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Perils of Crossover: New Recordings of Old Musicals Are a Mixed Blessing


Article # : 12717 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 3 / 1987  1,703 Words
Author : Kenneth LaFave
Ken LaFave is music editor of the Kansas City Star.

       Will American musical theater withstand the decades of devotion and distortion that await it? That is the question raised by the release, over the past two years, of several new recordings of older musicals, chief among them West Side Story, Candide, Follies, and South Pacific. The answer may depend on the strength of the form itself and on if and when another form comes along to replace it. In the heyday of American musical theater, about 1920 to 1970, dozens of shows hit the boards annually, and many of these were long-lasting. It was a vital form, and new work proliferated. Rodgers and Hart, the Gershwin brothers, Jerome Kern and his collaborators popped out shows at the rate of one or two a season. Later contributors, like Rodgers and Hammerstein and Lerner and Lerner and Loewe, slowed things down to a major show every two or three years. Today's musical theater composers - and there are precious few of them - produce work at an infinitely slower pace, thanks largely to the laborious system of workshopping shows for years before taking them into a theatre. A current Off-Broadway offering, Olympus on My Mind, reportedly took two years to write and three years to workshop. Yet it is exactly the sort of light, uncomplicated bauble of a show that Irving Berlin and Guy Bolton cranked out in two months, followed by three months of rehearsal and out-of-town tryouts.
       
        This slowdown in new work has been accompanied by an increased revivalism. Four out of the five new musicals that opened on Broadway last fall (1986) have closed, but two revivals - a cornucopia of Noel Coward songs and the 1930s British musical Me and My Girl - have joined the growing lineup of resuscitated shows on the Great White Way. What happened slowly to opera has happened quickly to musical theater: A repetoire has been established, and the business of the ... (1998 of 10024 Characters)
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