Broadway:
The American Musical Episode Guide
Tuesday,
October 19 at 9 p.m.
Episode
One: Give My Regards to Broadway (1893-1927)
When
Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. arrives New York in 1893, the intersection
of Broadway and 42nd is nobody's idea of "the crossroads
of the world." But by 1913, "The Ziegfeld Follies
really were an amalgamation of everything that was happening
in America, in New York, at that time," says writer Philip
Furia. "Flo Ziegfeld was like the Broadway equivalent of
the melting pot itself." Ziegfeld's story introduces many
of the era's key figures: Irving Berlin , a Russian immigrant
who becomes the voice of assimilated America; entertainers,
like Jewish comedienne Fanny Brice and African-American Bert
Williams, who become America's first "crossover" artists;
and the brash Irish-American George M. Cohan, whose song-and-dance
routines embody the energy of Broadway. This is also the story
of the onset of a world war, and the Red Summer of 1919, when
labor unrest sweeps the nation -- and Broadway. Episode One
culminates in Ziegfeld's 1927 production of Jerome Kern and
Oscar Hammerstein II's far-sighted masterpiece, Show Boat.
"The history of the American musical theater is divided
quite simply into two eras: everything before Show Boat,
and everything after Show Boat," says writer Miles
Kreuger.
The episode
features interviews with Irving Berlin's daughter Mary Ellen
Barrett, Ziegfeld Follies girls Doris Eaton and Dana O'Connell,
New Yorker critic Brendan Gill, theater artist Al Hirschfeld,
composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim, and Ziegfeld daughter Patricia
Z. Stephenson. Highlights include newly restored color footage
of The Ziegfeld Follies and footage of Fanny Brice singing "My
Man."
Episode
Two: Syncopated City (1919-1933)
Gossip
columnist Walter Winchell gives Broadway a nickname that becomes
synonymous with all of New York: "It is the Big Apple,
the goal of all ambitions, the pot of gold at the end of a drab
and somewhat colorless rainbow…." With the advent of Prohibition
and the Jazz Age, America convulses with energy and change,
and nowhere is the riotous mix of classes and cultures more
dramatically on display than Broadway. "There was this
period in which everybody was leaping across borders and boundaries,"
says director/producer George C. Wolfe. "There was this
incredible cross-fertilization, cultural appropriation."
While brash American women flapped their way to newfound freedoms,
heroines of Broadway like Marilyn Miller become a testament
to pluck and luck. It's the age of "Whoopee" and the
"Charleston," Runnin' Wild and the George White Scandals.
In 1921, a jazz show like no other arrives: Shuffle Along,
which features a rich, rousing score by Noble Sissle and Eubie
Blake, reopening Broadway's doors to black talent. Unique talents
like the Marx Brothers and Al Jolson -- a Jewish immigrant and
Prohibition's biggest star -- rocket to stardom. The Gershwin
brothers, the minstrels of the Jazz Age, bring a "Fascinating
Rhythm" to an entire nation. Innovative songwriting teams
like Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart ignite a new age of bright,
clever lyrics with the massive hit "Manhattan." But
as the Roaring Twenties come to a close, Broadway's Jazz Age
suffers the one-two punch of the "talking picture"
and the stock market crash, triggering a massive talent exodus
to Hollywood and putting an end to Broadway's feverish expansion.
The episode
features interviews with actor Carol Channing, Gershwin sister
Frances Gershwin Godowsky, Al Jolson & Co. creator Stephen
Mo Hanan, critic Margo Jefferson, writer Miles Krueger, New
Yorker theater critic John Lahr, radio host/music critic Jonathan
Schwartz, theater historians Max Wilk and Robert Kimball, and
director/producer George C. Wolfe. Highlights include rare performance
footage of composer Eubie Blake and a specially animated sequence
of Rodgers and Hart's 1927 hit "Thou Swell" from A
Connecticut Yankee.
Wednesday,
October 20 at 9 p.m.
Episode
Three: I Got Plenty O' Nuttin' (1930-1942)
The
Great Depression proves to be a dynamic period of creative growth
on Broadway, and a dichotomy in the musical theater emerges.
Productions like Cole Porter's Anything Goes offer
glamour and high times as an escape, while others -- such as
Of Thee I Sing, which satirizes the American political
system, and the remarkable WPA production of The Cradle
Will Rock, about a steel strike -- deal directly with the
era's social and political concerns. When Bing Crosby records
"Brother, Can You Spare a Dime," the doleful Broadway
ballad takes the hit parade by surprise. "This song spoke
to the hearts, and to the minds, and to the emotions and thoughts,
of everybody who lived during that Depression," says lyricist
Yip Harburg's son, Ernie. Rodgers and Hart return to New York
to create a string of new shows, including the sexually frank
Pal Joey, a genuine departure that stars newcomer Gene
Kelly. In the gloom of the Depression, Porter offers Broadway
audiences such unforgettable songs as "You're the Top,"
which serves as an effervescent tonic to a weary nation. In
1935, George Gershwin creates his epic masterpiece, Porgy
and Bess, which becomes, in the words of one critic, "the
most American opera that has yet been seen or heard." The
onset of World War II galvanizes the country and America's troubadour,
Irving Berlin, rallies the troops with This Is the Army.
The episode
features interviews with actor and original "Bess"
Anne Brown, playwright Jerome Chodorov, actor Carol Channing,
film director Stanley Donen, actor and original "Porgy"
Todd Duncan, writer Philip Furia, actor Kitty Carlisle Hart,
actor June Havoc, actor/producer John Houseman, actor/director
Tim Robbins, and composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim. Highlights
include rarely seen home movies of the Gershwin brothers from
the 1930s, and 1950s TV footage of the incomparable Ethel Waters
singing Irving Berlin's "Suppertime."
Episode
Four: Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin' (1943-1960)
The
new partnership of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II
changes the face of Broadway forever, beginning with the record-breaking
Oklahoma! in 1943, featuring a landmark ballet by
Agnes De Mille. Carousel and South Pacific
then set the standard for decades to come by pioneering a musical
where story is all-important. For challenging the country to
confront its deep-seated racial bigotry, South Pacific
wins the Pulitzer Prize. In On the Town, an exuberant
team of novices -- Leonard Bernstein, Betty Comden, Adolph Green,
and Jerome Robbins -- capture the energy, humor and pathos of
New York City during World War II. Irving Berlin triumphs again
with Annie Get Your Gun, featuring Ethel Merman and
the unofficial anthem of the American musical theater, "There's
No Business Like Show Business." In shows like Guys
and Dolls, My Fair Lady and Kiss Me, Kate,
sophisticated adaptations of literary material prevail. "Cole
Porter led the way in writing adult songs about love and sex,"
says theater historian Robert Kimball. "He defied the censors.
He, probably more than any other songwriter in this century,
made it possible for the openness that we have in all popular
music." In 1956, Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe triumph
with My Fair Lady, featuring a 20-year-old Julie Andrews.
TV's The Ed Sullivan Show becomes the most important
showcase for Broadway musicals. Yet with the death of Oscar
Hammerstein II soon after the premiere of The Sound of Music
in 1959, the curtain begins to lower on a golden age.
The episode
features interviews with actor Julie Andrews, writer/lyricist
Betty Comden, choreographer Agnes De Mille, writer/lyricist
Adolph Green, Oscar Hammerstein's grandson Andy Hammerstein,
choreographer Michael Kidd, author James Michener, theater historian
Steve Nelson, musician John Raitt, choreographer Jerome Robbins,
composer Mary Rodgers Guettel, and conductor Michael Tilson-Thomas.
Highlights include never-before-broadcast footage of Jerome
Robbins' choreography for On the Town, 1960 TV footage
of Rex Harrison re-enacting "I'm an Ordinary Man"
from My Fair Lady, and the first American broadcast
of 1950 footage of the original Guys and Dolls cast
performing in London.
Thursday,
October 21 at 9 p.m.
Episode
Five: Tradition (1957-1979)
West
Side Story not only brings untraditional
subject matter to the musical stage, it ushers in a new breed
of director/choreographer who insists on performers who can
dance, sing and act. But by the time Jerome Robbins' last original
musical, Fiddler on the Roof, closes after a record
run of 3,242 performances in 1972, the world of Broadway has
changed forever. Rock 'n' roll, civil rights and Vietnam usher
in new talents, many trained by the retiring masters, taking
musical theater in daring new directions with innovative productions
like Hair, the first Broadway musical with an entire
score of rock music. The non-linear narrative of George Furth
and Stephen Sondheim's Company plunges the musical
into a new era. Hal Prince's conceptual staging showcases John
Kander and Fred Ebb's dynamic score for Cabaret. Bob
Fosse captures a sexuality and cynicism ahead of its time with
Chicago, but it is director/choreographer Michael Bennett
who spearheads the biggest blockbuster of all -- A Chorus
Line. "It totally changed the musical theater,"
says Shubert Organization chairman Gerald Schoenfeld. "It
was a catalyst for the improvement of this area, and of course
this area is now the most desirable area in New York."
With Sondheim's Sweeney Todd, the Broadway musical
reaches unexpected new heights in style and material with a
tale of slaughter and cannibalism set in 19th-century London.
By the end of the 1970s, Broadway becomes the centerpiece of
a remarkably successful public relations campaign that will
lure tourists to New York for years to come.
The episode
features interviews with actor Joel Grey, composer Marvin Hamlisch,
actor Jerry Orbach, producer Hal Prince, writer Frank Rich,
lyricist Stephen Sondheim, director Julie Taymor, and actor
Ben Vereen. Highlights include rare footage of Ethel Merman
rehearsing for Gypsy and home movies from the original
stage production of Chicago.
Episode
Six: Putting It Together (1980-Present)
Legendary
as the "Abominable Showman," notorious producer David
Merrick re-conquers Broadway in 1980 with a smash adaptation
of the movie musical 42nd Street . But soon the biggest
hits are arriving from an unexpected source -- London. Producer
Cameron Mackintosh redefines the business of show business as
Cats, Les Misérables, The Phantom of the
Opera, and Miss Saigon become international blockbusters.
James Lapine lures Stephen Sondheim off-Broadway to develop
Sunday in the Park With George, while Jerry Herman's
crowd-pleasing La Cage aux Folles has two men sing
a love song to each other for the first time on Broadway. The
AIDS crisis decimates Broadway. With Julie Taymor's triumphant
re-imagining of The Lion King, Disney leads an astonishing
resurrection of 42nd Street. Composer Jonathan Larson scores
a bittersweet victory with the rock-flavored Rent,
and the old-style musical is reborn in Mel Brooks' The Producers,
which becomes the first must-see musical comedy in decades,
fetching a ticket price of $480 for each VIP seat. After 9/11,
Broadway -- like the rest of America -- emerges from the darkness.
Broadway's corporate dominance continues to grow, as evidenced
by new shows such as Wicked, the biggest hit of the
2003-04 season. "Oh, I've been hearing about Broadway disappearing
ever since I put on long pants," says the illustrator Al
Hirschfeld. "I mean, it's been the fabulous invalid. You
know, but it survives, it survives."
The episode features interviews with writer/producer
Mel Brooks, actor Kristin Chenoweth, Walt Disney Corporation
CEO Michael Eisner, actor/bookwriter Harvey Fierstein, composer/lyricist
Jerry Herman, actor Nathan Lane, playwright/director James Lapine,
producer Rocco Landesman, director Arthur Laurents, actor Idina
Menzel, Nederlander Theaters chairman James Nederlander Sr.,
director Susan Stroman, and composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. Highlights
include home movies of Jonathan Larson working as a waiter before
leaving his job to create Rent, and exclusive behind-the-scenes
footage of Wicked in rehearsal and opening on Broadway.
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