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Musical Theatre

What is a Musical?

Musicals have gone by many different

names

 Comic operas

 Operettas

 Burlesque

 Revues which have their roots in

vaudeville, music halls and minstrel

shows

The Best Musicals have three essential

qualities…

 Brains (intelligence

and style)

 Heart (genuine and

believable emotion)

 Courage (The guts to

do something creative

and exciting)

Musical Theatre

A Brief History

Greeks

 Added music to their productions as early as the

5th Century B.C.

 The Greek Chorus sometimes included music

(Aeschylus & Sophocles composed their own

music but melodies no longer exist)

 Solos were not unheard of

 No direct effect on modern musicals but it shows

that show tunes have been around for more than

2500 years

Romans

 3rd Century comedies of Plautus included song

and dance routines with full orchestrations

 To make dance steps more audible in large

open air theatres, actors attached metal chips

called "sabilla" to their footwear – the first tap

shoes

 Stress on spectacle and special effects, a trend

that echoes into our own time

Europe – Middle Ages

 Traveling minstrels and roving troupes of

performers offered popular songs and

slapstick comedy

 12th and 13th centuries religious dramas,

intended as liturgical teaching tools, used

church chants, creating their own form of

musical theatre

Europe – Renaissance

 Minstrels reached their peak with

Commedia Dell’arte in Italy with raucous

clown characters improving their way

through familiar stories

 Formal musical theatre was rare in the

Renaissance, but Moliere turned several of

his plays into comedies with songs when

the court of Louis XIV demanded song and

dance entertainments in the late 1600s

Europe – 18th Century

 By the 1700s, two forms of musical theater were

common in Britain, France and Germany

 ballad operas like John Gay's The Beggars Opera

(1728) that borrowed popular songs of the day and

rewrote the lyrics

 comic operas, with original scores and mostly

romantic plot lines, like Michael Balfe's The

Bohemian Girl (1845).



 Which brings us to the question…

Are Musicals Descended From

Opera?

 Opera has been with us since the late 1500s, but

contemporary musical theatre and film are not direct

descendants of grand opera.

 Opera can be called a descendant of classical theatre.

When Renaissance writers and composers tried to

resurrect the forms of Greek drama, they added music.

This eventually led to the birth of grand opera.

 From its birth in the 1800s, the musical has often

spoofed opera, but it traces its roots to other sources.

Vaudeville, burlesque, and many other forms are the

true ancestors of the modern musical -- not opera.

Are Musicals Descended From

Opera?

 Of course, the melodies of grand opera were part of the

popular musical culture of the 1800s and early 1900s,

and therefore had some effect on the musical theater

melodies of that time.

 However, the so-called "comic operas" that dominated

Broadway in the late 1880s and 90s, including the works

of Gilbert & Sullivan, are not operas. Producers called

these shows "comic operas" to make them sound more

sophisticated, but with extended dialogue and melodies

designed for the popular taste of that era, they were

clearly musicals.

Musical Theatre

Gilbert and Sullivan

Gilbert and Sullivan

 In the 1870s, William S. Gilbert and Arthur

Sullivan revolutionized the musical theatre,

creating witty, melodic operettas. Their songs

sparkled with melody and clever rhyme, and

Gilbert's librettos blended silliness and satire in

settings that ranged from fantasy to the realistic.

 Producer Richard D'Oyly Carte publicized these

shows as "light operas", but by any name, they

were musicals – some of the finest the world

would ever see.

Gilbert and Sullivan - Beginnings

 Gilbert was an unsuccessful attorney before his

comic poems appeared in popular magazines. This

opened the way to a career as a playwright and

director.

 Sullivan was Britain's most promising serious

composer, but he woud compose lighter pieces to

cover the expenses of his high-society lifestyle.

 In the 1860s, British musical theatre consisted of

variety shows, French operettas, and slapdash

comic light operas presented by John Hollingshead

at The Gaiety Theatre.

Trial by Jury (1875)

Trial by Jury

 Hollingshead hired G&S to create Thespis (1871), a

mythological spoof. Gilbert didn’t like it, but it impressed

producer Richard D'Oyly Carte.

 4 years later, he needed a one-act "curtain raiser" to share

the bill with his production at London's Opera Comique. Carte

convinced G&S to adapt one of Gilbert's satirical poems.

 Trial by Jury (1875) was a huge success

 This piece established several themes that run through most

of Gilbert and Sullivan's shows –

 unqualified men who have oiled their way into high public office

 the course of true love flowing in surprising directions

 an appalling disdain for women over 40 years of age

Gilbert and Sullivan – The Sorcerer

 D'Oyly Carte then persuaded G&S to attempt a full-length

work. The Sorcerer (1877) involved a magician who wreaks

havoc in a small English village with a love potion.

 Gilbert and Sullivan were developing a form of British

operetta that was quite unlike its predecessors. They

eliminated overt sexual references and replaced the

cartoonish characters with more familiar, believable

characters.

 Encouraged by The Sorcerer's profitable run, they then

created an operetta that succeeded beyond their wildest

dreams, with a show that reshaped the popular musical

theatre on both sides of the Atlantic.

HMS Pinafore (1878)

HMS Pinafore (1878)

 H.M.S. Pinafore was the story of a naval captain's daughter

who spurns the attentions of the First Lord of the Admiralty

because she loves a common sailor, spoofing the Victorian

class system.

 Pinafore was such a hit that D'Oyly Carte's investors tried to

steal the production from him, sending thugs to carry off the

sets and costumes in the middle of a performance!

 Since there was no international copyright laws, both Britain

and the U.S. were flooded with Pinafore copycats. When

G&S brought their company of Pinafore to New York, the

casts of several unauthorized Pinafore's brazenly turned out

to welcome them in the harbor.

Pirates of Penzance (1880)

Pirates of Penzance

 D'Oyly Carte secured the first international copyright by

premiering The Pirates of Penzance (1880) simultaneously

in New York and Great Britain.

 Pirates is the story of Fredrick, a young man who was

accidentally apprenticed to a band of pirates. He falls in love

with a Major General's ward and tries to atone for his past by

plotting the destruction of his former comrades. When it turns

out the soft-hearted pirates are really "noblemen who have

gone wrong," they and a relieved Frederick marry the

multitudinous wards of the rather "modern Major General."

 The success of Pirates confirmed Gilbert and Sullivan's place

in popular culture. The amazing thing was that they were just

getting started.

The Rocky Road of Success

 G&S continued to turn out successes such as Patience

(1881), Iolanthe (1882), but Princess Ida (1884) was not as

well received so it closed early. D’Oyly requested another

show to take it’s place.

 Gilbert submitted yet another plot involving a love potion, and

when no amount of re-writing could make Sullivan accept it,

the disagreement turned ugly.

 Sullivan declared that it was time for him to concentrate on

more serious compositions, and Gilbert resented the

suggestion that their collaboration was holding Sullivan back.

 The partnership was on the brink of collapse when a

Japanese sword fell from the wall of Gilbert's study –

inspiring the plot for their most popular show ever.

The Mikado (1885)

The Mikado

 The Mikado was influenced by an 1880s craze for “all things Japanese.” The

complicated plot centers on what happens when the Emperor of Japan decrees

that flirting is punishable by death. Because no one in the town of Titipu is

willing to enforce this horrible law, a condemned tailor (Koko) is appointed Lord

High Executioner – the reasoning being that he cannot behead anyone until he

beheads himself. When it turns out he has to execute someone after all, he

selects Nanki-Poo, a traveling minstrel. Nanki-Poo will only agree to the

scheme if he can first marry the executioner's ward and finance, the lovely

Yum-Yum. This will allow the minstrel a month of happiness, and the

Executioner can then behead the man and marry his ward as planned. An aged

woman (Katisha) from the royal court appears, announcing that Nanki-poo is

really the crown prince who has been in hiding since he toyed with her

affections! After a series of deceptions and misunderstandings, everything is

resolved.

 The Mikado's Japanese setting and costumes masked the fact that it was a

send-up of British customs and pretensions. In the United States, "Mikado-

mania" fed a nationwide American passion for all things Japanese. It

remains one of the most frequently produced musicals of all time, and still

receives new amateur and professional stagings worldwide.

The Beginning of the End

 G&S’s following shows were not able to live up to

the success of The Mikado.

 When it seemed Gilbert and Sullivan's

collaboration was at its peak, it fell apart over

several trivial disputes – including an infamous

quarrel over the price of some new carpeting in

the Savoy Theatre.

 After several years, the Savoy trio effected a

reconciliation, but things were never quite the

same. Gilbert and Sullivan's talents were intact,

but both were losing the fresh creative edge.

The Final Years

 G&S remained on cordial terms in their final years, and were both

hailed by the public. When Sullivan received a knighthood in 1888,

Gilbert was overlooked. The old collaborators worked on revivals

and shared curtain calls at the opening nights. Sullivan continued

composing classical pieces, and wrote comic operas with new

librettists. Weakened by years of kidney trouble, he succumbed to

a severe case of bronchitis in 1900 at age 58 years.

 Gilbert enjoyed renewed health and popularity in the new century,

writing plays and musical librettos, and finally received his

knighthood in 1907. In late May 1911, Gilbert (at age 74) suffered a

fatal heart attack while saving a young woman from drowning on his

country estate.

 After many years of illness, Richard D'Oyly Carte died in 1901.

Musical Theatre

Musical Theatre in America:

The Minstrel Show

Minstrel Shows

 The American musical has one shameful chapter in its history –

minstrel shows. The most popular musical stage shows of the

early and mid 19th Century, minstrelsy embodied racial hatred.

 Both white and black performers donned blackface, and audiences

of all colors loved it. Hateful as it was, minstrel shows were the first

form of musical theatre that was 100% American-born and bred.

 Minstrel shows developed in the 1840’s, peaked after the Civil War

and remained popular into the early 1900s. In these shows, white

men blackened their faces with burnt cork to lampoon Blacks,

performing songs and skits that sentimentalized slave life on

Southern plantations.

 Blacks were shown as naive buffoons who sang and danced the

days away, gobbling "chitlins," stealing the occasional watermelon,

and expressing their inexplicable love for "ol' massuh."

Jim Crow

 Blackface acts were common features in circuses and

traveling shows from the 1790s onwards.

 In the 1820s white entertainer Thomas "Daddy" Rice

caused a nationwide sensation by wearing burnt cork to

perform the song "Jump Jim Crow" on stage. He first

heard it from an old black street singer who supposedly

made up the lyric about his own name –

 "Jim Crow" turned out to be more than a popular song. It

became a stock comedy character, and a by-word for

legalized racial segregation. (Separate but Equal)

Minstrel Shows

 Minstrelsy was the first example of the way American

popular culture would exploit and manipulate Afro-

Americans and their culture to please and benefit white

Americans.

 As laws changed, several all-black minstrel companies

toured America and Great Britain. Black performers still

had to wear blackface makeup in order to look "dark

enough," performing material that demeaned their own

race. Despite such drawbacks, minstrelsy provided

African American performers with their first professional

stage outlet.

Famous Minstrel Performers









Amos and Andy Al Jolson

Musical Theatre

Musical Theatre in America:

Burlesque

Burlesque

 Beginning in the 1840s, these works entertained the lower

and middle classes by making fun of (or "burlesquing") the

operas, plays and social habits of the upper classes.

 Everything from Shakespearean drama to opera could inspire

a full-length burlesque spoof.

 By the 1860s, burlesque relied on the display of shapely,

underdressed women to keep audiences interested. In the

Victorian age, when proper women went to great lengths to

hide their physical form beneath bustles, hoops and frills, the

idea of young ladies appearing onstage in tights was a

powerful challenge.

Burlesque

 Suggestive rather than bawdy, these shows relied less on

strong scripts or songs than on sheer star power. When

Broadway's The Black Crook became a massive hit in 1866,

its troop of ballerinas in flesh-colored tights served notice that

respectable American audiences were ready to fork over big

bucks for sexually stimulating entertainment.

 At first, the American press praised burlesques, but turned

vicious under pressure from influential do-gooders. But the

cries of the self-righteous had an unintended effect. Editorials

and sermons condemning burlesque as "indecent" only made

the form more popular!

Burlesque

 By the 1880s, wit was gradually replaced by a determination

to reveal as much of the feminine form as local laws allowed.

But obscenity and vulgarity were avoided – the point was to

spoof, not to offend.

 Burlesque underwent a crucial change when Michael Leavitt

produced burlesque variety shows using something similar to

the three act minstrel show format –

 ACT ONE: The ensemble entertains with songs and gags,

dressed in formal evening clothes.

 ACT TWO: An "olio" of variety acts (singers, comics, skits, etc.).

 ACT THREE: A complete one-act musical burlesque. These

ranged from Shakespearean take offs like Much Ado About a

Merchant of Venice to a Gilbert and Sullivan spoof called The

Mick Hair-Do.

Burlesque

 The biggest burlesque star of the early 20th Century was dancer Millie

DeLeon, who tossed her garters into the audience and occasionally

neglected to wear tights, which got her arrested on occasion, and helped to

give burlesque a raunchy reputation.

 In time, burlesque bills began and ended with extended skits that made fun

of hit shows and popular topics. In between came a variety olio where

singers, comics, and specialty acts were all part of the mix. By the time

most performers reached vaudeville, they were already experienced pros.

 While it was common for burlesque stars to graduate into vaudeville,

vaudevillians considered it a fatal disgrace to appear in burlesque, insisting

that only those who were "washed up" would stoop so low. However, many

vaudeville veterans did burlesque during dry spells, appearing under an

assumed name.

 Some famous comedians learned their craft working in burlesque, including

future musical comedy stars Jackie Gleason, Bert Lahr, W.C. Fields, Red

Skelton, and Bob Hope.

Burlesque

 From the 1880s onwards, burlesque comedy was built around

situations familiar to lower and working class audiences. Sexual

innuendo was always present, but the focus was on making fun of

sex. Some examples –

 (Injured Man crosses stage in assorted bandages and casts.)

Comic: What happened to you?

Injured Man: I was living the life of Riley.

Comic: And?

Injured Man: Riley came home!

 (Minister walks up to a beautiful young woman.)

Minister: Do you believe in the hereafter?

Woman: Certainly, I do!

Minister: (Leering) Then you know what I'm here after.

 Many burlesque routines spoofed social conventions and linguistic

idiosyncrasies. The most famous was Bud Abbott and Lou

Costello's glorious "Who's On First,"

Musical Theatre

Musical Theatre in America:

Vaudeville

Vaudeville

 By the 1880’s, half of the population was now

concentrated in towns and cities, that left most of them

with a little spare cash and weekly leisure time.

 People wanted affordable entertainment on a regular

basis. Most variety shows were too coarse for women or

children to attend, and minstrel shows were declining in

popularity.

 Vaudeville also tried to bridge a social gap that had

divided the American upper and lower class.

 Two Boston producers in 1883, using the fortune they

made staging unauthorized Gilbert and Sullivan

productions started building a chain of ornate theatres

across the northeast.

Vaudeville

 Presenting commercially successful "clean" variety

shows, they instituted a policy of continuous multiple

daily performances, which they called "vaudeville."

 As vaudeville spread through the United States, major

theatre chains or circuits were built. All of them were

run by tough businessmen, and all insisted that acts

keep their material clean at all times.

 Headliners could bend the rules, but transgressions by

lesser known performers were not tolerated.

 By 1907, Variety reported that vaudeville was earning

$30 million a year.

Vaudeville

 Appearing in vaudeville was hard. A successful act

toured for forty plus weeks a year, doing "one nighters,"

or weekly stands.

 Performers put up with these demanding schedules

because even those who did not reach the level of

headliner could make good money.

 In 1919, when the average factory worker earned less

than $1,300, a small time circuit performer playing a 42

week season at $75 per week earned $3,150 a year.

 Anyone with determination and a talent to entertain

could earn a solid, respectable living. Few other fields

could claim to offer the disadvantaged such accessible

rewards in the early 20th Century.

Vaudeville Acts

 More than 25,000 people performed in vaudeville over it’s

50-plus years of existence

 An act could be anything that was inoffensive and

entertaining. A performer's gender, race and appearance

were no barrier to success, and nothing was too eccentric.

While singers and dancers were part of every bill, the

specialty acts set vaudeville apart

 Among them were mind readers, escape artists - Houdini

and his many imitators, high divers, strong men,

contortionists, balancing acts, freak acts, and regurgitators

- who drank liquids and then brought them back up. Hadji

Ali would swallow water & kerosene, then spew kerosene

onto open flames, followed by the water to put the flames

out. Not pretty, but audiences were fascinated.

The Decline of Vaudeville

 Many factors brought about the end of Vaudeville

 The advent of motion pictures was a devastating blow to

vaudeville.

 Audiences also grew tired of the vaudeville format

causing a sharp decline of ticket sales.

 The Great Depression also hit the vaudeville circuit

pretty hard.

 Most vaudeville houses were converted to movie

theatres and several circuit producers made the

transition to movies as well.

 Many vaudeville performers were able to make the

transition to radio and film.

Famous Vaudeville Performers









George Burns and

Judy Garland Gracie Allen

Famous Vaudeville Performers









Eddie Cantor Sophie Tucker

Famous Vaudeville Performers









W.C. Fields Jack Benny

Famous Vaudeville Performers









Ma Rainey Bessie Smith

Famous Vaudeville Performers









Bill “Bojangles” Robinson Nicholas Brothers

Famous Vaudeville Performers









Will Rogers Charlie Chaplin

Famous Vaudeville Performers









Marx Brothers Buster Keaton



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