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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jul 27, 2022 11:10:32 GMT
Having enjoyed seeing some classics over the last few weeks (Singin’ In The Rain, Anything Goes, South Pacific, Gypsy) I’m approaching Identical or The Parent Trap or whatever it’s called next week with some trepidation. Because when it comes down to it, these new shows are very rarely a patch on the classics. Even what I would describe as new classics like Les Mis, Phantom, Chess, Sunset, Evita etc blow these new shows out of the water.
Is there any “new” show, say written in the last 20 years that our ancestors will be watching and enjoying in 80 years time? I’m struggling to think of any. So what does that mean for the future of MT?
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Post by Jon on Jul 27, 2022 11:27:38 GMT
There is a lot of rose tinted glasses IMO because I imagine for every classic, there is about 10 duds which time has forgotten.
It's hard to predict what the future theatregoer will be watching in 80 years time because taste change with every decade. I suspect DEH or Heathers will look like museum pieces to teenagers in 2102.
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Post by imstillhere on Jul 27, 2022 11:31:54 GMT
Every single classic musical was once a new musical. The taste in musicals also becomes multi-generational. Every generation has their classics. (Six, Hamilton, A Strange Loop and Be More Chill are what to the mega musicals of the 80s are to others)
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Post by h86 on Jul 27, 2022 11:41:32 GMT
I often think about this.
Anything that is new will always be compared to what came before and that makes it really hard for new writing to be held on the same level as the classics.
I often prefer the writing of newer musicals but can’t help but generally enjoy the classics overall more just because they hold memories to me that are special. New shows just won’t be able to do that.
It’s so hard for new writing to be heard, with so many revivals, jukebox shows etc. the classics never had to compete with these.
I can see Hamilton being around for a while. That is the only one I would say.
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Post by singingbird on Jul 27, 2022 11:42:26 GMT
Very interesting question. I'm sure almost every reader of this board has some personal favourites from the last twenty years, but very few of these will have broken through to more than a niche audience. Is this because MT has become more fragmented? Is it because the 'big shows', those that have had West End runs of a couple of years or more, now often feel so concocted by committee, so targeted at specific demographics, so over-produced, that they don't quite feel organic and real?
I think the issue is a financial one. MT has become so expensive in real terms (although no-one has ever given me a satisfactory explanation of exactly why) that fewer shows have been produced. For each of the classics on your first list, there will be twenty or thirty equivalent shows that either flopped or were middling successes and are now rarely (if at all) revived. For every Jule Styne or R&H hit, they wrote many other, now largely forgotten, shows.
Because so many new shows were being produced, there were inevitably a lot more bona fide hits. Even with the seventies/eighties shows on your second list, there was still a greater volume of new musicals than there is now (I realise, btw, that there are thousands of new musicals being written... but almost none make it to stage, and even when they do and are enthusiastically received on the fringe - e.g. Clockmaker's Daughter, Benjamin Button - they then disappear without trace. The journey to mainstream success is now almost impossible.)
This has a knock on effect on audiences. Audiences now expect new musicals to be big, glossy, essentially feel-good, and largely aimed at birthday party / hen night type crowds. New MT, in the WE, has become an 'event' more than just going to the theatre, something that you just do as a regular part of your life. Sondheim revivals aside, I am struggling to think of anything much in the WE in recent years that falls into the category of 'adult musical' in the way that the likes of My Fair Lady and South Pacific or, later, Evita and Sunset Boulevard did. Has the audience vanished? Or do they just believe that these shows don't exist anymore, so they'll just wait instead for the next major Sondheim revival?
I don't know if I blame producers for not having faith and vision, or audiences for being reluctant to go to smaller theatres and seek out left-field gems and then demand longer runs for them, or writers for incorrectly judging what audiences want. It's a chicken and egg situation but, on balance, my feeling is you're right. I don't know if Six, for example (which is an extremely rare example of an audience demand-driven MT success) will be considered a classic of the future, but I suspect not. I guess that only time will tell.
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Post by Someone in a tree on Jul 27, 2022 11:47:12 GMT
I hope that Operation mincemeat and Come from away become classics.
I'll be interested to see what happens to Hamilton, Heather's, Legally Blonde and DEH.
I'm no fan of pop and rock music and I do think by writing in those formats then it instantly dates a show
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Post by Jon on Jul 27, 2022 11:53:08 GMT
I find it interesting that 42nd Street and Crazy For You are considered classic musicals when the former is based on a film and the latter is a reworked version of an existing Gershwin musical.
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Post by juicy_but_terribly_drab on Jul 27, 2022 13:01:10 GMT
I find it funny that 1 of the classics you've listed has gone through so many rewrites that it may as well be a new show. Anything Goes is almost unrecognisable from when it premiered nearly a century ago in terms of both its book and its score. Singin' in the Rain is in a similar boat with a number of songs both put in and excised willy-nilly, but as a stage show I don't think it can even really be called a classic considering it was first put on in the 80s. And South Pacific may have a gorgeous score but, much like a lot of R&H shows, its book is not so airtight. Now Gypsy you won't hear many complaints from me about, but these "new classics" you've listed here I cannot say the same for.
I love a bit of Les Mis as much as the next person, but that doesn't mean it's not an overstuffed show full of unmotivated reprises and a decent number of thinly drawn characters. Sure Phantom of the Opera might have been a mega hit but it's pretty much the equivalent of a Marvel movie, it's a musical blockbuster, full of spectacle but just don't think about it too hard. And Chess? The show you can't see the same way twice because it's rewritten every new production? That doesn't suggest to me a very solidly written show. And neither Sunset nor Evita are without their problems.
But I'm not trying to berate fans of these shows, in fact I'm a fan of a lot of them. All I'm saying is that not all of these shows are these infallible critical-darlings that it was clear from day one would run and run and run and everyone knew would become classics. I mean look at Chicago, another show I think most people would consider a "new classic", and yet it received pretty mixed reviews originally and while it ran for a respectable 2 years, I doubt anyone would think it would be the second-longest running Broadway show today. So while you might not be able to point to a new show right now and say, "That'll be a classic in 80 years," I doubt most people who lived while the classics you've listed premiered could do the same for them.
I think another thing easily forgotten when we get all doom and gloom about the state of modern musical theatre is how many terrible shows were made in the past as well. The shows we remember today were surrounded by such shlock that have rightly been left behind but it's easy to look back at all the classics and think that era was better. But the ratio of good to bad musicals made today is probably not so different from what it was decades ago, in fact I'd argue the majority of musicals are bS, it's just survivorship bias that prevents us from realising it was always this way.
I think the real difference between the past and present is that a lot of the best musicals in the past were also some of the biggest, whereas today the real artistry is found in the smaller productions, like Fun Home or The Band's Visit (or if we're talking new British writing, then like Islander or Operation Mincemeat), because that's where risks can be taken. Yes you might get the occasional commercial, long-runnng hit that's equally critically acclaimed, like Hamilton, but most of the big spectacle shows are left for the lazy adaptations of popular films nowadays because they are safer investments. It's like how in the 20th century many of the Best Picture nominees/winners were also some of the highest grossing films of the year, but now that usually couldn't be further from the truth (but also do not take this as me suggesting the Oscars are the best indicator of quality because that couldn't be further from the truth, it's just an interesting pattern I noticed between the 2 mediums).
Sorry for this massive wall of text response haha. I just think it's easy to be all doom and gloom about the state of modern musical theatre but really today's not so different to the past century, good art is always being made, you just need to know where to look for it.
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Post by Jon on Jul 27, 2022 13:16:07 GMT
It's easy to forget that Les Miserables got universal negative reviews from the critics. It was the public that ensured it became a hit.
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Post by FairyGodmother on Jul 27, 2022 13:18:49 GMT
One thing that helps the old musicals I think is that there was no option to use synthesisers.
If you listen to Friday Night is Music Night you often get an overture or entr'acte. I'm not convinced anybody is going to bother to arrange some of the newer overtures for a full orchestra (if an overture actually exists!). Although I suppose it could mean audiences are better behaved nowadays? (Although looking at the bad behaviour thread I'm not so sure!) I know overtures were traditionally written with a big dramatic start to get the audience to be quiet.
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Post by FairyGodmother on Jul 27, 2022 13:23:02 GMT
I think where I was going with that is that musicals are more likely to survive if people can remember the songs, so it helps if they turn up outside the show as well. Either in arrangements for choirs, orchestras, even karaoke.
But then the music needs to be written in a way that makes people want to hear and play it, and having a load of synthesised instruments doesn't really do that.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jul 27, 2022 13:35:56 GMT
I find it funny that 1 of the classics you've listed has gone through so many rewrites that it may as well be a new show. Anything Goes is almost unrecognisable from when it premiered nearly a century ago in terms of both its book and its score. Singin' in the Rain is in a similar boat with a number of songs both put in and excised willy-nilly, but as a stage show I don't think it can even really be called a classic considering it was first put on in the 80s. And South Pacific may have a gorgeous score but, much like a lot of R&H shows, its book is not so airtight. Now Gypsy you won't hear many complaints from me about, but these "new classics" you've listed here I cannot say the same for. I just mentioned those four because I happen to have seen them in the last few weeks.
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Post by fiyerorocher on Jul 27, 2022 13:43:46 GMT
There seems to be more of a demand for decent and more complex characterisation in more recent musicals, which is a relief. It's always sorely lacking in the 'classics'. And you probably couldn't end a musical the way 42nd Street ends anymore, which is a huge relief as I've never been less impressed by the final few minutes of a show in my life!
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Post by viserys on Jul 27, 2022 13:51:03 GMT
I'm no fan of pop and rock music and I do think by writing in those formats then it instantly dates a show But doesn't that go for every kind of musical? The "classics" were also a product of their own time and songs written for them by the likes of Cole Porter big mainstream hits on the wireless or played on a gramophone. My personal beef with modern musicals are the often utterly dire, clunky and forgettable lyrics compared to older songs. Take, for example "You never walk alone", a song written so beautifully that it stands on its own and has been used in countless different situations where some form of comfort was needed - and has been adapted by football terraces all over Europe. Simply because it was written so well, that it speaks to so many people. In modern musicals, however, very few songs stand on their own, when taken out of the context of the show. And songs that could be wonderfully meaningful... just aren't. My example: Waving through the window, which could have been a wonderful anthem to speak to every outsider everywhere in the world, but is a clunky pop song with ham-fisted lyrics that leaves me completely cold (as does the whole of DEH, but that's another subject). Right now, for reasons too convoluted to explain, I have fallen in love with Hadestown again, simply because of the sheer brilliance of the lyrics (and Anais Mitchell has published a wonderful little book in which she explains her writing process for each song, which shows just how much time and thought has gone into it). Whether it's something sweet and fun like the Wedding Song or something deep and dark like the songs towards the finale when it all goes tits up ("Men are fools, men are frail, give them the rope and they'll hang themselves...") So I think it will be those shows that will stand the test of time, because they're smart and well-written and everyone can find something in them and which music they employ is really secondary. We still love to sing the hippie anthems of Hair, although the 60s are a long time ago, because their message of peace & love still speaks to people today who weren't even born back then and we still love the hits of the bombastic mega-musicals of the 80s, because Grizabella's feeling of abandonment or Marius' grief for his dead friends are general emotions that everyone can get behind.
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Post by Someone in a tree on Jul 27, 2022 15:07:53 GMT
I'm no fan of pop and rock music and I do think by writing in those formats then it instantly dates a show But doesn't that go for every kind of musical? The "classics" were also a product of their own time and songs written for them by the likes of Cole Porter big mainstream hits on the wireless or played on a gramophone. Yes. Kind of. My prejudice is shining through here but classical sounding music or jazz is classical in its scope and therefore feels more timeless and universal. I think it's good that many sondheim songs can't be taken out of context as they as so rooted into the narrative and therefore doing the job of theatre and not flogging hits
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Post by Jon on Jul 27, 2022 15:22:23 GMT
I don't think there's anything wrong with using rock and pop for a musical and indeed many modern classics like Rocky Horror and Rent have that sort of sound.
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Post by og on Jul 27, 2022 15:36:47 GMT
I think where I was going with that is that musicals are more likely to survive if people can remember the songs, so it helps if they turn up outside the show as well. Either in arrangements for choirs, orchestras, even karaoke. But then the music needs to be written in a way that makes people want to hear and play it, and having a load of synthesised instruments doesn't really do that. It all depends on the process, but by-and-large a score is written, then it's orchestrated where the instrumentation is defined with a conscious regard to production requirements (style, budget, space in the pit etc). Les Mis was a very synth-heavy production thanks to John Cameron's work. In the mid-90s they replaced half the synths with different keyboards (that played samples of real instruments) in an effort to make the sound more acoustic but then quickly reverted back to the 80s-style synth sounds. It's only in recent years that the show was re-orchestrated to replace the synths. But I can safely assume that no point in the original composition process did Schonberg write any of the score with the intention of it being heard or sung at a karaoke bar. That people get up and sing songs from musical scores in that environment is just a by-product of the show's success. Arguably, it's the very synths used that helped define it. Many won't have a real opinion but some people are firmly in the camp that the big clean Les Mis 'For the 21st Century', with it's acoustic-only instrumentation, lacks the dirt and grime that the synth sounds fortified. Phantom's title track (and the Overture) is certainly of it's time in it's sound too, with it's very 80's sounding electronic drums and that has not affected the show's (nor it's soundtrack's) popularity or longevity. Hamilton's sound is firmly rooted in it's 90's hip-hop influences, despite being produced 2 decades later, and yet people happily still play and listen the score and it's songs. So, I'd disagree with the idea that synthesised sounds 'don't really' make 'people want to hear and play' songs or their parent scores. A good song being a good song, regardless of context, is what really matters.
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Post by danb on Jul 27, 2022 16:27:43 GMT
Amen to that! Music can sometimes be firmly rooted in its time but the quality of the composition transcends like Les Mis & Blood Brothers. They both contained some of cheesiest synth sounds ever committed to (the 1980’s) stage, but have either been re-orchestrated or frozen in a time capsule that involuntarily tours the country. I think that Hamilton and the Disney musicals will enter canon, and the teen shows will become fun things that junior companies alternate on a loop so that ‘insert’s name of the good one in your am dram’ can play the lead.
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Post by willjam39 on Aug 10, 2022 7:24:22 GMT
I have often found the shows that are lasting to be classics are the ones either written about the past or with very little cultural reference. In the recent Legally Blonde they were already having to rewrite to update things such as the social media aspects and during its run Avenue Q had to change the reference In mix tape to a cd.
The other place I've seen this most is in Gilbert and Sullivan revivals as they are peppered with of their time references and how they are handled can really change how a modern audience approach them. If done well as per Charles courts Patience it adds to the humour immensely.
I do agree a lot of the smaller shows are the gems of modern theatre (my fav is only four characters) but I would hope Come From Away stays in peoples minds to become a classic as its focus on storytelling more than effects is refreshing.
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Post by newyorkcityboy on Aug 10, 2022 10:23:27 GMT
The point has already been made but every ‘classic ‘ was new once. Having said that, the new shows that work all seem to be very niche. Jamie, Six, Heathers, Hanson…all these are catering to individual tastes. There hasn’t been a huge, mega crowd-pleasing hit in a very, very long while. Maybe not since Wicked. Even Hamilton is quite divisive.
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Post by distantcousin on Aug 10, 2022 19:27:13 GMT
Interesting comments about the nicheness of new musicals - I think that's put the finger on it, and why they seem to develop this cultish appeal that isn't as broadly appealing as musicals from the decades previously.
There have been VERY few new musicals in the past 20 years that I have LOVED. It's not helped by the lack of choice (mostly jukebox musicals now) and the new writing tends to have a similar musical palette (what I call post-Rent, "soft rock", MOR pop vein)
The only ones I would go back to are: Grey Gardens Fun Home (which I was lucky enough to see on it's US Tour) The Last Five Years Acorn Antiques
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Post by inthenose on Aug 10, 2022 19:29:11 GMT
Only Fools and Horses is really enjoyable and safe.
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Post by scarpia on Aug 10, 2022 19:39:57 GMT
It all depends on the process, but by-and-large a score is written, then it's orchestrated where the instrumentation is defined with a conscious regard to production requirements (style, budget, space in the pit etc). Les Mis was a very synth-heavy production thanks to John Cameron's work. [...] Arguably, it's the very synths used that helped define it. Many won't have a real opinion but some people are firmly in the camp that the big clean Les Mis 'For the 21st Century', with it's acoustic-only instrumentation, lacks the dirt and grime that the synth sounds fortified. Yep, I'm one of those that much prefers John Cameron's orchestrations. They had a grandeur and sweep not matched by the new ones, and some of the loveliest moments in the score, such as the string ostinato that underscored Valjean's epiphany at the end of the prologue, have disappeared. To me, the new Miz sounds bland, boring, and weak. The synth sounds were part of its original grit, now long since gone (along with all the RSC class attached to the original production).
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