It’s
weird to think about what actually makes a show successful.
Is
it the awards that it wins? There are shows that won the Tony Award for Best Musical and are still fairly
unknown by the public like Contact, or Passion, and Raisin are probably some of the best examples.
If
those shows make money, or at the very least recoups on Broadway is it deemed a
success?
Is
it the fact that it makes it to Broadway at all, which is the dream, right?
These
questions have been asked time and time again, and answered in all forms. When
it comes to a producer, I think the bottom line is if it makes its
investment back, those are cold numbers. For a creative team, a Director, or a Composer, I feel that opening on Broadway is the ultimate goal. It goes down in
the books. Regardless of how it performs, the reviews it receives, you were at
one time, at least, a Broadway show.
In
my opinion, being a theatre lover outside of the New York bubble, the life
after Broadway is what i feel makes a show a success. That it what the general
public consumes. Does it get more than one national tour, does it get produced
by high schools, colleges, churches, and community theatres, how popular is the
cast album, is there accessible merchandise? I think about Spring Awakening,
and Seussical the Musical, and of course Les Miz. These shows have had smashing
success outside of Broadway.
My
years in high school, the musicals were The Pajama Game, The Music Man, Once
Upon A Mattress, and Anything Goes. All 4 of those shows have extremely easy
visibility, and almost any Joe Schmoe you stop on the street will have heard of
those shows. I have already talk extensively about Mattress, and Anything Goes,
but I also wanted to point out that Pajama Game, and The Music Man both won the
Tony the year they were nominated (1955 & 1958 respectively)
Recently
my vocal ensemble put on a losers show. We highlighted a lot of shows that are
popular but may have lost some major awards. Once on This Island (lost to the Will
Roger’s Follies in ‘91), Mamma Mia (lost to Thoroughly Modern Millie in ‘02)
and Barnum (lost to Evita in ‘80) were some of the bigger highlights of the
show. It was a fun show to research on a production level. To see these great
shows that held such admiration and memories but may not have gotten the time
and accolades they deserved. It was nice to give these shows a little bit of
love on stage, in as grand of a way as we could.
What’s
a favorite of yours that you feel was robbed? Do you think “lesser-known” shows
should get a bigger life after Broadway?
In terms of Broadway: The Full Monty!! I love that show and it lost to The Producers.
ReplyDeleteIn terms of never making it to Broadway and never gets done anywhere and the show is still amazing?: A New Brain and Wild Party and TL5Y
Do you think that L5Y is getting its due now that it has been turned into a film?
DeleteHibshManda needs to move to Sac, where all three of those were produced within the last year! ;)
DeleteAs for shows I love that were losers, Ragtime (lost to Lion King), The Secret Garden (lost to Will Rogers Follies) and shoot, even Wicked lost to Ave Q! There are many gems from Off-Broadway or short runs, too, that theatres shouldn't discount.
Love the blog!