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The Musical as Drama

The Musical as Drama

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Author: Scott Mcmillin
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 375583

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 248
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.6 x 1

ISBN: 0691127301
Dewey Decimal Number: 792.60973
EAN: 9780691127309
ASIN: 0691127301

Publication Date: October 2, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Derived from the colorful traditions of vaudeville, burlesque, revue, and operetta, the musical has blossomed into America's most popular form of theater. Scott McMillin has developed a fresh aesthetic theory of this underrated art form, exploring the musical as a type of drama deserving the kind of critical and theoretical regard given to Chekhov or opera. Until recently, the musical has been considered either an "integrated" form of theater or an inferior sibling of opera. McMillin demonstrates that neither of these views is accurate, and that the musical holds true to the disjunctive and irreverent forms of popular entertainment from which it arose a century ago.

Critics and composers have long held the musical to the standards applied to opera, asserting that each piece should work together to create a seamless drama. But McMillin argues that the musical is a different form of theater, requiring the suspension of the plot for song. The musical's success lies not in the smoothness of unity, but in the crackle of difference. While disparate, the dancing, music, dialogue, and songs combine to explore different aspects of the action and the characters.

Discussing composers and writers such as Rodgers and Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Kander and Ebb, Leonard Bernstein, and Jerome Kern, The Musical as Drama describes the continuity of this distinctively American dramatic genre, from the shows of the 1920s and 1930s to the musicals of today.




Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars A mixed bag...   July 14, 2007
 7 out of 14 found this review helpful

McMillin may have been a fine English professor, but that doesn't mean he's adequately equipped to talk about live theatre intelligently. Theatre is not literature. A script and score are not a show; they are merely blueprints. The show only exists live in performance, with the collaboration of a director, actors, designers, musicians, and an audience. McMillin (like too many others) doesn't get that.

Too much of this book is spent on interesting theories that don't really make sense when applied to actual musical theatre pieces. And though the book is new, it assumes musicals are pretty much the same as they were mid-century, apparently unaware of the profound evolution the art form has been going through since the mid-1990s. So, sadly, many of his conclusions have no relevance whatsoever to musical theatre today. And, as often happens when people who don't work in the theatre try to write about it, there are just too many factual errors and misunderstandings of the art form throughout the book.


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