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The American Musical and the American Dream: from ‘Show Boat’ to Sondheim

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2009

Abstract

The musical has long been recognized as one of the few distinctively American art forms. How far do these roots result in an ‘Americanism’ of ideological content – and how, indeed, does one measure the ‘content’ of a musical, with its fusion of the spoken word, song, and choreography? David Hirst, who teaches in the Department of Drama and Theatre Arts of the University of Birmingham, here examines the problems of critical methodology posed by the musical form, and also traces the development of the musical as an expression (at times a critical expression) of the American way of life and the ‘American dream’. After demonstrating its reflection of themood of the Depression era, he analyzes its response to the social and political mood of the war and post-war years, and to the changing standards which made Hair an international success, yet which have consigned the work of Sondheim to Broadway failure – in a world where ‘failure’ and ‘success’ carry their own, pervasively American connotations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

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References

Notes and References

1. Kislan, Richard, The Musical: a Look at the American Musical Theatre (Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1980)Google Scholar.

2. The Revels History of Drama in English, Vol. 8: American Drama, ed. Craik, T. W. (London, 1977)Google Scholar.

3. lbid, p. 285.

4. lbid, p. 285.

5. lbid, p. 286.

6. lbid, p. 285.

7. Green, Stanley, Ring Bells, Sing Songs: Broadway Musicals of the 1930s (New York, 1971), p. 12Google Scholar.

8. lbid, p. 15.

9. On Pins and Needles, see further Goldman, Harry, ‘When Social Significance Came to Broadway’ Theatre Quarterly, No 28 (19771978), p. 2540Google Scholar.

10. Dagler, Carl N., Oui of Our Past; the Forces That Shapes Modern America (New York, 1959), P. 271–2Google Scholar.

11. Quoted in Weales, Gerald, The Group Theatre (New York, 1958), p. 122Google Scholar.

12. Albee, Edward, Preface to The American Dream (Penguined, 1960), p. 21Google Scholar.

13. Quoted in Zadan, Craig, Sondheim and Co. (New York. 1974), p. 152Google Scholar.