Tony Awards Reflect a Boring Broadway Season

With the Tony Awards only a few days away (June 13) and nearly every theatre-oriented website extolling predictions for the ceremony, I thought it appropriate to weigh in on the past Broadway season, and even toss out a few of my own picks for best in show.

It is nearly impossible to dismiss the fact that Broadway experienced a rather lackluster year, star-studded shows or not, as can easily be seen by the list of Tony nominations. When musicals like “Memphis” and “Million Dollar Quartet” are able to snag nods for best musical, and the dreaded “Addams Family” can be listed as having one of the best original scores, it’s certain that the creative juices flowing around Times Square were strained this past season.

Perhaps this season is slightly a result of the recession bounce-back effect. In late 2008, as the realities of a recession were preparing to strike Broadway, the New York Post’s Michael Riedel reported that “backers who regularly used to cut checks for $200,000 have all but vanished.”

There were, of course, Broadway cheerleaders during those hard times, claiming that art would endure and the show would go on, but what turned out to be more accurate was that the full effect of scared theatre funders and opportunistic producers would not be completely realized for years to come.

Just look at the celebrity-filled stages over the past few seasons, culminating in a string of Hollywood productions this time around. From Catherine Zeta-Jones in “A Little Night Music” — audiences would never eat their musical vegetables like this show without a celebrity endorsement — Jude Law in “Hamlet,” Christopher Walken in “A Behanding in Spokane,” Denzel Washington in “Fences,” and so on.

Production costs on Broadway are through the roof, as it costs upwards of $3 million to put on a play while musicals can run between $7 million and $11 million, according to FoxBusiness.com. It’s no wonder that producers felt squemish about relying on actual art to sustain a production. After all, “A Steady Rain” proved that a complete bore could become a hit merely because it featured Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig, while a worthy revival like “Ragtime” couldn’t find an audience as it had no Hollywood-linked names. Continue reading Tony Awards Reflect a Boring Broadway Season

Music’s Past and Future Meet on Broadway


As the current Broadway season draws to a close — shows must open by April 29 to be eligible for the coveted Tony Award this year — it looks like it might be the year of rock and roll, or at least a season that took some chances on heavier musical stylings.

Last season had rock music, in one form or another, getting much deserved attention from Tony voters and ticket buyers, including the now Pulitzer Prize-winning musical ‘Next to Normal,’ ‘Rock of Ages’ and the spruced up revival of ‘Hair,’ the musical that kicked off the first generation of rock musicals.

Now comes the highly-anticipated ‘American Idiot,’ a show built around the sounds of Green Day, set to open April 20; ‘Memphis,’ a production that, if not sporting an actual rock score, at least tells the story of rock music from a racial point of view; and the recently opened ‘Million Dollar Quartet,’ a musical based on early rock and roll.

Watching ‘Hair’ last season gave a look back at the birth of rock on Broadway, something that many younger theatregoers were unable to experience first hand.  What has now become acceptable to Broadway audiences, in various degrees, wasn’t so easy to digest when ‘Hair’ transferred from the Public Theatre to Broadway in 1968.

‘American Idiot’ is the most in-your-face musical to hit Broadway yet, with a pure rock sound that makes previous “rock” musicals look tame. ‘Rent’ might have introduced the idea of a contemporary rock musical to twentysomethings, but Green Day’s opus goes one step further by force feeding its raw sound and energy down the throats of theatregoers. The MTV generation, if it still exists, will find plenty to cheer about, as should all Broadway onlookers. This kind of show has the potential to inject new life into New York’s creative community.

On a similar note, most Green Day fans weren’t around to hear what radio stations sounded like before rock and roll took over the airwaves.  With the latest form of anthemic rock getting ready to take over Broadway, there couldn’t be a better time to look back at the genre’s birth, and that is exactly what both ‘Memphis’ and ‘Million Dollar Quartet’ are doing, with the latter musical taking the more historical route to educate and entertain.

‘Million Dollar Quartet’ tells the story of an actual recording session in 1956 that gathered the likes of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins at Sun Studios, the legendary recording studio that launched the careers of these musical heavyweights.  While Green Day and the various bands currently making the Billboard charts are inspired musicians, it was these four men that laid the groundwork for current rock artists. Continue reading Music’s Past and Future Meet on Broadway

‘Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson’ Tears Down Musical Theatre Tradition

Musical theatre old timers have been circling the proverbial wagons for quite sometime now, grasping at revival after revival in hopes of retaining the fading glory of yesteryear song and dance shows. Over the course of the past couple seasons on and off Broadway, a rebellion of sorts has been afoot, and if anyone has [...]