You're Dead to Me - History of Broadway
Episode Date: September 13, 2024Greg Jenner is joined in 20th-Century New York by Dr Hannah Thuraisingam Robbins and comedian Desiree Burch to learn about the history of Broadway. Most of us are familiar with at least one Broadway m...usical, from classics like My Fair Lady and the Sound of Music to new favourites Hamilton and Wicked. In the last couple of decades, high-profile film adaptations of shows like Chicago, Cats and Les Misérables have brought musical theatre to a bigger audience than ever before. But whether or not you know your Rodgers & Hammerstein from your Lloyd Webber, the history of Broadway is perhaps more of a mystery. This episode explores all aspects of musical theatre, from its origins in the early years of the 20th Century, to the ‘Golden Age’ in the 50s and the rise of the megamusical in the 80s. Along the way, Greg and his guests learn about the racial and class dynamics of Broadway, uncover musical flops and triumphs, and find out exactly what ‘cheating out’ is. You’re Dead To Me is the comedy podcast that takes history seriously. Every episode, Greg Jenner brings together the best names in history and comedy to learn and laugh about the past.Hosted by: Greg Jenner Research by: Hannah Campbell Hewson, Annabel Storr and Anna McCully Stewart Written by: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow, Emma Nagouse, and Greg Jenner Produced by: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow and Greg Jenner Audio Producer: Steve Hankey Production Coordinator: Ben Hollands Senior Producer: Emma Nagouse Executive Editor: James Cook
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the BBC.
This podcast is supported by advertising outside the UK.
If you're hearing this, you're probably already listening to BBC's award-winning history podcast.
But did you know that you can listen to them without ads?
Get podcasts like In Our Time, You're Dead to Me and History's Secret Heroes,
plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy to true crime, all ad free.
Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or listen to Amazon Music with
a Prime membership.
Spend less time on ads and more time with BBC podcasts. BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts
Hello and welcome to You're Dead to Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history
seriously. My name is Greg Jenner, I'm a public historian, author and broadcaster.
And today we are collecting our costumes and cancanning into the chorus line as we learn
all about the history of Broadway.
And to help us we have two very special theatrical stars. In History Corner they're an associate professor in popular music and the director of the Black Studies department at the University
of Nottingham. They're an expert on musical theatre and research race and gender identity
in popular culture. They've published on everything from The Wizard of Oz to Hamilton and my favourite
Frozen. No you let it go! It's Dr Dr Hannah Teresingham-Robbins. Welcome.
Hello, thank you for having me.
Delighted to have you here.
And in Comedy Corner, she needs no introduction on this show,
but I do still have to do one. So she's a comedian, actor, writer. You've seen her on
all the telly. Taskmaster, Frankie Boyle's New World Order, The Horn Section TV show,
Netflix's Too Hot to Hand handle, various other things.
And you'll know her from our many, many episodes
of this very podcast, including recent highlights,
the Columbian Exchange and Pythagoras, what a dude he was.
It's your Dead to Me's leading lady, Desiree Burch.
Welcome back, Desiree.
What a dude.
You said you had to do one.
Do I get to host the podcast now?
I think you've done enough episodes now that maybe.
I'm learning my British slang.
I'm doing well, guys.
Is this under the test?
Thank you so much for having me back. This is really exciting to learn the history of a place that I never made it to.
Oh, would you have wanted to?
Yeah, I started as an actor. That would have been amazing, but I don't sing.
So you kind of have to be famous first if you just want to act.
Or you need to dance, sing, and, you you know like be really hot and make out at 20 and
none of those things were ever gonna be my thing. I mean I know there's more to Broadway than that
but like it's a lot. It's a lot.
Because you studied at Yale.
I did yeah.
You did theatre studies.
I did yes.
So you know your stuff.
I mean I know some stuff. We did um you know a sort of pan history of theatre and there was all kinds of experimental you know, a sort of pan history of theatre and there was all kinds of experimental, you know,
for my senior thesis I got naked because what other thing does a university student want to do
on stage but get naked? So I got it out of the way so that the world could be spared
because it's all people want to do between 17 and 23. Great! I mean the obvious question, Desiree,
are you a fan of musical theatre?
Obviously, you know your theatre, you know your theatre history.
Are you a fan of musical theatre?
Do you go to Broadway when you're maybe back home and to the West End?
Okay.
Are we about to hear something?
No, I mean, look, I love theatre.
I love seeing incredible acting.
For me, it is always about the acting above everything else.
For musical theater, it really does need to be,
for the most part, singing first,
if you're going to enjoy it.
Sometimes it feels like it needs to be singing,
then acting, and then movement.
And I wish it were two and one were inverted.
Although I've seen musicals on Broadway
where they couldn't sing or act.
And I was just like, well, what are we doing here except for a jukebox revival?
But yeah, I mean, every so often it is done really well, but there's always a point in
a musical where you're like, I get it, fall in love.
Like I want, I need to catch a train, like make it end.
So what do you know? This is where I have a go at guessing what you, our lovely listener, might know about
today's subjects.
And we've all watched a musical, haven't we?
Whether it's a classic like West Side Story or My Fair Lady, a Lloyd Webber wonder piece
like Phantom of the Opera, a modern smash like Wicked or Hamilton, most of us have seen
a stage musical at some point, plus there are film adaptations as well. Catherine T. Jones in Chicago, you might have swooned over Hugh
Jackman in Les Mis, you might have laughed hysterically at the trailer for Cats with
the digitally removed feline anuses that the whole internet just loved. What a great day.
Some of us laughed hysterically after having purchased a ticket to see the film in the cinema.
You saw it!
Oh yes, I did with my good friend and we had a great time with two other people only in
the cinema with us.
It was a disaster.
It was a wonderful disaster and I do it again.
It was the last film I saw before the pandemic.
It's worth it!
But what about the history of the make-up popular art form that we call Broadway?
How have Broadway shows changed over the years and just who was
Imogen the Cow? Let's find out, shall we? Right, Desiree, word of warning, I'm going to try and
sneak in as many Broadway show titles into this episode as possible. I'm going to do this puns.
You're welcome to join me. Okay. But I'm going to start with a basic question, Desiree Burch,
what is a Broadway musical? A Broadway musical is a play that has not only words but songs in it that people perform
on Broadway, which is in New York City, circa 42nd Street, but you know goes up into the 50s and
theaters all around. It needs to have a million dollars just to turn on the light in the theater.
So that I do know. So it needs to have enough commercial appeal that they think they can play that for years and tour it around the world.
That's a very comprehensive answer, Hannah.
It is.
Is it remotely close to accurate though?
Oh yeah, 100%. I think it's kind of interesting that you said it's a play because there are
lots of musicals that don't really have conventional plots. So like for me, I guess a musical is
a combination of singing and drama. I would say more balanced than perhaps
you think, and spectacle. Sometimes there'll be lots of exciting sets, sometimes there'll
be costumes, sometimes there'll be amazing lighting, you know, lots of additional theatre
craft. But I think particularly going backwards, it's this really interesting like hybrid of
influences smushed into one performance form. And I guess the way to tell if you're engaging
with a musical is that like the singing uses different storytelling and also kind of
a different vocal style than we might expect if we're listening to popular
music so I guess the mash-up of genres and the emphasis of like communicating
the content of a song rather than communicating through song which is
opera are the clues that we're listening to a track from a musical and not a song
from something else.
Is the West End just Broadway but in London or is that a different thing?
Oh, controversial.
LAUGHTER
We look at Broadway as kind of the geographic home and the spiritual home
of the musical, even though it's actually genuinely a global phenomenon
at this point and belongs to lots of places.
I think one of the reasons the West End has become kind of Broadway B, if you like, is because of how the press covered musicals in the early history.
So they would often premiere in America and then come to London next.
They transfer over.
But they were transferring to loads of places. It's just that the dialogue between the American
and British press was particularly strong. So that's kind of where that's come from.
Fascinating. And in terms of the physical space of Broadway, Desiree, you've already said 42nd
Street. So this is a Manhattan story, not a West Side story, clang. What is the history of this
street, this little locus of theatre? It's the commercial theatre district in Manhattan,
sort of runs roughly between 42nd and 46th and 7th Avenue. So it's kind of
a hodgepodge of different theatres, but it's also places where you can eat. So they built
a lot of theatres sort of at the end of the 1800s, we're talking sort of 1880s, but by
the time we hit the early 1900s, we've got about 30 theatres in the area. And the thing
you were asking earlier about what constitutes a Broadway
musical versus not a Broadway musical, and it's actually to do with the capacity of a
theater. So it's 500 seats and a certain geography over 500 seats.
I definitely know what off, off and off, off, off Broadway are, where all of my theater
career happened.
But actually there are lots of theaters in New York that are not covered by the term
Broadway technically. There's definitely a complexity about what Broadway stands for,
but the thing that I think we can't debate is that it's originally an American art form.
There is a little bit of that creeping into the discourse at the moment that musicals
are not American and that's one of those that I won't stand for.
Oh, push down moment. Okay, this American
theatrical tradition, I mean there are, there are words that I sort of, I want to chuck at you,
vaudeville, burlesque, theatre, you know musical minstrel shows, how do we, are those all the same
thing? I think one of the distinguishing factors of American theatre is that there is a lot of blurred boundaries between genres that we're not so keen on in UK and actually in European theatre more broadly.
Using the ones that you sort of pulled together, we have what are referred to as melodramas
that have come over from France and they used music and particularly songs to like accent
really emotionally volatile moments in what was otherwise just a perform text. Vaudeville was lots of often sketches, it
could be songs, it might be comedy, it might be dance sequences but one of the
sort of defining factors of Vaudeville is that it took place in places that
sold alcohol and so you could tap in and out of the entertainment while it was taking place. Quite literally tap in and out, yeah.
Pun.
Burlesque is interesting because in the 19th century, it was actually more of a satire
form.
It was a much more traditional type of theatre than we would expect.
And the striptease component actually comes in much later.
Alongside this, we then have the like peaks and troughs of minstrelsy.
So minstrelsy sort of solidifies itself, sort of mid-1800s,
has a sort of a peak and a trough,
and then another peak and a trough in the early 20th century.
And that is a performance form that generally involved
white men or white presenting men wearing black makeup
and doing comedy skits and songs,
comedy and inverted commas there, but based on racist principles of attitudes to black
life.
Was Minstrel Z just like, hey, we want to do Vaudeville, but with more racism.
Because it's like a sketch sort of like variety type of show, but they're like, we really
want to do this blackface thing.
It depends on who you ask, but really, I would say blackface game, the blackface tradition
in Minstrelsy comes first. Vaudeville is kind of, it's kind of a hybrid of lots of different
parts. But yeah, 100%. But this was also something that happened in lots of other performance
forms. The thing that what Minstrelsy did was basically make an industry out of something
that was already happening in most of the other theatre spaces already. What they were
like was, oh, this
is something that gets laughs, let me try and commercialise it. And then through the progress
of minstrelsy, it then becomes a way for black performers to make money. And that's a challenging
bit of history, particularly in the turn of the 20th century. Lots of undercurrents happening,
but as you will have heard from my descriptions, also lots of blurred boundaries between what these
different forms were.
Let's get into the 20th century.
Let's get to 1902 when Broadway gets going,
I think Desiree, and one of the first productions
was The Wizard of Oz.
Nice.
Quite an unusual musical, do you know why?
Because of all the dead people involved?
Was that just the movie?
Yeah.
That's like the lore of it.
I mean, quite an unusual, it seems so canon to me that I can't think of why.
I mean, there's so many versions of it that I've seen,
The Wiz and Wicked and all these other versions of that.
What's weird about it?
No songs.
Okay, yeah.
No music? I mean, or some music, but not a score.
So some music, but not a score.
So this is like an interesting example of a work deliberately blending lots
of different things together. So this was kind of burlesque, it was pantomime, as we
would understand it in the UK, and also like lots of fantasy elements were immersed into
this version of The Wizard of Oz. The reason it's a landmark is because it was one of the
first big productions that sold tickets out in advance, so you couldn't just turn up and
buy a ticket at the door, and it kind of reformed what the commercial model for
these kind of shows could be but in terms of the score what happened and
this still happens in musicals lots of people aren't aware is that there were
optional songs and you could switch them in and out. It's a real comedy set where
you're like oh they're not warm enough for that one yeah let's take that one out
and do a couple of the gimmie ones. There's a stack due in, we won't do the gimmicks yeah yeah kind of yeah yeah it's also about the performers that you've got like if
you've got an alto in and you've got a soprano song and you haven't got someone who can transpose
the song at speed which often the music directors could do so if you're kind of player can't figure
out how to play it in c9 potentially or if your singer can't get that top note but and you can't
sort of make that work then you're like well swap this, we've got another song about it. And it's also worth saying,
I should say, at this period the songs are not particularly connected to the plot.
You would be having a conversation about having a cup of tea and then there would be a song about,
isn't it nice, the sun is shining. And then you would go back.
Those fantasy elements.
Yeah, exactly.
So The Wizard of Oz opened in Chicago in 1902.
Chicago Clang, a going-on musical.
They gave him the old Razzle Dazzle.
The production also changed a couple of other things
about The Wizard of Oz at Desiree.
They changed a major character from the book
and the later famous film.
Do you wanna guess which character did not appear
in 1902's?
Dorothy.
That'd be amazing.
It's just some bloke called Rob.
Just like, hello.
And they were like, ah, let's get a gal in there. We need to sell these tickets. No, Toto the dog. Dorothy
No Toto the dog was replaced by imaging the cow. Oh
There we go. There we go. So she had a cow She just was walking around with a cow played by an acrobat bent over wearing a cow suit. Oh
But then they're an acrobat so every so often, you know, that's the tornado and they can do
Exactly. Yeah Oh, but then they're an acrobat. So every so often, you know, it's the tornado and they can do backflips all around. Exactly, yeah, if you've got an acrobat, you know. So they go, a very moving performance from the image in the car.
Oh, gosh.
There you go, sorry. Right, let's talk about the development of increased visibility of these black performers, you said, because Minstrelsy, obviously racist and an unfortunate problematic history, but it created perhaps a culture whereby black performers could get work.
Yeah, for sure.
And I think one of the things that we don't necessarily know
so much about the early days of Broadway
is that there were lots of black creatives writing work,
producing work, touring work,
at sort of the turn of the 20th century.
So we're talking the early 1900s.
Perhaps the most famous example of that
is the musical, Interhomi,
which was a musical
mainly set in Florida. It was written by two African American performers who were already
an established double act called Williams and Walker. And they created this musical,
which was about two characters trying to persuade another person to collect a reward in order
for them to spend lots of money.
And the character actually finds a pot of gold and he decides to take all of his friends
to Dahomey in West Africa to see their homeland.
So this is an interesting example and it's a particularly famous one because it was very
successful in America and it had a big touring life, but it also came to the UK and was one
of the first times that a black authored
production, particularly a black authored musical had been played in lots of
London and British theaters.
Because this is 1903. Yes, 1903. So it's really early and
the challenge of Indahomey is that because these two performers had kind of come from minstrelsy
practices, there were
stereotyping issues, there was jungle humor, some primitivism material in Indahomey, which
has limited the way some people want to talk about it. But Indahomey actually opened the
possibility of lots of actors and creatives being able to produce their own musicals.
And so we have a number of shows becoming really popular
through the 1900s into the, to 1910s.
One example was about the first Black Battalion
to be formed in the American Army.
And that was produced in 1916, and it made lots of money.
The thing to say about this is that the audiences
for these shows were predominantly white, but the creators were interested in the disruption of the audience
membership too. And so these plays were often about Black history, about Black excellence,
or about sort of issues to do with Black liberation. were black people able to see this in segregated places or who was witnessing this work?
So there's a balance of the two.
I think Indahomey is complicated
because it does have elements of minstrelsy in it.
There were no white performers.
All of the cast were black.
But there were black actors using blackface
and using anti-black stereotypes
that were derived from minstrelsy
that formed kind of the first two
halves. The reason that Indahomey is actually interesting is because they have a moment
of dialogue where they talk about cultural displacement and what we would now call diaspora,
but was not particularly a term used then that connected specifically with any black
audience that was in. That would normally have been maybe 10, 20% of the audience. There were performances that were majority black audiences
or exclusively black audiences,
though not specifically on Broadway
if we distinguish the name and the geography for a minute.
And I think an interesting example of that then
is the sort of smash hit musical people like to turn to,
which is Shuffle Along, which opened in 1921.
And Shuffle Along changed the game because it ran for an extraordinary
amount of performances for the time around 500 performances.
The audience is flocking and was so excited to see it that they actually
had to make I think it's 63rd Street a one way thoroughfare because it was
impossible for the police to manage the traffic.
It was the Hamilton of its time. It was the Hamilton of its time. They the traffic. It was the Hamilton of its time.
They blocked traffic.
It was the Hamilton of its time. It launched so many careers.
So, for example, a teenage Josephine Baker was in Shuffle Along.
And a young Paul Robeson was also in Shuffle Along.
But there were other people like Florence Mills, a BBC in the UK favourite called Adelaide Hall,
who would star in Kiss Me Kate 20 years later in 1948. So it was launching careers on every level of the creative
process. And Desiree you've done, you did the Josephine Baker episode and the Paul Robeson episode.
So it's almost like we designed it this way. Homecoming, I mean you know I do have lots of plots
and plans. This is so wonderful. But the Robeson voice, do you remember we played you that clip of Robeson singing?
Yeah, was that when he was in Wales?
No. Oh, OK. Well, yeah, we played you one in Wales.
Yeah. OK. Yeah.
But we played also, I think, Old Man River. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I just wanted to we can't play it to you now for legal reasons.
Yes. So I'm going to ask you to remember that voice.
How do you think that carried in the theatre?
You know, I mean, incredibly well, I would imagine. Yes. That voice, how do you think that carried in the theatre?
I mean, incredibly well, I would imagine.
I feel like it would live inside of the wood that makes up the...
I don't know.
It just seems like it would reach and wrap around every part of that space because it
just...
Either that or it got entirely absorbed.
But I can't imagine that would ever happen.
It already feels like a very lingering voice that would be well resonated in whatever the theater was made of. Yeah. And we'll talk about voices later, Hannah. But
Ropeson being an early star is a really interesting one because this is a man who could really sing
to the rafters with such a beautiful, deep baritone voice. But we need to move on to talk about the
reason I can't play you any clips, Desiree, is the successive international copyright law.
I want to ask Hannah, when
does copyright law kick off and also when does this stuff get professionalised where
lawyers go hang on a second?
HANNAH Well who gets credit for a musical and who the rights belong to is one of the
most contentious topics in musical theatre history from from day dot. The first really
significant point of action is that in 1914, the American Society of Composers,
Authors, and Publishers was established,
and it aimed to protect the intellectual property of
its members and to establish a royalties system.
By 1917, all American venues had to get a license to stage
a piece that was either published by or written by
a member
of this organization. And that definitely prefaced a series of business maneuvers, particularly
at the end of the 1940s and 1950s in terms of thinking about who gets to earn money from
musicals.
And the Actors Union Equity. Are you a member Desiree?
Yes I am. Yeah, I thought
you do so much acting work, so I was like, sure you're a member. Yes. Do you want to
guess when they were founded? Oh, when the Union was founded, let's see, I mean if the
composers do this... Do you not sing it at the meetings? Do you sing it? No. Equity was founded.
Yes, exactly. No, I mean, my attendance, this was 1914, you said for ASCAP, right?
So it feels like way later.
So I would guess something like the 30s would be a real weird time.
I don't know.
Let's say, let's say the 1940s something.
I mean, that's a fair guess.
It's actually 1913, which I was quite surprised at, Hannah.
It's early.
It's earlier than the composers.
It happens first, but that's because of the strike action.
Ah yes, we're walking out.
I mean we've had an actor strike recently in Hollywood so I think we're all familiar with that.
Yeah and also I think we forget that the theatre owners, and this is particularly true of film,
held a lot more power over the things that were being staged in the early development
of theatre. So it's only after these unions are formed that composers and lyricists are
able to sort of create agency over their own materials. So actually actors were more visible
than the creative staff at the sort of beginning of the American theatre process.
But it was just white actors who were allowed inequity, is that right initially? Yes. the creative staff at the sort of beginning of the American theatre process.
But it was just white actors who were allowed in equity, is that right initially?
Yes.
Yeah, I mean, you know, all good ideas aren't always perfect, let's be honest. So there we go,
equity, making sure actors could earn and pay their rent.
Sorry.
Nicely done. Well referenced. That was beautiful.
Thank you.
But obviously later on, black performers were also allowed to join Equity, which obviously
is very important.
So it's thanks to copyright laws that I cannot play you any music whatsoever.
When we name check stuff, go listen to it.
Because the Dahomey music is gorgeous that we talked about earlier.
I loved it.
Wait, like they were literally fantasizing about what it would be like to go back.
Yes.
Like this is the sort of back to Africa. Yeah. There were several musicals
after Indahomi specifically thinking about returning to the continent and what
that would mean. And Showboats are really, you mentioned Old Man River, it's a
really interesting example of this because
Old Man River was extremely controversial in black organizing circles
because it used racist language in the lyrics
and it also musicalized
and for some romanticized black struggle and for others it was sort of an anthem of resistance
and so black unions, particularly in the 1930s, had considerable debate about whether this
was an appropriate song to be associated with organizing, is this something we should be
using in resistance and that's particularly significant as Paul Robeson,
your listeners will probably know,
was so involved in political organizing.
And this was actually almost an Achilles heel for him
at some point.
Yeah, that's right.
We've got to fly through the 20th century.
So-
Best way to deal with it.
Yeah.
In the 1920s, there was a new entertainment phenomenon
that showed up.
Desiree, what happened in Hollywood in 1927 that had a major impact on Broadway?
All I can think of is racism and men technicolor. There's definitely something in between.
There's a third thing in the middle.
In the middle to triangulate that. What happened in, I mean, the actual sound?
That's it.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You've got the coming of the talkies.
Yes. And it's the Jazz Singer, is the the first talkie which actually really
brings us back to Broadway doesn't it it's a musical and this heard the
popularity of theatre simply because I guess cinema was offering a brand new
experience right you could go for a much cheaper ticket to go and listen to songs
listen to dialogue you don't need to go to the theatre initially there was some
concern some people were actually frightened of the talkies
and the notion of people being able to speak
through the screen.
So the initial peak wasn't as extreme
as we might have expected.
But after that, the number of new theater productions,
all kinds, drops across America.
And this does coincide, it's important to say,
with the Great Depression.
But so you have a sort of a decline
from maybe 200 new productions a season
to somewhere near 100 new productions a season to somewhere
near a hundred new productions a season.
Really it's just a financial question, the fact that lots of the theatres were owned
by the same people as well.
So when the financial depression hits, their ability to hold onto their property and to
take financial risks is very different.
But actually the ability to work without really having any income, for example, while writing
a musical ceases to be
viable. And it's important to say that Broadway was perhaps one of the less
hard-hit industries during the Great Depression, but there was a significant
drop-off. And that's also one of the reasons that musicals become, in lots of
ways, the popular music, because shows lived or died by covers of songs from
musicals becoming the popular music.
So the 1940s is where American, the American economy is sort of supercharged by World War II
and by the 50s, obviously it becomes the kind of dominant superpower. And that's also where we get
the golden age inverted commas of the Broadway musical. Desiree, do you know who the famous
writing duo were who kind of dominated that decade? Is it Rodgers and Hammerstein? It is, yeah, very good. Yeah. One of the bits of the Oscar,. Is it Rodgers and Hammerstein?
It is, yeah, very good, yeah.
One of the bits of the Oscar, sorry, the Rodgers and Hammerstein story that gets missed is that
they were already influential figures in Broadway by the time they came together.
So Oscar Hammerstein's big break was writing the book and lyrics for Showboat.
And Richard Rodgers had a working relationship with a lyricist called Lorenz Hart, and they
wrote a number of hit musicals through the 1920s and the 1930s, you know, songs like My Funny Valentine
and The Lady is a Tramp come from their shows. But Roger's relationship with Hart starts
to falter because Hart's health is declining and he was also an alcoholic. So he formalised
this working relationship with Hammerstein, who he'd actually written some songs with
before and they come together to produce this musical no one's ever heard of called
Oklahoma. This is 1943, and Oklahoma becomes this overnight sensation. After Shuffle Along
and Showboat, it's the next sort of major landmark. It expanded the sort of creative
understanding of what a musical could be because
it combined plot, songs, dance and music sort of seamlessly. It's what's sometimes referred
to as an integrated musical, which as a critical race scholar, I think is hilarious.
Yeah.
Actually, with the dramatic elements of the show. Oklahoma ran for about 2,000 performances over five
years when you consider that the longest running musical in the 1930s ran for about 500 performances.
That gives you a sense of sort of impact.
I mean, 43, middle of the war, America, you know, it's sort of feel good.
It's like America's great guys, remember?
Oh, what a beautiful morning. Yep.
Yeah. This is where we're getting the characters singing their feelings.
Yeah, a little bit. It's about the songs needing to progress the plot in some way,
or give us a sense of place, or they become about expressions of internal thought and feeling.
Yeah.
Oklahoma is really deemed to be the first example where you can't just chop and change songs. They're really significant to where they fall.
They're driving the actual plot.
Yeah, absolutely.
The I want song or whatever.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
So the obvious question, are Rodgers and Hammerstein giving America kind of soothing balm where everything's fine entertainment or are they sort of quietly radical? So they're really interesting because they're kind of both and I think that's the heart
of their success. So it's really important to say that they took lots of creative risks
that paid off but they might not have done.
There's a dream ballet in that musical.
There is a dream ballet.
Oh and then we've got to stage the dream ballet. We did it in high school and I had to play
a boy because I could flip girls over like this.
Nice.
So I remember oh we got to rehearse the dream ballet and the rest of us were like,
yeah, peace, we don't have to do this.
So Oklahoma has a balance of sort of a romantic depiction of rural America, this sort of idyll
and the sort of ins and outs of a relationship.
But it actually has some sort of quite big topics and dark themes.
So we sort of deal with nation making, should Oklahoma
join the United States? We have industrial threats to rural life. And we also have the
issues of dealing with outsiders, quote unquote, in small communities and the notions of sort
of predatory behavior towards women. So it's not a simple musical and it definitely does
deal with some difficult things, but it balances
that with spectacle. You have a character singing off stage, but in a musical theatre
voice you have a barn dance and as you say you've got this historic dream ballet, so
there's a real sort of balance of the two, but it facilitated other nostalgic musicals
and musicals that took risks. So in the 40s, we have Brigadoon and Annie Get Your Gun.
But we also have a psychoanalytical musical
called Lady in the Dark, in which a woman goes through
all of her concerns about all of her worries.
And she sort of, it switches between her being with a therapist
and what's going on in her psychology.
And this was one of the hit musicals.
Wait, she was in therapy in the 40s.
Yeah, yeah.
Talking about her issues as a woman.
Dr. Freud will see you now.
Absolutely.
It was written by Kurt Weill.
Oh, was it?
Oh, okay.
All right.
Makes a lot of sense.
Yeah.
But it's a really interesting example of sort of the polarity of yay entertainment.
And here's a really complicated topic that we're going to explore through tap dancing. It's very interesting you mentioned the kind of
the Americana of Oklahoma and Annie Get Your Gun and so on because obviously
later on in the 80s you get the the English invasion. As an American living in
London can you reverse the polarity and imagine how American Broadway producers
felt when English people showed up with their song and dance numbers? I mean it's
so weird because when American thinks everyone's like, come right this way,
welcome, we want all of this cash. And growing up in the 80s, you know, I mean,
Andrew Lloyd Webber was canon, like every year Andrew Lloyd Webber is putting out something,
that was what Broadway was. So to know that before it was that, it was like, get the hell out of here.
to know that before it was that, it was like, ah, get the hell out of here.
You know?
But I mean, really.
I mean, but also like, we're happy to make
all of our big fat American dollars
based on your musical about whatever,
but we're still get out here.
And the interesting thing actually,
just looking at some of the other hits of that sort of era,
that so-called golden age, Carousel, sure,
but South Pacific, The King and I, The Sound of Music music these aren't American stories no well yes and you know what I
mean they're kind of there's a sort of exotic internationalism here yeah
absolutely I'm Rogers and Hammerstein were concerned about colonialism not
necessarily in a way that we would recognise now, but South Pacific was specifically, South Pacific was
specifically... South Pacific handled material about GIs coming to foreign climes and then leaving,
and some of the prophets from South Pacific went to deal with orphans
who were left as a result. The king and I, there's an interesting sort of dimension to
the king and I because they were not looking to make Anna, the main character who's this
British governess who goes to look after the children of the king of Siam, super sympathetic.
They were interested in showing her having forms of bigotry and prejudice and her and
the King working out this tension between them.
And in some of the cut music from The King and I, they really press on that, but it didn't
make it.
Yeah, I was gonna say, the test audience didn't like that so much.
It didn't make it.
And I think in lots of ways, the softness we might have expected in the 40s and 30s
comes in musicals in the 50s, once the form is a little bit more settled
and Rodgers and Hammerstein are, you know, this dominant force.
But at the same time, you have things like Guys and Dolls,
which opens in 1950, you have West Side Story.
West Side Story was actually overshadowed by The Music Man
that's recently been on Broadway,
and right up to Fiddler on the Roof,
which is the first musical to pass 3,000 performances. So if you think in the 20s we're overwhelmed by something that runs
400 performances, by the sort of mid 60s we're at 3,000 performances. Phantom of the Opera has run
14,000 performances on Broadway. They must be so bored of it by now. Surely the cast are just going,
gah, can we just sing anything else? My Fair Lady is
another one to shout out, which is Lerner and Lowe, isn't it? So we've got other double
acts coming in. We've got other creative teams. West Side Story is Bernstein and Sonheim,
who are both giants.
If you're hearing this, you're probably already listening to BBC's award-winning history podcasts. But did you know that you can listen to them without ads? Get podcasts like In Our Time, You're
Dead to Me and History's Secret Heroes, plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy
to true crime, all ad-free. Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or
listen to Amazon Music with a Prime membership prime membership spend less time on ads and more
time with BBC podcasts.
We've got the musical the sound of music let's talk about the
actual sound being made because we get the right of microphones
and amplification but prior to the mics how are these
performers getting through a two hour show and hitting
the back rows with their vocal technique?
And how many shows a week are they able to do?
Yeah, so I mean we are in the sort of five to seven shows a week.
Amplification comes into musicals really slowly.
So they are starting to dabble with it towards the end of the 1930s, the beginning of Oklahoma.
Oh, what a beautiful morning.
The person singing off stage
is actually using a microphone in 1943.
Interesting.
But there aren't mics on stage.
So that's also something that comes up quite a lot
in reviews of the time, where voices will pass
from the acoustic environment to a microphone and back.
So there were comments about that not working,
which I think is part of where the resistance
to amplification sort of comes from.
If we listen to musical
theatre performers, really from the pre-60s, we are listening to a much rounder, broader
sound in general. Often we're listening to operatically trained performers or a balance
of singers. We also have techniques, which I'm sure you'll be aware of, Desiree, of cheating
front. So you don't actually look at a performer because the directionality of
where your voice is going is really important. So you're standing at the front
of the stage singing to the audience even though you're talking to your
colleague on stage who's stood to your side. And you might notice actually even now when you
go and see musicals that characters are often standing on a right angle from
each other so the person who's doing most of the singing will be facing the
front but it looks like they're being addressed in some way. So there's a
balance of technique of learning to throw your voice and project. Sometimes that was
because you came from an operatic background, or it's because you came from a music hall
background where you might be not only singing in a large space, but over people drinking
and chatting. And we see that actually really well immortalized in lots of musical theatre
films where actors
have to struggle as part of their character building to be heard.
So people were just stronger and better back then, didn't need microphones.
What different vocal techniques or styles are you aware of?
You're definitely going to need a soprano in your show because that's what everybody's
coming to hear.
And most of the women sing, way the hell up in their nose and their forehead
and speak that way all of the time.
So I feel like that's usually a centerpiece
of a lot of things.
But the phrase belting.
Yes, of course.
Yeah. Yeah.
How do you understand that?
I mean that like, you know, using your dot,
like just let a rip, like really, you know, there's, yeah.
Just really like, I mean, it's a way of,
you really need to train.
Otherwise you're going to shred your voice, but you, yeah, just really like, I mean, it's a way of you really need to train. Otherwise, you're going to shred your voice.
But you really are just sort of like from your diaphragm, just like slamming that song out.
Yeah. I mean, Idina Menzel is sort of the famous one I'm aware of in the modern.
You know, again, Frozen, my daughter loves Frozen.
So I hear it a lot. Yeah.
What is a belter from a technical point of view, Hannah?
I think lots of people think belting is about volume and it's actually about intensity.
It's about creating this round, full, bright sound and it's exactly what you're describing
about. Completely relaxing, throwing your voice as far as possible. And I think a great
example of this is Ethel Merman, who was particularly famous for her ability to sing in full voice
in every song for every performance. And what's really interesting about her is she would perfect an interpretation of a song and then deliver it the same each night because
that was one of the ways in which she protected her voice. If you listen to her singing, there's
no business like show business from Annie Get Your Gun or Everything's Coming Up, Roses
from Gypsy. These songs are written in a register, so in a key and in a place in her voice to
make this easy for her. These are sort of in the middle of her voice because this is a chest voice technique. Another brilliant singer
we have to mention quickly would be Ethel Waters, who's from a much earlier tradition,
sort of 20s, 30s, 40s, but she was also a Broadway star. And her singing style, was it belting?
I would describe Ethel Waters as the legitimate performer who sort of inspired belting in lots of ways. It's
important to say that belting sort of comes from a racist tradition connected with minstrelsy
in which actors would mimic early gospel and blues and swing sounds and try to throw their
voices but in exaggerated and derogatory ways. By contrast, Ethel Waters, who was an African American blues singer who then became a film actor and later an evangelist, was an interpreter
of songs who would balance really intimate storytelling with the ability to let this
voice pour forth. So I think Waters is a really good example of someone who was able to harness
this skill, but actually use it in a creative way well before her time. And we see this
in sort of
mirrored in songs like as long as he needs me from Oliver or I dreamed a dream from Les Mis that she
was you know 40 years 50 years before we start hearing this actually become tenable because of
amplification. In the 60s firstly we get in as you say electrified instruments so guitars and drums
that's in it but that also means that kids are listening to rock and roll now. They don't want to go to the theatre, they want to listen to the
Stones. So does the theatre change again?
Yeah, the 60s is kind of a watershed. Musical theatre ceases to be the popular music. It
becomes old fashioned in comparison to what's happening both in popular music and in film.
Part of this is sort of triggered by Elvis Presley's film musicals and his
transition from his sort of more quote unquote clean identity into his rock star figures.
But there are also shortcomings, I guess, to what this leads to. Not everybody was able
to write a successful rock musical because actually lots of rock songs were not intended
to tell stories. Jesus Christ Superstar is an outlier in someone doing it very successfully early and hair
would be another. There are some duds, Hannah. Oh yeah. Nice. I want to hear about these. Desiree,
if I say to you 1972's classic Via Galactica. Oh my gosh, that sounds amazing. What do you think happens in that?
I'm at Via Galactica. I don't know. I mean it's it sounds like space lasers and you know
I mean cuz I'm trying hard not to think of things that were a thing like Xanadu which is this or is it or
Xanadu one of them? No, I'm thinking of Starlight Express. It's all on roller skates. Yeah. Yeah, what else could it be on? All on snowboards or something like that?
It's so close.
Laser guns, aliens.
You're doing really, doing good. Hannah, do you want to tell Desiree what the technology
was?
Well, so they wanted to mimic zero gravity.
Yes. Wow. Oh my God. Yes.
All of their actors bouncing on trampolines for the entire musical.
Bring it back. That's what I say.
It's not really anti-gravity, it's like very gravity.
Yes, you can really feel the gravity.
Like bang, bang.
Same now, I would love to, if anyone would like to produce the Van Halen musical, jump
with me.
I know where to get some trampolines.
Let's do this.
The 1970s was a time of a bit of crisis in New York.
A lot of crime, a lot of, you know.
I was gonna say, you mean the good times
that everybody talked about
when I was there in the early 2000s?
The fun stabby times.
You should have been here before
when there were heroin needles in everyone's eyes.
It was great.
It's not great.
So there was sort of big campaigns
to try and get New York up and running again,
bring Broadway back.
Then you do get the kind of tourist flocking in
after various tourist campaigns.
But also you then get the arrival of Andrew Lloyd Webber
and the mega musical.
What do you think of as a mega musical in your head?
I just imagine a lot of people
and I guess a chandelier crashing.
I mean, a lot of people and spectacle.
I mean, in my head, musicals are pretty mega.
Like as far as my modern understanding of them
It's like oh someone's getting hoisted up and like, you know
Someone's flying out over the audience or you've got to have like something like that. So why don't you would have?
Yeah stunts and like huge, you know and an entire army of people coming on to stage or like a
Helicopter lands in before the act break. So obviously you've got Lemmys, Miss Saigon, Starlight Express, cats with bumholes, I don't
know.
We get Lloyd Webber coming in and fixing the show.
Nothing changes.
You can perform it a thousand times in every city in the world.
It's never going to be different.
The seeds of this are sown in the 70s with Greece and Chicago and the Rocky Horror Show
and The Wiz and A Chorus Line, which is another
sort of massive hit. But what Lloyd Webber does is he combines technology, a score, musical
choices, lighting, production components all together to create a product that could be
recreated in lots of different spaces. And what that means is that these musicals, specifically mega musicals, become destination performances.
You go to Broadway to see the Phantom of the Opera on Broadway.
It allows considerable special effects.
So we have extensive revolving stages and extra complicated folding
scenery like in Les Mis.
We have a helicopter seeming to land in the middle of a scene in Miss Saigon.
We've got magic tricks and all sorts of illusion work, for example, in Phantom, Cats, we have this amazing immersive
set but the people are actually climbing over the audience to get to their performance marks.
So it becomes immersive in a different kind of way but it also pushes the boundaries of all the
things one might expect when going to see a musical. And the standardization
is really important because it means that if you've seen one of these shows in theory
in one place in the world and you go to see it somewhere else, you actually know what
you're getting. And that was very different.
It's so weird that we had a British person come in to do that because it's a very American
thing to do.
It is, isn't it? It is quite an American tradition. Well, I mean, I don't want to speak on behalf
of America, but it does- A bit to like standardize something to make it highly commercial.
Exactly.
He's the reason why my suburban friends fly halfway around the world, you know, once a year to be like,
we're going to the Broadway to see this show.
Yeah.
OK.
Exactly. I mean, it's called show business, right?
And I mean, ticket prices soar in this time, don't they?
They shoot up.
He's the reason they? They shoot up.
Oh, he's the reason they're all 400 dollars.
Yeah, yeah. So.
I mean, I wouldn't want to blame him entirely. And the reason I wouldn't want to blame him
entirely is that one of the tensions in musicals the whole way through is the balance of the
shows that sell an amazing amount and the shows that are critically acclaimed but don't
sell a massive amount. So this is a tension, for example, between all the classics on time
shows that we know and love now that weren't particularly commercially successful when
they originally opened. But the other thing that happens with this standardization is
the sort of future proofing of musicals that got bad reviews. People wanted to go see the
spectacle and see what had not worked, for example. Yeah, absolutely. There was a little
bit of that.
Well, you went to see Cats, the movie, at the cinema. I mean, oh.
The 90s, obviously, is where we get the Disney Corporation saying,
well, we've got some musicals, let's...
And we like money, let's see what we can do here.
Spectacle, you got it.
You've got your huge hits, Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King,
obviously mega smashes again.
But then, of course, the 21st century, the millennium,
brings the horrors of 9-11, of course, you know, the 21st century, the millennium brings the horrors
of 9-11, of course, but also kind of a different era. Again, how is Broadway adapting to that
20 years ago or so?
Yeah, we have this really interesting balance of excitement that the musical is kind of
having a revival. The Disney animated musicals have been a massive hit. The Broadway versions
have then been a massive hit. We then have Moulin Rouge in Chicago that come out pretty
close together in the cinema, which had massive box office success. And then we have the producers
opening around 9-11 in the States, which won a record number of Tony Awards, had immense
audience engagement. And at the same time, we also have jukebox musicals having a new
resurgence. I mean, jukebox musicals have been part of musical theatre since the 1930s.
That's really interesting because I think people often assume they're kind of very cynical,
modern cash cows for musical artists like Abba or whatever, where you're just cashing in on your back catalogue.
Yeah, they were musical, cynical cash cows when you had in-house writers.
You didn't get a cash cow!
Remember Imogen?
It's kind of an interesting thing because if you already owned the rights to the songs
from a musical you already produced, why would you not reuse them again?
So you mentioned, I think you said Singing in the Rain is one of your favourite films,
right?
It's my favourite movie at the time and all the songs are reused.
Yeah, like Good Morning, Debut Dinner, Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland film.
So you know, this is not a new phenomenon, but we have ABBA and we have Queen, the Who
musical is back around. Later on we have Jersey Boys bringing people who are not
necessarily excited, yeah absolutely. Wait, a musical. The Green Day musical. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, for the punk
rock kids. Alright, nice. There's loads of it, Alanis Morissette more recently but
what's important about that is that it brings people who are maybe not excited
by what they think of as musical theatre music into musicals, but we have a real diversity of material. We have things like
Spring Awakening, LeMans Miranda's first musical in the Heights, which was a
surprise success, and an interesting example of theatre that was subsidised in
the States where most theatre is commercially funded. Things like the Book
of Mormon and Avenue Q pressing the boundaries of what is irreverent and
what isn't. But we also have this massive wind of
films that did not have musical theatre elements becoming musicals. So Billy Elliot is the
obvious example for the UK audience, but Legally Blonde, Mean Girls. There's a lot, American Psycho
is an interesting outlier. So there's lots of this going on. Groundhog Day. Yeah, Groundhog Day is a lovely one. Tim Minchin,
that's great. And then obviously Wicked is a massive hit as well.
Yes, absolutely. So Wicked, I think it's fascinating that The Wizard of Oz is
peppered the whole way through musical theatre history.
1902 we started.
We started in 1902. We then have the switch to Technicolor, which leads to
Disney, then making Snow White and
kicks off all of our animated musicals.
We have The Wiz, which is a really significant landmark in black authored musicals post civil
rights and the film becomes really significant.
And then we move forwards into Wicked and interestingly then Andrew Lloyd Webber's reality
TV shows where we hunt for Dorothy.
So there is this sort of massive.
I miss that.
Not hunting her like literally.
No, we are like, oh yes.
That'd be amazing. Like the Running Man but with Dorothy.
Yes.
The musical theatre X Factor.
Okay.
But it's really interesting. So Wicked is a great example of taking what was an adult book and pitching it for teenagers.
There was a definite attempt, a bit like in the 60s, to bring in new young family audiences
back in the success of the Disney musical to other musicals.
So we have Wicked, which is very traditional in lots of ways, and that prefaces the success
of something like Hamilton.
And Hamilton takes us kind of full circle as a musical that not only transcends sort of
the social political context of musicals but also goes back into popular music and
you know becomes the first cast album to reach number one on the Billboard
rap chart. Yeah I mean Hamilton is beyond phenomenon in many ways it felt new but
in a lot of ways of what you've been talking about it feels like it's
borrowing on a long tradition. It's an amazing balance of old and new
and that's the reason that it is so successful is that we are getting a conventional what we would
call a book musical in the style of Oklahoma with a sort of a beginning and a middle and an end and
lots of characters and lots of action, but at the same time moving musical theatre forwards in terms
of the kind of genres that are heard in what I'm going to refer to as mainstream theatres,
because there was definitely touching on hip hop and rap in other musicals before this point,
but he really popularised it and he was very lucky in the timing because it aligned beautifully with the Obamas agendas.
So Desiree, final thoughts on, do you send your regards to Broadway? Have we convinced you of the joys of singing?
Yes, please remember me to Harold Squam.
Um, particularly that Macy's.
This has been amazing.
Thank you so much for teaching me about stuff
that I now miss because I didn't understand it
the first time.
And now letting me know I can't whinge
about a jukebox musical because they are basically
the backbone of musicals throughout
the entire
commercial practice.
Yeah, there's nothing new under the sun.
Often on this show we're always like, yeah, history, we've done it before.
The best thing I learned was that actors used to have a lot more power and that makes me
really, really happy and also sad and longing for the old days.
The Nuance Window! and longing for the old days. The nuance window! Okay, well it's time now for the nuance window.
This is where Desiree and I enjoy our intermission ice creams and Dr.
Hannah gets two minutes on stage to sing us something we need to know.
Take it away, Dr. Hannah.
Okay, something I think we haven't covered is musicals rely on communicating
plot and character really quickly.
So they work in shortcuts.
And because of the number of elements that most musicals contain, musical theatre creators
have kind of developed a vocabulary to tell us what we need to know simply and succinctly.
So the company might pause on stage and a spotlight actor will appear in a contrasting
colour, probably covered in sequins.
The action is paused.
We know that this is our main character and we don't have to process where sequins, the action is paused. We know that this is
our main character and we don't have to process where they fit into the story any further.
On the same basis we have things like dance sequences that reveal dreams and introspections,
but in musicals from Brigadoon in the 1940s through to like The Lion King, choreography
also covers action that's really hard to stage and chase scenes. We have types of song, you mentioned
earlier the I want song, the love duet, and these tell us about the characters' emotions and
motivations. We also have these establishing numbers that explain the musical's location and
their plot, and they prevent us from having to think about specifics while we're enjoying all
the other things musicals have to offer. Wicked and Hamilton are really interesting examples
because they begin by telling you how the story ends. And then they also introduce key characters and narrative. So we are kind of
wrapped up in comfort five minutes in. We know who the characters are, we know what the key content
is, we can just enjoy what we are consuming. All of that makes musicals really exceptionally
accessible to a broad audience, and that is
one of the things that musical theatre has in comparison to other art forms. It accesses
all walks of life. It also means that musicals that are successful tend to be written by
people who are in musicals in other parts of their career, are connected to musical
theatre history, and know this vocabulary before they get into the process of writing. The complexity of this vocabulary then is that the amalgamation
of ideas leads to musicals trading in stereotypes and it can also allow us to have a limited
imagination about how we stage things and what musicals might sound like. The challenge,
I suppose then, is that the creative efforts of lots of people over decades
and centuries who've made the musical what it is can become invisible in this product
that we think is a very simple thing to make.
Lovely.
Thank you so much, Desiree.
Any thoughts on that?
There's something really amazing about this because there is a microcosm for like how
things could work,
where it's like in theater,
the bottom line is that the show must go on.
Everyone's gotta find the most creative,
cost-effective way to make the thing
come together and happen.
But also hearing your argument about
you do need to do it quickly economically
also means that the things that get cut
are often some of the most sort of like damaging things that we
probably needed to explore in the first place. I can't even get over the belting part from earlier
because I was just like, oh, I thought that came directly from gospel. But it was like, no, it was
a mimicking of gospel that turned into an appropriation or I'm, my head is still spinning
around about that one. But it is a really great metaphor for how we could sort of do life and capitalism,
but then it does involve a lot of nepotism.
It does.
So maybe not, maybe not.
I have a working theory, get back to me.
Okay, come back to you next year.
So what do you know now?
["The New York Times"]
Well, it's time now for the, so what do you know now?
This is our quick fire quiz for Desiree to see how much she has learned.
Aw, man!
I have every confidence in you.
We've got ten questions for you.
Here we go.
So, question one.
What was the first black Broadway production in 1903 with scenes set in Africa?
Oh, in Dahomey.
It was, very good. Question two, what was the name of the Actors Union
formed in 1913?
Oh, what, Equity?
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
I almost tricked myself out of answering an obvious question.
Take the card out of your own wallet, yeah.
Question three, what was controversial
about the song Old Man River in black organizing spaces?
A lot of black people felt, uh, organizers felt that it was drawing upon stereotype or reinforcing
those, I mean, essentially. And it was complicated because Paul Warrowson was singing it and it
was, you know, also about lifting up a tradition. So it was very...
Yeah, I think that's a very good summation. Yes, reinforce and also racist language was
used in it.
Yes, yes, yes. Yeah, question four,
can you name two musicals by Rodgers and Hammerstein?
Okay, well, Oklahoma's one.
There's so many, why can't I think of a single one?
Think G.I.'s.
South Pacific?
Yes, South Pacific, well done.
We got there, we got there.
Oh, oh, oh.
Question five, what is the technique known as cheating out?
It's like you don't face the person you're talking to, you face the audience.
You're like, open up like this and go, I'm talking to you Greg, can't everybody see that?
Yeah, so your voice carries, very good.
Can you all see that through the medium of podcast?
Question six, which musical theatre star was renowned as a belter in the days before artificial amplification and sang, there's no business like show business.
Ethel Merman.
It was Ethel Merman.
Question seven, who is most associated with the rise of the mega musical?
Oh, Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Of course it is.
Question eight, which character replaced Toto the dog in the 1902 musical version of The Wizard of Oz?
Wait, replace Toto the dog?
I thought Image and the Cow. Well, it's Image and the Cow, but I thought it was in reverse. No, very good. Wait, replace Toto the Dog? I thought Image and the Cow, well it's Image and the Cow,
but I thought it was in reverse. No, very good. Yeah, okay fine. You still got it right. Question
nine, describe the staging for the 1972 musical Via Galactica. Oh wait, is this the one with the
trampolines? This is so amazing. Why are there not revivals of this right now? I think it's time.
I agree, bring it back.
And this for Perfect 10, of course, question 10.
The cast album for which musical became the first
to reach number one on the Billboard rap charts?
Oh, Hamilton.
10 out of 10, Never in Doubt.
I wish it were the sound of music though, so bad.
That'd be amazing, wouldn't it?
That'd be so great. Just Jay-Z's version of The Hills though, so. That'd be amazing, wouldn't it? That'd be so great.
Just Jay-Z's version of The Hills Are Alive would be amazing.
10 out of 10, well done Desiree.
Thank you, Dr. Hanna, for a wonderful lesson.
Listener, for more musical chat with Desiree,
check out our episodes on Paul Robeson, Josephine Baker,
and also Pythagoras, because we talked briefly about.
Oh, it was fantastic.
We talked about his octave stuff.
For a rousing encore on Black American culture, we've got a lovely episode on the Harlem
Renaissance, which I really enjoyed.
And remember, if you've enjoyed the podcast, please leave us a review, share the show
with your friends, subscribe to your Dead to Me on BBC sound so you never miss an
episode. But I'd just like to say a huge thank you to our guests.
In history corner, we have the wonderful Dr.
Hannah to Reisingham Robbins from the University of Nottingham.
Thank you, Hannah. Thanks so much for having me.
And in comedy corner, we have the brilliant Desireetingham. Thank you, Hannah. Thanks so much for having me. And in Comedy Corner, we had the brilliant Desiree Burch.
Thank you, Desiree.
Surely you should ask your listeners
to leave you a musical review if they like this episode.
Hey, if people want to sing their reviews, I'm open to it.
Just remember, it needs to be an I want song.
And to you lovely listener, join me next time as we stage
revival of another forgotten historical masterpiece.
But for now, I'm off to go and perform a one-man version
of Frozen in my garden shed until the Disney lawyers shut me down.
Bye! store. It was written by Emmy Rose Price Goodfellow, Emma Nagoose and me. The audio producer was Steve Hankey and our production coordinator was Ben Hollands. It was produced by Emmy
Rose Price Goodfellow, me and senior producer Emma Nagoose. Our executive editor was James
Cook. You're Dead to Me is a BBC Studios audio production for BBC Radio 4.
From BBC Radio 4 comes DOE, examining the business behind profitable everyday products and what
they might be like in the future. I'm the entrepreneur Sam White. In each episode I
focus on things like TVs, hairdryers or vacuum cleaners, hearing first hand from people who
make them.
We still make products with DVD playability. You would be very surprised how many we sell.
Then our expert guests choose their favourite game-changing innovations
which shape the products in the past before we follow the money
to where they're going next.
Think of the TV 98 inch or 100 inch.
Doe makes the mundane marvellous again.
Listen on BBC Sounds.
If you're hearing this, you're probably already listening to BBC's marvellous again. Listen on BBC Sounds. plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy to true crime, all ad free. Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or listen to Amazon Music with
a Prime membership.
Spend less time on ads and more time with BBC podcasts.