Natasha Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 is playing ART in Dec/Jan. If it transfers to Broadway, it could pose a serious threat to Hamilton, what awards do you think each would win?
I think Hamilton will pull a "Producers" sweep next year honestly. If I was working on a musical I'd push it back until the following season, 2016-2017.
I think "Natasha, Pierre..." has the best score that I've heard for the longest time and that includes "Hamilton". The same goes for the show in general. It's brilliant. I liked "Hamilton too but I prefer "The Great Comet". I can't wait to see what ART does with it.
I love, love, love Great Comet, and legitimately listened exclusively to the cast recording for months after its release.
But I think it needs a smaller, more customizable space to be fully appreciated; it is was written with such a space in mind.
I also think Hamilton is a superior and more important piece of theatre. And I don't think it will lose steam- it has very limited availability in its first months and I doubt people will lose interest.
"...everyone finally shut up, and the audience could enjoy the beginning of the Anatevka Pogram in peace."
Okay I'm curious. I haven't seen Hamilton and the only video i can find of it is a 1 minute montage with that "I'm not throwin away my shot" song. That is the only song i have heard from the show. So for those who have seen Hamilton, how huge is this show going to get? Are we talking RENT and HAIR huge? Or are we talking something smaller like Next to Normal?I saw a poster saying this was the best musical of our generation. Are we all gettin a little cray cray or is Hamilton really the second coming of Christ?
Countdown til Jordan comes on raging about how much loves me! 3..2..1...
I love Natasha and Pierre and already have tickets to see it again at the ART. They'll probably have to see how that goes. It's going to be on the larger main stage there and I haven't heard if they will be doing any of the food and drink stuff that Malloy loves. I'm sure they'll have to assess how Cambridge goes before they make any decisions about Broadway. What will it lose if it's on a proscenium with tradition theater rows of seats? What will it gain?
What prices can Broadway ticket buyers tolerate if there are more bells and whistles? How much more can Randy Weiner get away with as he rakes it in with his Theatre of the 1%?
I think it's all interesting but I don't think they'd be able to go from ART to Broadway in the same season. I could be wrong, I have been in the past.
That production is not coming in. The show flopped in the theatre district. Only a fool would tempt fate.
Only an even bigger fool would bring it in against Hamilton.
And I would think that, if it did come in, it may well be a revival.
I liked Natasha a lot, including the score, but it got zero traction.
Hamilton is indeed the most important show of the 21st Century (to date), and the last fifth of the previous century as well. It has already banked enough advance to recoup, and it will be in line with Rent and A Chorus Line among relatively recent landmark shows. But it is more than both-the Show Boat of this century.
Buzz is not going to be the problem for Hamilton; finding a ticket will be the problem.
Greased, lots of producers intend a lot of things, but most never fulfill their intentions. But even giving them the benefit of the doubt, it would be utterly crazy to bring it in knowing you would be an also ran.
Bilbo, Ragtime was not enthusiastically reviewed except by Canadian critics who were described as provincial for the degree they jumped on the Garth bandwagon. And Ragtime was a spectacle not an important landmark in musical theatre.
CATSNY, if you have an in, I'd rather get one measly point than a sum certain. Unfortunately for your conspiracy theory the only thing I got for saying what I said was two astonishing evenings of theatre, one very early in previews (prior to any significant hype) and the other during the last extension. And yes I know I sound like a flack for the show, but I have waited a long time for validation of my belief that musical theatre had a future.
It's on the stage at the Loeb Drama Center of the ART. Will they retrofit the theater to make it look like a supper club, as the original fantasy was for the prospective Broadway production? Probably not.
I don't know much about the show or the specific plans at the ART other than this:
- I have tickets
- It won't be their traditional proscenium as they are building the stage out over the front section of seats (reducing seating by a third)
Lastly, if the ART is looking to bring any show to broadway next season, I suggest it would be Waitress, premiering this summer.
If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it?
These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.