The Musical is not just an American art form -- it belongs to the world. Mel Atkey's forthcoming book A Million Miles from Broadway: Musical Theatre Beyond New York and London will look at how musical theatre has roots in many countries.
Wednesday, 17 June 2020
Janie Dee Something in the Air
Janie Dee used my song "Something in the Air" as the opening number for her cabaret show.
Sunday, 10 November 2019
Saturday, 26 October 2019
How and why I wrote A MILLION MILES FROM BROADWAY
With the writing of my book A MILLION MILES FROM BROADWAY, I have found that what some people would call serendipity (I tend to think of it as a higher power) played a leading part. For example, when I was in Singapore, my hosts strongly urged me to talk to pop star and musical writer Dick Lee. How was I going to do that from the opposite end of the world? I found his website and sent him an email. Almost immediately I received a reply saying “I am in fact in London right now… and could meet up… I'm staying at The Soho Hotel…” He in turn insisted I talk to his Japanese collaborator, Amon Miyamoto. How on Earth was I going to do that? After a few weeks of playing email tag, I learned that he was directing the next show at the theatre where I worked. I then concluded that God must have wanted this book to be written. Now that it's done, however, I will have to learn to trust that same power to its distribution. So far, it has gotten off to a slow start. Few in the media have asked for reviewers copies. Perhaps they don't realise that this "revised and expanded edition" is actually twice the content of the original: it has added segments on Greece, Italy, Mexico, Cuba, Egypt, Israel among others, and also includes coverage of the Daegu International Musical Festival in Korea, and the story behind the development of COME FROM AWAY and a greatly expanded coverage of the South African musical KING KONG.
However, this book is not backed by a major trade publisher (they weren't interested in something they saw as "uncommercial") so I have to do everything myself. Still, people are resistant to what they see as marketing emails, so it is a challenge to find ways of reaching its potential market, those professionals who are looking to expand their knowledge of their craft. I received this message from Katie Doyle, one of the readers of my previous book, BROADWAY NORTH: “I initially got an advanced diploma in Musical Theatre because my school did not offer a degree program and was one hundred percent practical. Now, fourteen years later they are offering a degree program and I was able to go back and complete my degree. What did this entail? The History of Musical Theatre, Dance and Acting. That is how I discovered your book… It was so valuable to me and I loved it so much! It was what was missing all those years ago. I think if I had understood the history sooner, not only would it have informed my work in a positive way, but it would have made me realize I was a part of something much bigger than the latest audition and given an importance and richness to my work that was lacking. Not only should it be included in a MA of Musical Theatre program, it should be taught from first year!”
I believe that my new book brings an important and hitherto unexplored perspective to the musical. Please give it a chance.
There is a 40% discount in effect until the end of this month.
Friday, 4 October 2019
A Million Miles from Broadway – Revised and Expanded Edition
Wait no more... here it is.
The print version of A Million Miles from Broadway – Revised and Expanded Edition can be ordered here.
The print version of A Million Miles from Broadway – Revised and Expanded Edition can be ordered here.
Please note that if you order it from the Lulu page during October, you will receive a 40% discount. It can also be purchased as a Kindle download here.
"His research
is monumental... This is an important book on a previously undocumented area of
musical theatre." — Peter Pinne, Stage Whispers (Australia)
“I am very impressed !! You have really done it justice! I have nothing to add because everything in already there, in your book. Congratulations!!” -- Peter Brook, director, Irma la Douce
“I am very impressed !! You have really done it justice! I have nothing to add because everything in already there, in your book. Congratulations!!” -- Peter Brook, director, Irma la Douce
Monday, 4 March 2019
Preview of Expanded version of A Million Miles from Broadway
As you no doubt know, I have begun a Kickstarter campain to raise £3000 toward the cost of producing a new revised and expanded version of my book A Million Miles from Broadway – Musical Theatre Beyond New York and London. I have now raised £936 of the minimum £3000 pounds I will need by 23 March. Please help me reach my goal so that I can finish this vitally important book by going to http://kck.st/2DN3yzx
These are some of the reviews that a previous
edition of my book has received:
"His research is monumental... This is an important book on a
previously undocumented area of musical theatre." -- Peter Pinne, Stage Whispers
"There’s never been a better book for the
armchair-traveler-theatergoer." -- Peter
Filichia, New York theatre critic
"An intriguing and informative work that will help you see the
musical in an entirely new light - and make you hopeful for the future."-- Viewsfromthegods.co.uk
Overture:
A Search for
Signs of Life
For many generations, the world has presumed that
the musical theatre is first and foremost an American art form and that all of
the great Broadway and Hollywood musicals were the result of uniquely American
ingenuity. Like jazz, the musical is deemed
to be America’s gift to the world, and requires American know-how to make it
work.
Balderdash.
Great
as the classic Broadway musicals may have been, it’s one thing to say that the
musical is an integral part of American culture; it’s quite another to claim
that America is an inseparable part of the musical.
I am not an American. Nor am I English. And yet, I write musicals. I grew up in
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, some three thousand miles away from Broadway;
nonetheless even the New York Times has
praised my “lovely music”[i]. It may therefore surprise you to learn that my
home town was an artistically charged environment.
It is, I believe, signifigant that the first
professional musical I ever saw – in
1967 – was a Canadian show, Anne of Green
Gables[ii]. There were lots of other shows too –
professional, amateur, movies; it seemed that people everywhere were bursting
into song.
During the next decade, there emerged from this
cocoon a remarkable group of people who were evidently drinking the same water
I was drinking. These included singer/songwriter Ann Mortifee, director and librettist
Richard Ouzounian, composer Marek Norman, actor Brent Carver, actress Ruth
Nichol, dancer Jeff Hyslop, singer, songwriter and actor Patrick Rose, producer
David Y. H. Lui and future Artistic Director of the Arts Club Theatre Bill
Millerd. They all emerged from the
University of British Columbia at around the same time, and had been members of
the UBC Musical Theatre Society (Mussoc), an organisation that began in 1916
and whose past members also included actress Margot Kidder. (They would eventually also include me.)
After graduation, they continued to work
together, informally calling themselves the “Movers and Shakers” club. For a time, they gave Vancouver a unique
musical theatre scene. Several of them eventually
rose to international prominence, and you may see some of their names sprinkled
elsewhere in this book. For others, their fame remained local.
I was too young to actually be a part of this
group. I just watched from the
sidelines, and got to know each of them personally. They were my first heroes, and, importantly
for this book, they proved that local
people could be my heroes.
Yet, like most of the “Movers”, I had to leave
Vancouver, for I wanted to study the masters and to combine the discipline I
would learn abroad with the uniqueness that I found at home. Sometimes it takes an entire lifetime to
learn that the first idea you had was the right one. While I have since then worked in Toronto,
New York and London, the influence of the “Movers and Shakers” is still with
me.
It wasn’t until the mid 1990s – some twenty years
after I wrote my first musical – that I actually saw my first show on Broadway.[iii] Like The
Drowsy Chaperone‘s “Man in
Chair” character, I was more familiar with the Broadway cast albums than I was
with the shows themselves. I saw them
from a remote distance, and so they were filtered through local
perceptions. New York may have been
literally about 3,000 miles away, but it might as well have been a million.
It may come as a shock for some to hear this, but
what we now call the musical wasn’t conceived in America. It was the child of a
European parent. Some called this parent
“operetta”, while to others it was “opéra-bouffe” or even “comédie-musicale”, a
term which pre-dates the American “musical comedy”. (These terms relate to the musical in the
same way as “Gramophone” relates to “record player”.) That same parent had other offspring as well,
and therefore the Broadway musical has siblings. These siblings have co-existed and borrowed
from each other throughout their history, and the musical theatre has benefited
from this. However, I have never believed that Broadway is the musical’s ultimate
destination.
Some people believe that the modern musical
reached its zenith on Broadway in the 1940s and 50s, but “the history of the
musical theatre”, in the words of New Zealand-born historian Kurt Gänzl
(1946- ), “is no one-nation or one-center affair.”[iv] Alan Jay Lerner (1918-86), the librettist behind My Fair Lady said, “Broadway cannot live
without the musical theatre, but the musical theatre can live without
Broadway. After all, its first home was
Paris and then Vienna and then London and then New York. So changes of address are not uncommon.”[v] American composer-lyricist Maury Yeston (1945- ) adds,
“Broadway is now a very long street running from the Kartnerstrasse in Vienna
through Hamburg and Amsterdam, across to the West End, New York, Chicago,
Minneapolis, L. A., to the Ginza and beyond.”[vi]
Alas, not everybody sees it that way.
Why else did the late Peter Stone (1930-2003), a former president of the Dramatists Guild best
known as the Tony winning book writer of 1776
and Titanic, once claim that no
musical theatre existed outside of New York City?
Stone was not himself a native New Yorker. He was born in Los Angeles, the son of film
writers – (his father John produced Shirley Temple’s Baby Take a Bow in addition to several Charlie Chan and Mr. Moto
films) – and he even spent thirteen years living in Paris as an employee of an
American broadcaster.
However, in 1989 Stone said, “Why doesn’t a
musical theatre exist anywhere but in New York?
It doesn’t, you know.”[vii] In case you don’t wuite believe what you’re
hearing, on another occasion, he also said “I always thought the reason [Waiting for] Godot was a hit everywhere except in New York was because we were
the only place in the world that had musicals.”[viii] These seem like rather
bold statements, given that at the time, Broadway was dominated by Cats, Phantom of the Opera and Les Misérables, with barely an American-written musical to be
seen (or heard).
He elaborates, “It is in New York that it is
passed along, the lore of it, the craft of it, the technique of it.”[ix] Now,
not everybody these days cares about the lore, the craft and the technique that
went into the classic musicals of the golden age, but I do. I care passionately, and people like me will
therefore do whatever it takes to imbibe it, regardless of where we live. And what I have discovered about the lore of
musical theatre would, I aver, surprise even Mr. Stone.
He continues:
“Musical comedy writing is something that is passed down and around from
practitioner to practitioner, so it’s not something you can do in a room in
Cincinatti. New York is the place. You can see the shows that are working and
synthesize what’s to be gotten from them.”[x]
It’s true that historically the craft of musical
theatre was handed down from one generation to another. Stone was himself mentored in this way by
Frank Loesser (1910-69), the composer-lyricist of Guys and Dolls. But what do you do if living in New York is
not, for whatever reason, an option? How
do you learn the technique? Take a tip
from Jerome Kern, George and Ira Gershwin and Charles Strouse.
Before New York had taken its place at the head
of the queue, Jerome Kern studied for two years in Heidelberg, Germany, then
moved on to London, where he lived and worked for a further decade. Ira Gershwin also worked in London with
people who had known and worked with his idols Gilbert and Sullivan, while his
brother George returned from Paris with suitcases filled with Debussy scores. A generation later, Charles Strouse studied
in Paris under Nadia Boulanger. Consider
also the many Broadway writers, including Victor Herbert, Frederick Loewe and
Kurt Weill, who were born abroad and arrived in New York with their studies –
and sometimes even their reputations – already a fait accompli.
Some people from New York have also turned their
attention to training foreigners. Lehman
Engel (1910-82) taught in Toronto. “Writers
and composers in other countries have made serious attempts to rival the
creative spirits of the American musical theatre”, he wrote in 1981. “There seems to be no reason why they should
not succeed.”[xi] People from Korea come to study at the Tisch
School in New York (or Goldsmiths in London), then they go back home to
practice – and spread – what they have learned. Others just study the works
themselves – the hits and the flops – and read every biography they can get
their hands on. They may also have a
chance to see – and learn from – the more than eighty percent of musicals that
fail.
In this sense, New York has, in the past, enjoyed
an advantage, but does that mean it is really the only place where musicals can
happen? I deeply admire Peter Stone’s
work, and there is a great deal to learn from him, but on this one point, I know
for a fact that he was wrong.
Imagine hypothetically for a moment that, at some
point, somebody had declared that no musical theatre existed outside of
Vienna. (I have little doubt that at
some point in history, somebody actually has said or thought that.) How would Americans have summoned the courage (and
it does take courage) to prove this wrong?
At the time Stone was speaking of, many of the
greats – including even George Abbott (1887-1995) – were still with us and
plying their trade. Now, thirty years
later, virtually all of those practitioners – including Mr. Stone himself –
have left us. It is no longer possible to
be directly mentored by them, no matter where you live, so we learn from the
greats by whatever means are available to us.
That’s what I did – and hence this book.
[i] Laurel
Graeber, “Family Fare”, New York Times,
7 November, 2003.
[iii] I had
already seen a number of London shows during visits, beginning in 1969 with Fiddler on the Roof starring Alfie Bass.
[iv] Kurt
Gänzl, The Musical – A Concise History,
Northeastern University Press, Boston, 1997, p. xi.
[v] Alan Jay
Lerner, The Musical Theatre: A Celebration,
McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1986, p. 236.
[vi] Scott
Brown, “How Can Musical Theater be Saved?”, Vulture.com, 24 May 2012, accessed
21 July 2012.
[vii] Peter
Stone, “The Musical Comedy Book” in Dramatists’
Guild Quarterly, Vol. 25 No. 4, Winter 1989, p.13.
[viii] Patsy Southgate, “Peter Stone: Musical Titan Writes the Book”, The East Hampton Star, 29 May 1997.
[x] Stone,
p. 23
Monday, 11 February 2019
A Search for Signs of Life
The following is an excerpt from the preface of the revised and expanded version of my book, A Million Miles from Broadway -- Musical Theatre Beyond New York and London. It is a work in progress, so I will encourage comments.
For many generations, the world has presumed that
the musical theatre is primarily an American art form: like jazz, it is America’s
gift to the world.
Balderdash. It’s one thing to say that the musical is an
integral part of American culture; it’s quite another to claim that America is an
inseparable part of the musical.
I grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia, some
three thousand miles away from Broadway, yet it was a musically and theatrically
charged environment. The first professional musical I ever saw was Anne of Green Gables in 1967[i]. Even before that, whether through local
amateur productions, movies or the odd touring show, there were people
everywhere bursting into song.
During the next decade, there emerged a
remarkable group of people who were evidently drinking the same water I was
drinking. These included singer/songwriter Ann Mortifee, director and writer
Richard Ouzounian, composer Marek Norman, actor Brent Carver, actress Ruth
Nichol, dancer Jeff Hyslop, singer and actor Patrick Rose, producer David Y. H.
Lui, writer and director John MacLaughlin Gray and actor Eric Peterson. They all came out of the University of
British Columbia at around the same time, and all but the last two had been my
fellow members of the UBC Musical Theatre Society (Mussoc), an organisation
that began in 1916 and whose past members also included actress Margot
Kidder.
These were my early influences. After graduation, they continued to work
together, informally calling themselves the “Movers and Shakers” club. For a time, they gave Vancouver a unique
theatre scene, especially for musical theatre.
Several of them eventually rose to international prominence, and you may
see some of their names recurring elsewhere in this book. For others, their
fame remained local.
I watched from the sidelines, and got to know all
of them personally. They were my first
heroes, and, importantly for this book, they proved that local people could be my heroes.
While I have since then worked in Toronto, New York and London, the
influence of the “Movers and Shakers” is still with me.
Yet, like most of the “M and S’s”, I had to
leave, for I believe in learning from the masters. Sometimes it takes an entire lifetime to
learn that the first idea you had was the right one.
It wasn’t until the mid 1990s – some twenty years
after I wrote my first musical – that I actually saw my first show on Broadway.[ii] Like The
Drowsy Chaperone‘s “Man in
Chair” character, I was more familiar with the Broadway cast albums than I was
with the shows themselves. I saw them
from a remote distance, and so they were filtered through local
perceptions. New York may have been
literally about 3,000 miles away, but it might as well have been a million.
Some people believe that the modern musical
reached its zenith on Broadway in the 1940s and 50s, but “the history of the
musical theatre”, in the words of New Zealand-born historian Kurt Gänzl
(1946- ), “is no one-nation or one-center affair.”[iii] Alan Jay Lerner (1918-86), the librettist behind My Fair Lady said, “Broadway cannot live
without the musical theatre, but the musical theatre can live without
Broadway. After all, its first home was
Paris and then Vienna and then London and then New York. So changes of address are not uncommon.”[iv] American composer-lyricist Maury Yeston (1945- ) adds,
“Broadway is now a very long street running from the Kartnerstrasse in Vienna
through Hamburg and Amsterdam, across to the West End, New York, Chicago,
Minneapolis, L. A., to the Ginza and beyond.”[v] The musical wasn’t born in America, and I do
not believe that Broadway is its ultimate destination.
The American musical may have been the child of a
European parent, but that same parent had other offspring as well, and
therefore the American musical has siblings. These siblings have co-existed and in fact
borrowed from each other throughout history.
Why then did the late Peter Stone (1930-2003), a former president of the Dramatists Guild best
known as the Tony winning book writer of 1776
and Titanic, once claim that no
musical theatre existed outside of New York City?
Stone was not himself a native New Yorker. He was born in Los Angeles, the son of film
writers – (his father John produced Shirley Temple’s Baby Take a Bow in addition to several Charlie Chan and Mr. Moto
films) – and he even spent thirteen years living in Paris as an employee of an
American broadcaster.
However, in 1989 Stone said, “Why doesn’t a
musical theatre exist anywhere but in New York?
It doesn’t, you know.”[vi] That seems like a rather bold statement,
given that at the time, Broadway was dominated by Cats, Phantom
of the Opera and Les Misérables, with barely an American-written musical to be
seen (or heard).
He continues, “It is in New York that it is
passed along, the lore of it, the craft of it, the technique of it.” It
may be that Stone did not forsee the extent to which audiences – and thereby some
creators – would stop caring about the lore, the craft and the technique that
went into the classic musicals of the golden age. On the other hand, people (like me) who do care passionately and are really
dedicated will do whatever it takes to find a way to learn about it. And what I have discovered about the lore of
musical theatre would, I aver, surprise even Mr. Stone.
He goes
on: “Musical comedy writing is something that is passed down and around from
practitioner to practitioner, so it’s not something you can do in a room in
Cincinatti. New York is the place. You can see the shows that are working and
synthesize what’s to be gotten from them.”[vii]
It’s true that historically the craft of musical
theatre was handed down from one generation to another. Stone was himself mentored in this way by
Frank Loesser (1910-69), the composer-lyricist of Guys and Dolls. But what do you do if you’re not an American,
and living in New York is not an option?
How do you learn the technique? Take
a tip from Jerome Kern, George and Ira Gershwin and Charles Strouse.
Before New York had taken its place at the head
of the queue, Jerome Kern studied in Germany.
Ira Gershwin worked in London with people who had known and worked with
his idols Gilbert and Sullivan, while his brother George returned from Paris
with suitcases filled with Debussy scores.
A generation later, Charles Strouse studied in Paris under Nadia
Boulanger. Consider also the many
Broadway writers, including Victor Herbert, Frederick Loewe and Kurt Weill, who
were born abroad and arrived in New York with their studies – and sometimes
even their reputations – completed.
Some people from New York have also turned their
attention to training foreigners. Lehman
Engel taught in Toronto. People from
Korea come to study at the Tisch School in New York (or Goldsmiths in London),
then they go back home to practice – and spread – what they have learned. Others
just study the works themselves – the hits and the flops – and read every
biography they can get their hands on. They
may also have a chance to see – and learn from – the more than eighty percent
of musicals that fail.
In this sense, New York has, in the past, enjoyed
an advantage, but does that mean it is really the only place where musicals can
happen? I deeply admire Peter Stone’s
work, and there is a great deal of merit in what he says, but on this one
point, I know for a fact that he was wrong.
Imagine hypothetically for a moment that, at some
point, somebody had declared that no musical theatre existed outside of
Vienna. (I have little doubt that at
some point in history, somebody actually has said or thought that.) How would Americans have summoned the courage (and
it does take courage) to prove this wrong?
At the time Stone was speaking of, many of the
greats – including George Abbott (1887-1995) – were still with us and plying
their trade. Now, thirty years later,
virtually all of those practitioners – including Mr. Stone himself – have left
us. It is no longer possible to be
directly mentored by them, so we learn from the greats by whatever means are
available to us. That’s what I did – and
hence this book.
Make no mistake – musical theatre certainly does
exist outside of New York. I’m not
talking about the many franchised versions of Les Misérables and Hamilton that have played everywhere from Tel-Aviv to Abu
Dabi. Like the “Movers and Shakers”, I’m
referring to indigenous musical theatre created in places other than New York
by people other than New Yorkers and drawing on traditions other than just those
of Broadway. We are now in the world of what Canadian academic Marshall McLuhan (1911-80)
called the “global village”.[viii]
[ii] I saw my
first London show, Fiddler on the Roof starring
Alfie Bass, in 1969.
[iii] Kurt
Gänzl, The Musical – A Concise History,
Northeastern University Press, Boston, 1997, p. xi.
[iv] Alan Jay
Lerner, The Musical Theatre: A Celebration, McGraw-Hill
Book Company, New York, 1986, p. 236.
[v] Scott
Brown, “How Can Musical Theater be Saved?”, Vulture.com, 24 May 2012, accessed
21 July 2012.
[vi] Peter
Stone, “The Musical Comedy Book” in Dramatists’
Guild Quarterly, Vol. 25 No. 4, Winter 1989, p.13.
[vii] Stone,
p. 23
[viii] Marshall
McLuhan, The Gutenberg Galaxy
Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1962, p.31
Saturday, 17 March 2018
Sunday, 28 May 2017
Sunday, 21 May 2017
Thursday, 18 May 2017
Friday, 12 May 2017
Wednesday, 3 May 2017
Thursday, 20 April 2017
Sunday, 16 April 2017
What's next in international musical theatre?
This year it will be five years since A Million Miles from Broadway was published. A lot has happened since then.
I began writing that book shortly after the publication of Broadway North: The Dream of a Canadian Musical Theatre in 2006. When some Australians pointed out to me that “change a few names and it could be our story” it got me thinking about how indigenous musicals could develop in other countries.
It’s been a long haul since then. Broadway North had been put ou...t by a small trade publisher, which mean that I had a professional editor and a sales team. I was able to launch a Canadian tour to promote it. However, Natural Heritage Books (now part of Dundurn Press) were only interested in Canadian books on Canadian topics. While A Million Miles from Broadway has a wider scope and theoretically wider appeal, no government body – who are only interested in their own turf – would back it, and trade and academic presses balked at the idea. (I later told New York critic Peter Filichia, who gave it a rave review, that all the things he loved about it were the things the academic and trade presses wanted me to cut.)
I began writing that book shortly after the publication of Broadway North: The Dream of a Canadian Musical Theatre in 2006. When some Australians pointed out to me that “change a few names and it could be our story” it got me thinking about how indigenous musicals could develop in other countries.
It’s been a long haul since then. Broadway North had been put ou...t by a small trade publisher, which mean that I had a professional editor and a sales team. I was able to launch a Canadian tour to promote it. However, Natural Heritage Books (now part of Dundurn Press) were only interested in Canadian books on Canadian topics. While A Million Miles from Broadway has a wider scope and theoretically wider appeal, no government body – who are only interested in their own turf – would back it, and trade and academic presses balked at the idea. (I later told New York critic Peter Filichia, who gave it a rave review, that all the things he loved about it were the things the academic and trade presses wanted me to cut.)
This book’s tenth anniversary is still five years away, but it’s got me thinking about either an update or a sequel. Canada has enjoyed great international success with Come from Away, building on what The Drowsy Chaperone (and before that, Anne of Green Gables) achieved. What about Australia? South Africa? Argentina? What has happened in your part of the world since 2012?
I wait with baited breath for your answers, and will use them to decide what form (if any) this next move will take.
I wait with baited breath for your answers, and will use them to decide what form (if any) this next move will take.
Friday, 17 February 2017
Lin-Manuel Miranda knows his musicals
What relevance
does conventional musical theatre have
to Hamilton? While he is undoubtedly steeped in rap,
hip-hop and R&B music, Lin-Manuel Miranda also has a thorough foundation in
musicals. (In fact, his wedding was even
set to the music of “To Life” from Fiddler
on the Roof.) Stephen Sondheim, who
worked with Miranda on the 2009 revival of West
Side Story says, “Lin-Manuel's use of rap is that he's got one foot in the
past. He knows theatre. He respects and understands the value of good rhyming,
without which the lines tend to flatten out.” [1]
In Hamilton, Miranda actually cites the 1969 Broadway historical hit
1776, quoting its opening number “Sit
Down, John!” in reference to the same character, John Adams. He also cites Gilbert and Sullivan’s “The
Modern Major General” from Pirates of
Penzance, and was influenced by Sondheim’s Assassins (“a master class in, Okay, how are these people
similar, how are they different, what do they want, what story are we telling
in this one song?”) Jason Robert
Browne’s The Last Five Years (“At the end of Hamilton’s affair with
Maria Reynolds; he sings, ‘Nobody needs to know,’ and Jason wrote the ultimate
infidelity jam called ‘Nobody Needs to Know.’ The moment I had the idea, I
called Jason and was like, ‘Ahhhhh, I need to make this reference!’”) and Les Misérables (“I learned a lot from Les Miz about
compression and returning to themes.”)[2]
I am not going to
try to speculate on what Hamilton’s
influence will be – not since Clive Barnes infamously insisted that all post Hair musicals must be rock has anybody
done something that misguided. Besides,
so much of Hamilton is so specific to
its subject that it is hard to imagine how anybody else could employ the same
techniques (although I know we are going to be subjected to hundreds of
would-be imitators). Sondheim says, “Hamilton
is a breakthrough, but it doesn't exactly introduce a new era. Nothing
introduces an era. What it does is empower people to think differently. There's
always got to be an innovator, somebody who experiments first with new forms.”
However, what it
most significant about Hamilton is
not its music – much of which is not actually rap or hip-hop – or even its
form, but its notion of inclusiveness. Its
story of American history is told by a largely non-white cast using musical and
theatrical forms that they are comfortable with but that would be anachronisms
if taken literally. Many of the lyrics
are narrative, making it at times more like an oratorio than a musical. Just as Stanley Kubrick achieved his stunning
effects in 2001: A Space Odyssey by,
in part, choosing only to do that which he could do very well, Miranda limits
his use of rap and hip-hop to appropriate situations as a narrative device,
often with humorous results. There is
little in Hamilton that could be
described as “naturalistic”. By doing this,
he allows the audience to accept the notion that the story is being relayed
through the media of “modern” people.
Not only does it help modern audiences to accept it, but it also conveys
the notion that they are, or at least can be a part of it.
He would not be
able to do this had he not had a full musical and theatrical vocabulary. No one musical form – be it rock or ragtime –
has the emotional range by itself to tell a great story. Just as Stephen Schwartz, a generation earlier
combined his love of folk and Motown with his respect for the work of Leonard
Bernstein and of Harnick and Bock, Miranda is a merger of two worlds. This is, and always has been, how the musical
moves forward. Both the performers and
the writers need to have a broad background.
Study everything. Pop, classical,
musical theatre – it all goes together into the great mix, but a musical, more
than any other form, requires eclecticism.
I am still available as a lecturer on musical theatre,
both as a visiting/guest lecturer or as a tutor.
[1]
Michael Gioia, “Stephen Sondheim says Hamilton is a breakthrough”,Playbill, 8 July 2015 http://www.playbill.com/article/stephen-sondheim-says-hamilton-is-a-breakthrough-com-352907
[2]
http://www.vulture.com/2015/07/lin-manuel-mirandas-20-hamilton-influences.html
Thursday, 6 October 2016
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Sunday, 11 October 2015
Back to School
One of the major purposes behind my decision to get my MA in Musical Theatre was the notion that I could teach musical theatre history. Well, a couple of weeks ago, I had a chance to do just that at a conservatory in West London. One thing I confirmed was that I absolutely loved doing it. I begean with Mozart’s The Magic Flute and worked my way forward with Orpheus in the Underworld, The Pirates of Penzance, Show Boat, Porgy and Bess and Oklahoma!, showing video clips to illustrate each show. They are planning to bring me back to cover post-war musicals up to the present. Best of all, the class all stayed behind to talk to me. There was one from South Africa (who, surprisingly, had never heard of Sarafina!) who was very interested to know more about A Million Miles from Broadway, my book on international musical theatre. There were also students from Australia and France. This may turn into a full teaching position if this school is able to receive accreditation for a diploma program next year.
The other part of my MA that I am hard at work on is The Last Queen of Paradise, a musical about the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai’i. It will be showcased at the Tristan Bates Theatre in London in September of next year.
My new book Breaking Into Song is also available from Lulu as well as Amazon Kindle. I look forward to letting you know of future developments.
Mel Atkey
To purchase A Million Miles from Broadway:
A Million Miles from Broadway
To purchase Breaking into Song:
Breaking into Song
The other part of my MA that I am hard at work on is The Last Queen of Paradise, a musical about the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai’i. It will be showcased at the Tristan Bates Theatre in London in September of next year.
My new book Breaking Into Song is also available from Lulu as well as Amazon Kindle. I look forward to letting you know of future developments.
Mel Atkey
To purchase A Million Miles from Broadway:
A Million Miles from Broadway
To purchase Breaking into Song:
Breaking into Song
Wednesday, 27 May 2015
Breaking into Song -- new book by Mel Atkey now available
As you may know, for the past year I have been working on my
MA in Musical Theatre at Goldsmiths in London. This is partly so that I
can put the work I did on writing Broadway North and A Million
Miles from Broadway to more effective use as a teacher and lecturer,
although my main project will be The Last Queen of Paradise, a musical
about the American takeover of Hawaii.
In the meantime, I have just published a small volume of my
articles, essays and interviews from the past 35 years. Breaking Into
Song begins with my first ever interview for what was then a syndicated
radio series called Broadway Melodies back in 1980. Stephen
Schwartz was then working on turning The Magic Show into a movie.
This was to be the beginning of a correspondence that lasted a couple of
decades in which he offered me encouragement as a writer of musicals, long
before he began doing it on a grander scale through ASCAP.
It also features a fascinating interview with Reid Shelton, Annie’s
original Daddy Warbucks recalling the development process that show went
through, and the lengths to which the Kennedy Centre’s Roger Stevens went to
keep the costs (and the ticket prices) down (eg. Opening night in Washington
DC, the scenery was not painted, as he didn’t want to spend the money until he
knew the show was a hit.). Those are just two of the seven essays
collected in this book, which can be ordered by clicking here.
(There is a 20% discount if you order before it goes on wider sale, which will
be in 4-6 weeks.)
A Million Miles from Broadway – Musical Theatre Beyond
New York and London can also be ordered here.
I hope you enjoy them!
Mel Atkey
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