Three out of four Broadway-bound musicals fail to get there, and
many of those that do, ultimately fail. The Broadway Musical takes
an engrossing look at the industry's successes and failures in an
effort to understand the phenomenon of mass collaboration that is
Broadway.
The authors investigate the complicated machinery of show business
from its birth around the turn of the century through its survival
of the cost explosions of the 1980s. Through interviews with many
of Broadway's top producers, directors, designers, actors,
songwriters, lyricists, librettists, musicians, and other artists,
they lead us on an intimate tour of the creative process. They also
explore the roles of top executives and the reactions of critics
and audiences. They conclude with a fascinating look at the
inherent conflicts and tensions that have resulted in some of the
most seamless and best-loved productions on Broadway.
Fans of the genre as well as scholars and students of American
culture will delight in this revealing insider's look at the scenes
behind the scenes and the history of one of America's most popular
forms of entertainment.
The effort that goes into making a Broadway musical is enormous,
first requiring the enthusiasm of a group of initial creative
artists and then the cooperation of hundreds of talented
individuals and the investment of millions of dollars before each
show is ready to open. Each venture is marked perhaps more by
conflict than collaboration, and the continuation of the industry
seems more remarkable when it is revealed that three out of four
Broadway musicals fail to break even on Broadway.
What goes into the making of a successful musical? No venture can
be a success without good collaboration, but whether it is good or
bad in any specific case cannot be known beforehand. The Broadway
Musical is an investigation into this phenomenon of collaboration
and its seeming unpredictability. To gather information, Bernard
Rosenberg and Ernest Harburg have interviewed many of the top
producers, directors, designers, players, songwriters, lyricists,
librettists, and other artists that are responsible for today's
Broadway musicals. Starting with the development of the industry
itself, the authors investigate the complicated machinery of show
business and detail how it was able to survive the rapidly rising
costs of productions in the 1980s. Proceeding to the creative
aspects of the show, the authors provide an intimate look at the
assembling of the musical at every level, detailing the workings of
the top executives, musicians, songwriters, techne, the reaction of
the critics and the audience. The book concludes with a lengthy
look at the phenomenon of collaboration itself, describing the
inherent conflict and tension that often adds to the production of
a Broadway musical.
The Broadway Musical is an engrossing look at the successes and
failures of this most elaborate form of live entertainment.
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