Early Golden Age works that focused on racial tolerance included Finian s Rainbow and South Pacific Towards the end of the Golden Age several shows tackled Jewish subjects and issues such as Fiddler on the Roof Milk and Honey Blitz and later Rags The original concept that became West Side Story was set in the Lower East Side during Easter Passover celebrations the rival gangs were to be Jewish and Italian Catholic The creative team later decided that the Polish white vs Puerto Rican conflict was fresher 74 Tolerance as an important theme in musicals has continued in recent decades The final expression of West Side Story left a message of racial tolerance By the end of the 1960s musicals became racially integrated with black and white cast members even covering each other s roles as they did in Hair 75 Homosexuality has also been explored in musicals starting with Hair and even more overtly in La Cage aux Folles Falsettos Rent Hedwig and the Angry Inch and other shows in recent decades Parade is a sensitive exploration of both anti Semitism and historical American racism and Ragtime similarly explores the experience of immigrants and minorities in America 1970s to present Edit 1970s Edit After the success of Hair rock musicals flourished in the 1970s with Jesus Christ Superstar Godspell The Rocky Horror Show Evita and Two Gentlemen of Verona Some of those began as concept albums which were then adapted to the stage most notably Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita Others had no dialogue or were otherwise reminiscent of opera with dramatic emotional themes these sometimes started as concept albums and were referred to as rock operas Shows like Raisin Dreamgirls Purlie and The Wiz brought a significant African American influence to Broadway More varied musical genres and styles were incorporated into musicals both on and especially off Broadway At the same time Stephen Sondheim found success with some of his musicals as mentioned above A Chorus Line was one of 55 productions that Joseph Papp s Public Theatre has brought to Broadway In 1975 the dance musical A Chorus Line emerged from recorded group therapy style sessions Michael Bennett conducted with gypsies those who sing and dance in support of the leading players from the Broadway community From hundreds of hours of tapes James Kirkwood Jr and Nick Dante fashioned a book about an audition for a musical incorporating many real life stories from the sessions some who attended the sessions eventually played variations of themselves or each other in the show With music by Marvin Hamlisch and lyrics by Edward Kleban A Chorus Line first opened at Joseph Papp s Public Theater in lower Manhattan What initially had been planned as a limited engagement eventually moved to the Shubert Theatre on Broadway 76 for a run of 6 137 performances becoming the longest running production in Broadway history up to that time The show swept the Tony Awards and won the Pulitzer Prize and its hit song What I Did for Love became a standard 77 Broadway audiences welcomed musicals that varied from the golden age style and substance John Kander and Fred Ebb explored the rise of Nazism in Germany in Cabaret and murder and the media in Prohibition era Chicago which relied on old vaudeville techniques Pippin by Stephen Schwartz was set in the days of Charlemagne Federico Fellini s autobiographical film 8 became Maury Yeston s Nine At the end of the decade Evita and Sweeney Todd were precursors of the darker big budget musicals of the 1980s that depended on dramatic stories sweeping scores and spectacular effects At the same time old fashioned values were still embraced in such hits as Annie 42nd Street My One and Only and popular revivals of No No Nanette and Irene Although many film versions of musicals were made in the 1970s few were critical or box office successes with the notable exceptions of Fiddler on the Roof Cabaret and Grease 78 1980s Edit Cameron Mackintosh The 1980s saw the influence of European megamusicals on Broadway in the West End and elsewhere These typically feature a pop influenced score large casts and spectacular sets and special effects a falling chandelier in The Phantom of the Opera a helicopter landing on stage in Miss Saigon and big budgets Some were based on novels or other works of literature The British team of composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and producer Cameron Mackintosh started the megamusical phenomenon with their 1981 musical Cats based on the poems of T S Eliot which overtook A Chorus Line to become the longest running Broadway show Lloyd Webber followed up with Starlight Express 1984 performed on roller skates The Phantom of the Opera 1986 also with Mackintosh derived from the novel of the same name and Sunset Boulevard 1993 from the 1950 film of the same name Phantom would surpass Cats to become the longest running show in Broadway history a record it still holds 79 80 The French team of Claude Michel Schonberg and Alain Boublil wrote Les Miserables based on the novel of the same name whose 1985 London production was produced by Mackintosh and became and still is the longest running musical in West End and Broadway history The team produced another hit with Miss Saigon 1989 which was inspired by the Puccini opera Madama Butterfly 79 80 The megamusicals huge budgets redefined expectations for financial success on Broadway and in the West End In earlier years it was possible for a show to be considered a hit after a run of several hundred performances but with multimillion dollar production costs a show must run for years simply to turn a profit Megamusicals were also reproduced in productions around the world multiplying their profit potential while expanding the global audience for musical theatre 80 1990s Edit Audra McDonald In the 1990s a new generation of theatrical composers emerged including Jason Robert Brown and Michael John LaChiusa who began with productions off Broadway The most conspicuous success of these artists was Jonathan Larson s show Rent 1996 a rock musical based on the opera La boheme about a struggling community of artists in Manhattan While the cost of tickets to Broadway and West End musicals was escalating beyond the budget of many theatregoers Rent was marketed to increase the popularity of musicals among a younger audience It featured a young cast and a heavily rock influenced score the musical became a hit Its young fans many of them students calling themselves RENTheads camped out at the Nederlander Theatre in hopes of winning the lottery for 20 front row tickets and some saw the show dozens of times Other shows on Broadway followed Rent s lead by offering heavily discounted day of performance or standing room tickets although often the discounts are offered only to students 81 The 1990s also saw the influence of large corporations on the production of musicals The most important has been Disney Theatrical Productions which began adapting some of Disney s animated film musicals for the stage starting with Beauty and the Beast 1994 The Lion King 1997 and Aida 2000 the latter two with music by Elton John The Lion King is the highest grossing musical in Broadway history 82 The Who s Tommy 1993 a theatrical adaptation of the rock opera Tommy achieved a healthy run of 899 performances but was criticized for sanitizing the story and musical theatre izing the rock music 83 Despite the growing number of large scale musicals in the 1980s and 1990s a number of lower budget smaller scale musicals managed to find critical and financial success such as Falsettoland and Little Shop of Horrors Bat Boy The Musical and Blood Brothers The topics of these pieces vary widely and the music ranges from rock to pop but they often are produced off Broadway or for smaller London theatres and some of these stagings have been regarded as imaginative and innovative 84 2000s present Edit Trends Edit In the new century familiarity has been embraced by producers and investors anxious to guarantee that they recoup their considerable investments Some took usually modest budget chances on new and creative material such as Urinetown 2001 Avenue Q 2003 The Light in the Piazza 2005 Spring Awakening 2006 In the Heights 2008 Next to Normal 2009 American Idiot 2010 and The Book of Mormon 2011 Hamilton 2015 transformed under dramatized American history into an unusual hip hop inflected hit 85 In 2011 Sondheim argued that of all forms of contemporary pop music rap was the closest to traditional musical theatre and was one pathway to the future 86 However most major market 21st century productions have taken a safe route with revivals of familiar fare such as Fiddler on the Roof A Chorus Line South Pacific Gypsy Hair West Side Story and Grease or with adaptations of other proven material such as literature The Scarlet Pimpernel Wicked and Fun Home hoping that the shows would have a built in audience as a result This trend is especially persistent with film adaptations including The Producers Spamalot Hairspray Legally Blonde The Color Purple Xanadu Billy Elliot Shrek Waitress and Groundhog Day 87 Some critics have argued that the reuse of film plots especially those from Disney such as Mary Poppins and The Little Mermaid equate the Broadway and West End musical to a tourist attraction rather than a creative outlet 35 The cast of Hamilton meets President Obama in 2015 Today it is less likely that a sole producer such as David Merrick or Cameron Mackintosh backs a production Corporate sponsors dominate Broadway and often alliances are formed to stage musicals which require an investment of 10 million or more In 2002 the credits for Thoroughly Modern Millie listed ten producers and among those names were entities composed of several individuals 88 Typically off Broadway and regional theatres tend to produce smaller and therefore less expensive musicals and development of new musicals has increasingly taken place outside of New York and London or in smaller venues For example Spring Awakening Fun Home and Hamilton were developed off Broadway before being launched on Broadway Several musicals returned to the spectacle format that was so successful in the 1980s recalling extravaganzas that have been presented at times throughout theatre history since the ancient Romans staged mock sea battles Examples include the musical adaptations of Lord of the Rings 2007 Gone with the Wind 2008 and Spider Man Turn Off the Dark 2011 These musicals involved songwriters with little theatrical experience and the expensive productions generally lost money Conversely The Drowsy Chaperone Avenue Q The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Xanadu and Fun Home among others have been presented in smaller scale productions mostly uninterrupted by an intermission with short running times and enjoyed financial success In 2013 Time magazine reported that a trend off Broadway has been immersive theatre citing shows such as Natasha Pierre amp The Great Comet of 1812 2012 and Here Lies Love 2013 in which the staging takes place around and within the audience 89 The shows set a joint record each receiving 11 nominations for Lucille Lortel Awards 90 and feature contemporary scores 91 92 In 2013 Cyndi Lauper was the first female composer to win the Tony for Best Score without a male collaborator for writing the music and lyrics for Kinky Boots In 2015 for the first time an all female writing team Lisa Kron and Jeanine Tesori won the Tony Award for Best Original Score and Best Book for Kron for Fun Home 93 although work by male songwriters continues to be produced more often 94 Jukebox musicals Edit Another trend has been to create a minimal plot to fit a collection of songs that have already been hits Following the earlier success of Buddy The Buddy Holly Story these have included Movin Out 2002 based on the tunes of Billy Joel Jersey Boys 2006 The Four Seasons Rock of Ages 2009 featuring classic rock of the 1980s and many others This style is often referred to as the jukebox musical 95 Similar but more plot driven musicals have been built around the canon of a particular pop group including Mamma Mia 1999 based on the songs of ABBA Our House 2002 based on the songs of Madness and We Will Rock You 2002 based on the songs of Queen Film and TV musicals Edit Further information Musical film Zac Efron and Zendaya pictured along with Hugh Jackman brought star power to The Greatest Showman Live action film musicals were nearly dead in the 1980s and early 1990s with exceptions of Victor Victoria Little Shop of Horrors and the 1996 film of Evita 96 In the new century Baz Luhrmann began a revival of the film musical with Moulin Rouge 2001 This was followed by Chicago 2002 Phantom of the Opera 2004 Rent 2005 Dreamgirls 2006 Hairspray Enchanted and Sweeney Todd all in 2007 Mamma Mia 2008 Nine 2009 Les Miserables and Pitch Perfect both in 2012 Into The Woods The Last Five Years 2014 La La Land 2016 The Greatest Showman 2017 A Star Is Born and Mary Poppins Returns both 2018 Rocketman 2019 and In the Heights and Steven Spielberg s version of West Side Story both in 2021 among others Dr Seuss s How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2000 and The Cat in the Hat 2003 turned children s books into live action film musicals After the immense success of Disney and other houses with animated film musicals beginning with The Little Mermaid in 1989 and running throughout the 1990s including some more adult themed films like South Park Bigger Longer amp Uncut 1999 fewer animated film musicals were released in the first decade of the 21st century 96 The genre made a comeback beginning in 2010 with Tangled 2010 Rio 2011 and Frozen 2013 In Asia India continues to produce numerous Bollywood film musicals and Japan produces Anime and Manga film musicals Made for TV musical films were popular in the 1990s such as Gypsy 1993 Cinderella 1997 and Annie 1999 Several made for TV musicals in the first decade of the 21st century were adaptations of the stage version such as South Pacific 2001 The Music Man 2003 and Once Upon a Mattress 2005 and a televised version of the stage musical Legally Blonde in 2007 Additionally several musicals were filmed on stage and broadcast on Public Television for example Contact in 2002 and Kiss Me Kate and Oklahoma in 2003 The made for TV musical High School Musical 2006 and its several sequels enjoyed particular success and were adapted for stage musicals and other media Dove Cameron has starred in such TV musicals as Descendants Hairspray Live and Schmigadoon In 2013 NBC began a series of live television broadcasts of musicals with The Sound of Music Live 97 Although the production received mixed reviews it was a ratings success 98 Further broadcasts have included Peter Pan Live NBC 2014 The Wiz Live NBC 2015 99 a UK broadcast The Sound of Music Live ITV 2015 100 Grease Live Fox 2016 101 102 Hairspray Live NBC 2016 A Christmas Story Live Fox 2017 103 and Rent Live Fox 2019 104 Some television shows have set episodes as a musical Examples include episodes of Ally McBeal Xena Warrior Princess The Bitter Suite and Lyre Lyre Heart s On Fire Psych Psych The Musical Buffy the Vampire Slayer Once More with Feeling That s So Raven Daria Dexter s Laboratory The Powerpuff Girls The Flash Once Upon a Time Oz Scrubs one episode was written by the creators of Avenue Q Batman The Brave and the Bold Mayhem of the Music Meister and That 70s Show the 100th episode That 70s Musical Others have included scenes where characters suddenly begin singing and dancing in a musical theatre style during an episode such as in several episodes of The Simpsons 30 Rock Hannah Montana South Park Bob s Burgers and Family Guy 105 Television series that have extensively used the musical format have included Cop Rock Flight of the Conchords Glee Smash and Crazy Ex Girlfriend There have also been musicals made for the internet including Dr Horrible s Sing Along Blog about a low rent super villain played by Neil Patrick Harris It was written during the WGA writer s strike 106 Since 2006 reality TV shows have been used to help market musical revivals by holding a talent competition to cast usually female leads Examples of these are How Do You Solve a Problem like Maria Grease You re the One That I Want Any Dream Will Do Legally Blonde The Musical The Search for Elle Woods I d Do Anything and Over the Rainbow In 2021 Schmigadoon was a parody of and homage to Golden Age musicals of the 1940s and 1950s 107 2020 2021 theatre shutdown Edit Marquee of the In the Heart of the Beast Theatre in Minneapolis Minnesota during the COVID 19 pandemic The COVID 19 pandemic caused the closure of theatres and theatre festivals around the world in early 2020 including all Broadway 108 and West End theatres 109 Many performing arts institutions attempted to adapt or reduce their losses by offering new or expanded digital services In particular this resulted in the online streaming of previously recorded performances of many companies 110 111 112 as well as bespoke crowdsourcing projects 113 114 For example The Sydney Theatre Company commissioned actors to film themselves at home discussing then performing a monologue from one of the characters they had previously played on stage 115 The casts of musicals such as Hamilton and Mamma Mia united on Zoom calls to entertain individuals and the public 116 117 Some performances were streamed live or presented outdoors or in other socially distanced ways sometimes allowing audience members to interact with the cast 118 Radio theatre festivals were broadcast 119 Virtual and even crowd sourced musicals were created such as Ratatouille the Musical 120 121 Filmed versions of major musicals like Hamilton were released on streaming platforms 122 Andrew Lloyd Webber released recordings of his musicals on YouTube 123 Due to the closures and loss of ticket sales many theatre companies were placed in financial peril Some governments offered emergency aid to the arts 124 125 126 Some musical theatre markets began to reopen in fits and starts by early 2021 127 with West End theatres postponing their reopening from June to July 128 and Broadway starting in September 129 Throughout 2021 however spikes in the pandemic have caused some closures even after markets reopened 130 131 International musicals EditThe U S and Britain were the most active sources of book musicals from the 19th century through much of the 20th century although Europe produced various forms of popular light opera and operetta for example Spanish Zarzuela during that period and even earlier However the light musical stage in other countries has become more active in recent decades Musicals from other English speaking countries notably Australia and Canada often do well locally and occasionally even reach Broadway or the West End e g The Boy from Oz and The Drowsy Chaperone South Africa has an active musical theatre scene with revues like African Footprint and Umoja and book musicals such as Kat and the Kings and Sarafina touring internationally Locally musicals like Vere Love and Green Onions Over the Rainbow the all new all gay extravaganza and Bangbroek Mountain and In Briefs a queer little Musical have been produced successfully Japan s all female Takarazuka Revue in a 1930 performance of Parisette Successful musicals from continental Europe include shows from among other countries Germany Elixier and Ludwig II Austria Tanz der Vampire Elisabeth Mozart and Rebecca Czech Republic Dracula France Starmania Notre Dame de Paris Les Miserables Romeo et Juliette and Mozart l opera rock and Spain Hoy no me puedo levantar and The Musical Sancho Panza Japan has recently seen the growth of an indigenous form of musical theatre both animated and live action mostly based on Anime and Manga such as Kiki s Delivery Service and Tenimyu The popular Sailor Moon metaseries has had twenty nine Sailor Moon musicals spanning thirteen years Beginning in 1914 a series of popular revues have been performed by the all female Takarazuka Revue which currently fields five performing troupes Elsewhere in Asia the Indian Bollywood musical mostly in the form of motion pictures is tremendously successful 132 Beginning with a 2002 tour of Les Miserables various Western musicals have been imported to mainland China and staged in English 133 Attempts at localizing Western productions in China began in 2008 when Fame was produced in Mandarin with a full Chinese cast at the Central Academy of Drama in Beijing 134 Since then other western productions have been staged in China in Mandarin with a Chinese cast The first Chinese production in the style of Western musical theatre was The Gold Sand in 2005 133 In addition Li Dun a well known Chinese producer produced Butterflies based on a classic Chinese love tragedy in 2007 as well as Love U Teresa in 2011 133 Amateur and school productions Edit Naples Players teen Thoroughly Modern Millie 2009 Musicals are often presented by amateur and school groups in churches schools and other performance spaces 135 136 Although amateur theatre has existed for centuries even in the New World 137 Francois Cellier and Cunningham Bridgeman wrote in 1914 that prior to the late 19th century amateur actors were treated with contempt by professionals After the formation of amateur Gilbert and Sullivan companies licensed to perform the Savoy operas professionals recognized that the amateur societies support the culture of music and the drama They are now accepted as useful training schools for the legitimate stage and from the volunteer ranks have sprung many present day favourites 138 The National Operatic and Dramatic Association was founded in the UK in 1899 It reported in 1914 that nearly 200 amateur dramatic societies were producing Gilbert and Sullivan works in Britain that year 138 Similarly more than 100 community theatres were founded in the US in the early 20th century This number has grown to an estimated 18 000 in the US 137 The Educational Theater Association in the US has nearly 5 000 member schools 139 Relevance Edit The Lion King on Broadway The Broadway League announced that in the 2007 08 season 12 27 million tickets were purchased for Broadway shows for a gross sale amount of almost a billion dollars 140 The League further reported that during the 2006 07 season approximately 65 of Broadway tickets were purchased by tourists and that foreign tourists were 16 of attendees 141 The Society of London Theatre reported that 2007 set a record for attendance in London Total attendees in the major commercial and grant aided theatres in Central London were 13 6 million and total ticket revenues were 469 7 million 142 The international musicals scene has been increasingly active in recent decades Nevertheless Stephen Sondheim commented in the year 2000 You have two kinds of shows on Broadway revivals and the same kind of musicals over and over again all spectacles You get your tickets for The Lion King a year in advance and essentially a family pass on to their children the idea that that s what the theater is a spectacular musical you see once a year a stage version of a movie It has nothing to do with theater at all It has to do with seeing what is familiar I don t think the theatre will die per se but it s never going to be what it was It s a tourist attraction 143 However noting the success in recent decades of original material and creative re imaginings of film plays and literature theatre historian John Kenrick countered Is the Musical dead Absolutely not Changing Always The musical has been changing ever since Offenbach did his first rewrite in the 1850s And change is the clearest sign that the musical is still a living growing genre Will we ever return to the so called golden age with musicals at the center of popular culture Probably not Public taste has undergone fundamental changes and the commercial arts can only flow where the paying public allows 35 See also Edit Music portal Theatre portalCast recording Lists of musicals List of musicals filmed live on stage Long running musical theatre productions Music theatre Parsi theatre 2 5D musicalNotes and references Edit Morley p 15 Everett and Laird p 137 a b Rubin and Solorzano p 438 a b Shepherd John Horn David 2012 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 8 Genres North America A amp C Black p 104 ISBN 978 1 4411 4874 2 Wattenberg Ben The American Musical Part 2 PBS org May 24 2007 accessed February 7 2017 Brantley Ben Curtain Up It s Patti s Turn at Gypsy The New York Times March 28 2008 accessed May 26 2009 a b Cohen and Sherman p 233 Tommasini Anthony Opera Musical Please Respect the Difference The New York Times July 7 2011 accessed December 13 2017 Gamerman Ellen Broadway Turns Up the Volume The Wall Street Journal Ellen October 23 2009 accessed December 13 2017 Porgy and Bess That old black magic The Independent October 27 2006 accessed December 27 2018 Lister David The Royal Opera opens a window on Sondheim The Independent April 5 2003 accessed December 27 2018 Teachout Terry Sweeney Todd Archived 2008 04 18 at the Wayback Machine National Endowment for the Arts accessed November 1 2009 White Michael Something for the weekend sir The Independent London December 15 2003 accessed May 26 2009 Kowalke Kim H Theorizing the Golden Age Musical Genre Structure Syntax in A MusicTheoretical Matrix Essays in Honor of Allen Forte Part V ed David Carson Berry Gamut 6 2 2013 pp 163 169 These may include electric guitar electric bass synthesizer and drum kit Show index with links to orchestration information Archived 2010 02 13 at the Wayback Machine MTIshows com accessed October 4 2015 Elliot Susan August 17 2008 Off the Stage What s Behind the Music The New York Times Retrieved October 6 2015 Gokulsing 2004 p 98 Mini Musicals labyrinth net au Cenarth Fox 2001 accessed 22 January 2010 Theatre Latte Da takes foray into mini musical form Star Tribune March 30 2002 accessed 15 January 2010 registration required Thornton Shay 2007 A Wonderful Life PDF Houston Texas Theatre Under the Stars p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 11 27 Retrieved May 26 2009 Goodwin Noel The history of theatrical music Brittanica com accessed August 4 2021 and Blakeley Sasha and Jenna Conan History of Musical Theatre Lesson for Kids Early Musicals Study com accessed August 4 2021 a b c d e f g Kenrick John A Capsule History Musicals101 com 2003 accessed October 12 2015 Hoppin pp 180 181 Lord p 41 Lord p 42 Buelow 2004 p 26 Shakespeare 1998 p 44 a b Buelow p 328 Carter and Butt 2005 p 280 Parker 2001 p 42 a b c Gillan Don Longest Running Plays in London and New York Stage Beauty 2007 accessed May 26 2009 a b Wilmeth and Miller p 182 Wilmeth and Miller p 56 a b c d e f Kenrick John History of Stage Musicals Musicals101 com 2003 accessed May 26 2009 Allen p 106 a b c Lubbock Mark The Music of Musicals The Musical Times vol 98 no 1375 September 1957 pp 483 485 accessed 17 August 2010 a b Bond Jessie Introduction to The Life and Reminiscences of Jessie Bond Archived 2012 04 21 at the Wayback Machine reprinted at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive accessed March 4 2011 Reside Doug Musical of the Month The Black Crook New York Public Library for the Performing Arts June 2 2011 accessed June 21 2018 a b Kenrick John G amp S in the USA at the musicals101 website The Cyber Encyclopedia of Musical Theatre TV and Film 2008 Retrieved on 4 May 2012 a b Jones 2003 pp 10 11 Bargainnier Earl F W S Gilbert and American Musical Theatre pp 120 133 American Popular Music Readings from the Popular Press by Timothy E Scheurer Popular Press 1989 ISBN 0 87972 466 8 PG Wodehouse 1881 1975 guardian co uk Retrieved on 21 May 2007 List of allusions to G amp S in Wodehouse Home lagrange edu accessed May 27 2009 Meyerson Harold and Ernest Harburg Who Put the Rainbow in the Wizard of Oz Yip Harburg Lyricist pp 15 17 Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1993 and Bradley p 9 Mark Evan Swartz s Oz Before the Rainbow describes the enormous train trips required of the cast of the 1903 smash hit The Wizard of Oz which tour ran for nine years including on the road Oz Before the Rainbow L Frank Baum s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz on Stage and Screen to 1939 The Johns Hopkins University Press 2000 ISBN 0 8018 6477 1 See generally Index to The Gaiety a British musical theatre publication about Victorian and Edwardian musical theatre Kenrick John Basil Hood Who s Who in Musicals Additional Bios XII Musicals101 com 2004 accessed May 7 2012 a b Bordman Gerald Jerome David Kern Innovator Traditionalist The Musical Quarterly 1985 Vol 71 No 4 pp 468 473 a b Kenrick John Hellzapoppin History of The Musical Stage 1930s Part III Revues Musicals101 com accessed October 8 2015 a b Salad Days History Story Roles and Musical Numbers guidetomusicaltheatre com accessed March 16 2012 Krasner David A Beautiful Pageant African American Theatre Drama and Performance in the Harlem Renaissance 1910 1927 Palgrave MacMillan 2002 pp 263 267 Midgette Anne Operetta Review Much Silliness In a Gilt Frame The New York Times March 29 2003 accessed December 1 2012 Lamb Andrew Spring 1986 From Pinafore to Porter United States United Kingdom Interactions in Musical Theater 1879 1929 American Music Chicago University of Illinois Press 4 British American Musical Interactions 47 doi 10 2307 3052183 ISSN 0734 4392 JSTOR 3052183 Wagstaff John and Andrew Lamb Messager Andre Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed 15 March 2018 subscription required a b Lubbock 2002 1944 Pulitzer awards Pulitzer org accessed July 7 2012 Connema Richard San Francisco As Thousands Cheer and Dear World TalkinBroadway org 2000 accessed May 26 2009 Kenrick John History of Musical Film 1927 30 Part II Musicals101 com 2004 accessed May 17 2010 Special Awards and Citations 1944 The Pulitzer Prizes accessed January 7 2018 a b Gordon John Steele Oklahoma Archived 2010 08 04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 13 2010 Everett and Laird p 124 Rubin and Solorzano pp 439 440 Marks Peter Opening Nights The New York Times September 27 1998 accessed July 14 2019 Suskin Steven On the Record Ernest In Love Marco Polo Puppets and Maury Yeston Playbill August 10 2003 accessed May 26 2009 Rich Frank March 12 2000 Conversations with Sondheim The New York Times Magazine Retrieved May 26 2009 W S Gilbert and his choreographer John D Auban helped transformed Victorian musical theatre production styles See Vorder Bruegge Andrew Associate Professor Department Chair Department of Theatre and Dance Winthrop University W S Gilbert Antiquarian Authenticity and Artistic Autocracy Archived 2011 05 10 at the Wayback Machine Victorian Interdisciplinary Studies Association of the Western United States annual conference October 2002 Retrieved 26 March 2008 and Mr D Auban s Startrap Jumps The Times 17 April 1922 p 17 a b Kenrick John Dance in Stage Musicals Part III Musicals101 com 2003 accessed August 14 2012 Block Geoffrey ed The Richard Rodgers Reader New York Oxford University Press US 2006 ISBN 978 0 19 531343 7 pp 194 195 Dickson Andrew A life in theatre Trevor Nunn The Guardian 18 November 2011 accessed August 15 2012 John Kander April 7 2010 Passing Through Curtains NewMusicBox Interview Interviewed by Frank J Oteri published May 1 2010 Ward Jonathan Recruit Train and Motivate The History of the Industrial Musical Archived 2004 08 03 at the Wayback Machine March 2002 Perfect Sound Forever Wollman p 12 Laurents Arthur August 4 1957 The Growth of an Idea New York Herald Tribune Primate LLC Archived from the original on December 12 2007 Retrieved May 26 2009 Horn 1991 p 134 Barnes Clive Theater Review A Chorus Line The New York Times May 22 1975 Song search What I Did for Love AllMusic accessed October 11 2016 Kenrick John The 1970s Big Names Mixed Results History of Musical Film musicals101 com accessed July 11 2014 a b Everett and Laird pp 250 256 a b c Allain and Harvie pp 206 207 Blank Matthew March 1 2011 Broadway Rush Lottery and Standing Room Only Policies PlayBill Retrieved March 1 2011 Cumulative Broadway Grosses by Show BroadwayWorld com Archived from the original on January 11 2014 Retrieved February 9 2014 Pareles John April 27 1993 Critic s Notebook Damping 60 s Fire of Tommy for 90 s Broadway The New York Times Retrieved June 28 2012 Shaw Pete 2006 A glorious musical romp with bite Broadway Baby Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved May 26 2009 Cote David Theater Review Hamilton Time Out New York August 6 2015 Sondheim Stephen 2011 Look I Made a Hat Collected Lyrics 1981 2011 with Attendant Comments Amplifications Dogmas Harangues Digressions Anecdotes and Miscellany New York Alfred P Knopf p xxi ISBN 978 0 307 59341 2 Berman Eliza On Broadway It s Deja Vu All Over and Not Just for 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History of Musical Film musicals101 com accessed July 11 2014 and Kenrick John The 1990s Disney amp Beyond History of Musical Film musicals101 com accessed July 11 2014 Robert Bianco December 6 2013 Sound of Music was a little off USA TODAY Bill Carter December 9 2013 NBC Says It Will Put On a Show Again The New York Times The Wiz Live Ratings Strong NBC Musical Draws 11 5 Million Viewers Variety Retrieved 4 December 2015 Jane Martinson 15 December 2015 As ITV prepares for The Sound of Music Live are we watching TV s future The Guardian Sophie Gilbert February 1 2016 Grease Live Makes the Best Case Yet for the TV Musical The Atlantic Michael O Connell February 1 2016 TV Ratings Grease Live Surges on Fox Nabs 12 2 Million Viewers The Hollywood Reporter Fierberg Ruthie November 1 2017 Watch This First Glimpse of Fox s A Christmas Story Live Playbill Retrieved November 1 2017 Turchiano Danielle 29 October 2018 Tinashe Kiersey Clemons Among Cast for Fox s Live Version of Rent Variety Cubillas Sean Family Guy 10 Best Musical Numbers CBR com March 9 2020 Roush Matt June 30 2008 Exclusive First Look at Joss Whedon s Dr Horrible TVGuide com Retrieved May 26 2009 Edwards Belen The original songs in Schmigadoon perfectly capture the joy of musicals Mashable July 22 2021 Broadway League Extends Shutdown Until June 2021 www ny1 com Retrieved Jan 18 2021 West End confirms closure until at least August WhatsOnStage 3 June 2020 The best theatre to watch online right now Time Out Worldwide Archived from the original on 2020 04 06 Retrieved 2020 04 07 Convery Stephanie Rawson Sharnee 2020 03 20 Livestreaming schedule music art literature and events from Australia and beyond The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 2020 03 26 Retrieved 2020 03 26 Stage shows musicals and opera you can watch online now for free WhatsOnStage whatsonstage com Archived from the original on 2020 04 09 Retrieved 2020 04 09 Unitt Chris Cultural Digital Streams streams culturaldigital com Retrieved 2020 04 10 Free Theatre Screenings Google Drive docs google com Retrieved 2020 04 10 STC Virtual Sydney Theatre Company Archived from the original on 2020 04 17 Retrieved 2020 04 15 Haylock Zoe April 6 2020 Hamilton Cast Reunion Happens in Separate Rooms Vulture Archived from the original on April 13 2020 Retrieved April 13 2020 Mamma Mia original West End cast sing tribute in self isolation to NHS and cast member with coronavirus Evening Standard 7 April 2020 Archived from the original on 14 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Review Twelfth Night Live from The Maltings Theatre Theatre Weekly 12 June 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2020 BBC Radio 3 Free Thinking The future of theatre debate Retrieved 13 June 2020 Meyer Dan December 17 2020 Original Video Creators Tapped to Provide Music for Ratatouille The TikTok Musical Lucy Moss to Direct Playbill Retrieved December 24 2020 Evans Greg Dec 28 2020 Ratatouille The TikTok Musical All Star Cast To Include Wayne Brady Tituss Burgess amp Adam Lambert Retrieved Jan 18 2021 The living room where it happens Hamilton film to premiere on Disney The Guardian 12 May 2020 Andrew Lloyd Webber s The Show Must Go On series Musicals including Joseph to be streamed online for free Evening Standard 3 April 2020 Archived from the original on 4 April 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2020 Arts Council England Has Launched a 190 Million Emergency Relief Package for Creative Organizations and Artists artnet News 2020 03 25 Archived from the original on 2020 03 27 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Cooper Nathanael 2020 04 08 27 million for arts organisations in new targeted support package The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 2020 04 10 Retrieved 2020 04 09 Jacobs Julia 2020 03 24 Arts Groups Facing Their Own Virus Crisis Get a Piece of the Stimulus The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2020 03 27 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Cave Damien and Michael Paulson Broadway Is Dark London Is Quiet But in Australia It s Showtime The New York Times February 27 2021 McPhee Ryan U K Postpones Reopening Roadmap West End Theatres Will No Longer Reopen in Full in June Playbill June 14 2021 Garvey Marianne No curtain calls or intermissions Broadway is back but this act is different from before CNN September 2 2021 Blake Elissa Hamilton Come From Away among shows to close during Sydney s snap Covid lockdown The Guardian June 25 2021 Broadway shows newly reopened after COVID face new cancellations NPR December 16 2021 Jha p 1970 a b c Zhou Xiaoyan Taking the Stage Beijing Review 2011 p 42 Milestones 2005 2009 Town Square Productions accessed September 30 2013 Major organizations representing amateur theatre groups include National Operatic and Dramatic Association in the UK American Association of Community Theatre in the US and the International Amateur Theatre Association School groups include the Educational Theater Association which has 5 000 member school groups in the US See Nadworny Elissa The Most Popular High School Plays and Musicals NPR November 13 2015 accessed March 14 2016 Filichia Peter 2004 Let s Put on a Musical How to Choose the Right Show for Your School Community or Professional Theater Watson Guptill Publications ISBN 0823088170 a b Lynch Twink Community Theatre History American Association of Community Theatre accessed March 14 2016 a b Cellier Francois Cunningham Bridgeman 1914 Gilbert and Sullivan and Their Operas London Sir Isaac Pitman amp Sons pp 393 394 Nadworny Elissa The Most Popular High School Plays and Musicals NPR org November 13 2015 accessed March 14 2016 The Broadway League Announces 2007 2008 Broadway Theatre Season Results Press release Broadway League May 28 2008 Archived from the original on February 22 2010 Retrieved May 26 2009 League Releases Annual Demographics of the Broadway Audience Report for 06 07 Press release Broadway League November 5 2007 Archived from the original on February 22 2010 Retrieved May 26 2009 Record Attendances as Theatreland celebrates 100 Years PDF Press release Society of London Theatre January 18 2008 Archived from the original PDF on October 29 2008 Retrieved May 26 2009 Rich Frank Conversations with Sondheim New York Times Magazine March 12 2000 Cited books Edit Allain Paul Harvie Jen 2014 The Routledge Companion to Theatre and Performance Routledge ISBN 978 0 4156 3631 5 Allen Robert C c 1991 Horrible Prettiness Burlesque and American Culture University of North Carolina ISBN 978 0 8078 1960 9 Bradley Ian 2005 Oh Joy Oh Rapture The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 516700 7 Buelow George J 2004 A History of Baroque Music Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34365 9 Carter Tim Butt John eds 2005 The Cambridge History of Seventeenth Century Music The Cambridge History of Music Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 591 ISBN 978 0 521 79273 8 Archived from the original on 2013 01 12 Retrieved 2009 05 26 Cohen Robert Sherman Donovan 2020 Theatre Brief Twelfth ed New York City McGraw Hill Education ISBN 978 1 260 05738 6 OCLC 1073038874 Everett William A Laird Paul R eds 2002 The Cambridge Companion to the Musical Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79189 2 Gokulsing K Moti Dissanayake Wimal 2004 1998 Indian popular cinema a narrative of cultural change Revised and updated ed Stoke on Trent Trentham p 161 ISBN 978 1 85856 329 9 Hoppin Richard H ed 1978 Anthology of Medieval Music Norton introduction to music history New York Norton ISBN 978 0 393 09080 2 Horn Barbara Lee 1991 The Age of Hair Evolution and Impact of Broadway s First Rock Musical New York Greenwood Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 313 27564 7 Jha Subhash K 2005 The Essential Guide to Bollywood Roli Books ISBN 81 7436 378 5 Jones John B 2003 Our Musicals Ourselves Hanover University Press of New England ISBN 978 0 87451 904 4 Lord Suzanne 2003 Brinkman David ed Music from the Age of Shakespeare A Cultural History Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 31713 2 Lubbock Mark 2002 1962 American musical theatre an introduction The Complete Book of Light Opera 1st ed London Putnam pp 753 756 Morley Sheridan 1987 Spread a little happiness the first hundred years of the British musical London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 01398 4 Parker Roger ed 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of Opera Oxford Illustrated Histories illustrated ed Oxford University Press p 541 ISBN 978 0 19 285445 2 Rubin Don Solorzano Carlos eds 2000 The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre The Americas New York City Routledge ISBN 0 415 05929 1 Shakespeare William 1998 First published 1623 Orgel Stephen ed The Tempest The Oxford Shakespeare Oxford University Press p 248 ISBN 978 0 19 283414 0 Wilmeth Don B Miller Tice L eds 1996 Cambridge Guide to American Theatre 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56444 1 Wollman E L 2006 The Theater Will Rock a History of the Rock Musical From Hair to Hedwig Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 11576 6 Further reading EditBauch Marc The American Musical Marburg Germany Tectum Verlag 2003 ISBN 3 8288 8458 X Bloom Ken Vlastnik Frank 2004 10 01 Broadway Musicals The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time New York Black Dog amp Leventhal Publishers ISBN 1 57912 390 2 Bordman Gerald 1978 American Musical Theatre a Chronicle New York Oxford University Press viii 749 p ISBN 0 19 502356 0 Botto Louis Mitchell Brian Stokes 2002 At This Theatre 100 Years of Broadway Shows Stories and Stars New York Milwaukee WI Applause Theatre amp Cinema Books Playbill ISBN 978 1 55783 566 6 Bryant Jye 2018 Writing amp Staging A New Musical A Handbook Kindle Direct Publishing ISBN 9781730897412 Citron Stephen 1991 The Musical from the Inside Out Chicago Illinois I R Dee 336 p ISBN 0 929587 79 0 Ewen David 1961 The Story of American Musical Theater First ed Philadelphia Chilton v 208 p Ganzl Kurt The Encyclopedia of Musical Theatre 3 Volumes New York Schirmer Books 2001 Kantor Michael Maslon Laurence 2004 Broadway The American Musical New York Bulfinch Press ISBN 0 8212 2905 2 Mordden Ethan 1999 Beautiful Mornin The Broadway Musical in the 1940s New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512851 6 Stempel Larry Showtime A History of the Broadway Musical Theater W W Norton 2010 826 pages comprehensive history since the mid 19th century Traubner Richard Operetta A Theatrical History Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company 1983External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Musical theatre Internet Broadway Database Cast and production lists song lists and award lists Guidetomusicaltheatre com synopses cast lists song lists etc The Broadway Musical Home History of musicals V amp A museum website Castalbumdb Musical Cast Album Database Synopses and character descriptions of most major musicals StageAgent com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Musical theatre amp oldid 1132556404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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