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History That Doesn't Suck

163: The Show (Boat) Must Go On: Broadway and the American Musical

History That Doesn't Suck

Prof. Greg Jackson

History, Education

4.76.2K Ratings

🗓️ 26 August 2024

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Miller, Lyles, and I were standing near the exit door . . . Blake stuck out there in front, leading the orchestra—his bald head would get the brunt of the tomatoes and rotten eggs.”

This is the story of American musical theater and the dawn of modern Broadway. 

Popular entertainment is evolving fast in the early twentieth century. Minstrel shows just aren’t drawing the same numbers anymore (for good reason), and burlesque and variety shows abound. The earliest “official” musical, The Black Crook takes several notes from these sometimes scandalous shows, as do Flo Ziegfeld’s new “revues.” By the 1920s, composers, writers, and choreographers are experimenting with what a musical production can do: using songs to advance the plot (thanks Hammerstein!), and incorporating new music genres like jazz. 

Big players including George Gershwin, Noble Sissle, and Irving Berlin all play a role in crafting the perfect environment for the American musical to emerge, but the production Show Boat really gives a glimpse of the future of musical theater. It entertains even as it tackles heavy topics, and the score is seriously moving. It’s difficult to anticipate how audiences will receive this new form—less pompous than a European operetta, but definitely more substantial than one of Ziegfeld’s musical revues. So, without further ado . . . take your seat, the show’s about to begin. 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

History isn't black and white, yet too often it's presented as such.

0:05.0

Gray History, the French Revolution, is a long-form history podcast dedicated to exploring the ambiguities and nuances of the past.

0:14.2

From a revolution of hope and liberty to the infamous reign of terror,

0:19.3

you can't understand the modern world without understanding the French Revolution.

0:24.6

So search for the French Revolution today.

0:28.6

What's something you learned in history class that you feel like wasn't the whole truth.

0:33.5

Better yet, what's something you didn't learn at all

0:36.1

that was omitted completely.

0:37.9

That's what I like to call, Redacted History.

0:40.8

My name is Andre White, the host of the Redacted History Podcast, the place where history's forgotten

0:46.4

events, heroes, and villains get their story told, one episode at a time.

0:52.1

The Redacted History Podcast. Real History Never Dies.

0:56.8

Stream the Redacted History Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever else you get your

1:02.4

podcast.

1:03.4

H.T.S. fans, this is Professor Jackson.

1:06.1

I'm pleased to announce that history that doesn't suck is going out on the road again

1:09.7

with our live stage show.

1:11.4

If you haven't heard, this is the live show where I tell the story of the

1:14.8

first 100 years of American history from the revolution through the Civil War. I wrote it

1:19.5

for the stage, not the podcast. It's meant to be experienced with friends and neighbors. So go to

1:24.8

H.T.d.com slash tour for the latest schedule and tickets and come join me for some

1:31.0

epic storytelling under the lights with video and live musicians.

...

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