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The Bowery Boys: New York City History

#372 The Shuberts: The Brothers Who Built Broadway

The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Tom Meyers

Society & Culture, History, Documentary, Places & Travel

4.83.6K Ratings

🗓️ 24 September 2021

⏱️ 73 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There's no business like show business -- thanks to Lee, Sam and J.J. Shubert, the Syracuse brothers who forever changed the American theatrical business in the 20th century. At last Broadway is back! And the marquees of New York's theater district are again glowing with the excitement of live entertainment. And many of these theaters were built and operated by the Shubert Brothers, impresarios who helped shape the physical nature of the Broadway theater district itself, creating the close cluster of stages that give Times Square its energy and glamour. In this show, we'll be visiting the dawn of Times Square itself and the evolution of the American musical -- from coy operettas and flirty song-filled revues filled with chorus girls. The Shuberts were there almost from the beginning. After fending off their rivals (namely the Syndicate), the Shuberts centered their empire around an alleyway that would quickly take their name -- Shubert Alley. They were innovative and they were ruthless, generous and often cruel (especially to each other). During the 1950s and 60s, the Shubert empire almost crumbled -- only to rise again in the 1970s and 1980s thanks to A Chorus Line and some very musical felines. FEATURING A visit to the Shubert Archive above the Lyceum Theatre, a magical trove of historical items from the American stage. boweryboyshistory.com Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/boweryboys

Transcript

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0:00.0

The Barryboys episode 372, The Shoebirds, The Brothers, who built Broadway.

0:06.6

Hey, it's The Barryboys!

0:08.3

Hey!

0:23.0

Hi there, welcome to The Barryboys. This is Greg Young.

0:26.0

And this is Tom Myers. And we are on Broadway.

0:29.4

Mm-hmm.

0:30.4

Or just a block west of Broadway on 44th Street to be more specific.

0:34.4

But Broadway is back in a big way this fall after more than a year and a half of darkened

0:39.7

stages due to the pandemic lockdowns.

0:43.0

Yeah, we're in the thick of it here. We're on Broadway. We're not yet on a marquee.

0:47.7

I'm afraid, not yet.

0:49.3

And we're standing in the center of the Broadway theater district, a little spot known as

0:54.1

Shoebird Alley. But this is no ordinary Alley, but a pathway that cuts to the block of 44th

1:00.4

and 45th streets surrounded by Broadway theaters.

1:06.0

And many of these theaters were built and originally operated by the Shoebird Brothers. They were

1:11.0

in Prasarios who basically invented the Broadway theater district as we know it today and

1:15.8

changed the way that people see stage shows in the United States.

1:19.8

Well, to celebrate the return of Broadway, we're going to look at the business of making

1:25.2

shows and explore the story of the brothers Shoebird, Lee, Sam and JJ. They ushered in

1:33.7

the modern theater age and helped make New York the theater capital of the world. In fact,

1:39.6

creating that world from the various stages, we see right around us right now, Tom, including

1:45.2

right next to us right here, the Shoebird and the Booth Theater.

...

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