
///
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||||
Broadway: The American Musical (CD) Broadway: The American Musical: the book
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
There are two types of people--those who hate musicals and those who would knock their own
mothers down to get a front row seat. Its
fitting that Julie Andrews narrates PBSs landmark series Broadway: The American
Musical since Andrews, already British theatrical royalty, first performed on
Broadway in The
Boy Friend (1954) and, as Eliza Dolittle in My
Fair Lady (1956), brought surpassing radiance to the Great White Way.
Andrews narrates the history of this uniquely American art form from
its roots in vaudeville to impresario Florenz Ziegfield's 1927 production of Showboat,
guiding the Broadway musical to maturity. She
notes that Showboat opened to a baffled audience because for the first time the
elements of music, comedy and drama were forged together, becoming the archetype of a form
that is still evolving. The series continues all the way through to the current
season with the hit Wicked,
a $40 million gamble that reflects how art and commerce intersect on Broadway. Broadway is a delightfully extended medley
of nights in the American theater.
Director Michael Kantor smartly plots the eras out in six installments.
"Give My Regards to Broadway" (1893-1927) tracks the beginnings of the American
musical theater. "Syncopated City"
(1919-1933) captures a country on the move and headed for the decline of the Great
Depression. "I Got Plenty O Nuttin" (1929-1942) shows America in crisis
from financial collapse to the beginning of World War II. "Oh, What a Beautiful
Mornin'" (1943-1960) exhibits
Broadways golden era during post-war renewal. "Tradition"
(1957-1979) reflects changing theatrical trends mirroring civil unrest. "Putting it Together" (1980-present)
includes the rebuilding of tawdry Times Square into New Yorks glittering center of
American theater.
The writers (Marc Fields, Laurence Maslon and JoAnn Young ) capture the
history, performances and spirit of American musical theater with economy of script and
fluid analysis. Kantor wisely frames the
history of the musical in the broader social context that reflected and, in some
instances, even defined America. Credit the editors (Kris Liem, Nancy Novack and Adam
Zucker) for thrilling film montages, with rehearsal footage as the lead in and New York
City itself revealed as the biggest theater of all.
Who wouldnt want to see a mystified Ed Sullivan backing away from
a cast member of the rock musical Hair
who is trying to put peace beads around Sullivan's neck? All
of the backstage drama is there. And, of course,
there are once in a lifetime songs and thrilling choreography. Musicals blow the dust off of your
soul, says Mel Brooks, creator of the
2001 megahit The
Producers.
Each period is thoughtfully
chronicled, focusing on performers, directors, choreographers, composers and producers who
left their indelible marks--a remarkable roster of talent including Ethel Merman, Hal
Prince, Cole Porter, Bob Fosse, Michael Bennett, Susan Stroman and Stephen Sondheim, to
name just a few. Performances from titans like
Zero Mostel, Paul Robeson, Mary Martin, and Bernadette Peters reignite the Broadway
firmament of stars. Tunes from master composers and lyricists like Gershwin, Porter, Kern,
Hammerstein sample the inspiration of the great American songbook.
The series crisply moves to
todays more cynical, bottom-line, corporate driven era. All of the spirit of the stage and the humanity of the
performers is there, sometimes expressed in painfully personal terms. Jonathan Larson,
whose musical Rent was
about to open off Broadway, died at 35 while the show was in final rehearsals. A video of the then unknown composer/lyricist
working his last shift at a diner is as moving a coda as the one in the show.
Broadway: The American Musical helps rescue an invaluable
legacy that every American will find joyous. There
have been attempts before to package historical Broadway, poorly filmed compendiums of
desperate stabs at nostalgia. Broadway
smartly steers away wherever possible from archival still photos and talking heads, the
fodder of many documentaries, while it invaluably rescues TV kinescopes of performances
from the 1950s when musicals were regarded as a great American tradition.
Kantor also captures the amusing and the arcane, from theatrical rogues
like producer David Merrick to Jack Benny bitching about the $6.60 top ticket price of a
Rogers and Hammerstein musical. Kitty Carlisle
Hart tells a story about Merman, who could take her lyrics in shorthand from Ira Gershwin,
because she was also working as a secretary.
Kantor sets the stage with smart visuals and some pristine archival
footage that collectively catches the sweep of 100 years of theater history, giving it
perspective that doesnt play like an endless list of name-dropping for the theater
community and the devoted. Max Wilk, a theater historian, speaks to "the color
line" on Broadway. Footage of Ethel Waters, who refused to work in minstrel shows or
play to stereotypes, otherwise making her way as a song and dance woman, is inspiring.
The impact of 9/11 on the New York theater and dance
communities and how they survived warranted more attention than given here. The writers seem to bail in following through on
racial issues as well. And gay Broadway is
visited mostly through the impact of AIDS, with more importance being put on Jerry
Hermans production of La
Cage Aux Folles, a minor musical from any point of view. Harvey Fierstein, the shows author, does say
It would be great if there was a follow-up series to delve deeper into these
issues.
But nothing detracts from the opportunity to see rehearsal footage from
shows like Strike
up the Band with Gershwin at the piano. Not
so forgiving are cheesily recorded scenes from the early days of video, like the clips for
Cats
and Cabaret. But, by that time the sheer sweep and accuracy
Kantor has achieved adds up to a rare docu-series that has a blood-red inner pulse. Broadway:
The American Musical covers its ground and the subject is still alive. Who could ask for anything more?
- Lewis Whittington