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What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?

What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?

SueleenGay Profile Photo
SueleenGay
#1What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 3:59pm

I used to think it was that all the men on Broadway were gay (Yea, we know,Hunter, you are not).

Now I think it is that the Broadway Community is a loving and welcoming bunch that embraces all performers with open arms and takes care of them as if they really WERE family.
I guess they are just as shallow and petty and bitter as the rest of the world.

Thanks for the reality check.

What do YOU think is the biggest misconception about Broadway?


PEACE.

theaterkid1015 Profile Photo
theaterkid1015
#2What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:04pm

That it isn't full of communists waiting to overthrow the government through their singing and dancing mind control tricks


Some people paint, some people sew, I meddle.

SueleenGay Profile Photo
SueleenGay
#2What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:09pm

Or that when a star is nice to you at the stage door it makes them your "friend" and the nicest/sweetest/funniest person in the world.


PEACE.

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#3What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:19pm

One misconception I used to have (that I'm sure many people share) is that Broadway was actually ON Broadway. I imagined Broadway to be a strip of theater houses standing side by side and lining either side of the avenue, with lit marquees and flashy billboards lighting up the night sky, and that off-Broadway was one street over and off-off-Broadway two streets over and so on.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

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theaterkid1015
#4What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:22pm

In all seriousness, I do feel like the musical is shrouded in misconceptions. Many people automatically think of hokey songs, bad acting, and lots of schmaltz. Not that some musicals aren't totally guilty of this, but some of the sophistication seen in many musicals. I think it's a product of some regional theaters that usually rely on the schmaltz and skip over the substance when mounting musicals.


Some people paint, some people sew, I meddle.

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#5What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:34pm

Yeah, theaterkid, the people I know all think that Broadway is just musical comedies.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

wickedfan11 Profile Photo
wickedfan11
#6What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:37pm

Two different people in my school thought these things:

1. Broadway is one theatre, and all of the shows alternate performances.

2. Broadway shows are like movies in a movie theatre, playing dozens of times a week, almost anytime a day you would like to see them.

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twinbelters
#7What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:43pm

That musical theater scores aren't "real" music. I'll never understand why so many people don't have an ear for show tunes.


With Irma you gotta do something!

Jordan Catalano Profile Photo
Jordan Catalano
#8What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:45pm

That when you get an autograph from someone at a stage door and tell them how great you thought they were, that you've "met" them and "talked" to them.

As in," I met Hugh Jackman the other night and we talked about his show. He was SO nice!"

rmusic11322
#9What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:47pm

I used to think Broadway was ON Broadway too. And that the original cast was the ONLY cast in the show.

wonderwaiter Profile Photo
wonderwaiter
#10What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 4:51pm

I used to think Broadway was like a museum, and that all shows that ever were or had been ran in perpetuity, as if in their own little pavilions like Epcot.


And no one grew into anything new, we just became the worst of what we were."

BroadwayBound17 Profile Photo
BroadwayBound17
#11What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:13pm

I used to think Broadway was this huge flashy thing, also all on one street/avenue. I thought every theater was enormous. Some cases this is true, but mostly, not.


2011: In The Heights Tour 1/16/11, The Color Purple Tour 2/11/11, West Side Story Tour 3/18/11

leefowler
#12What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:15pm

My sister (in Missouri) was under the impression that Broadway tickets were extremely hard to get...that to get tickets to ANY Broadway show would take at least a years reservation in advance.


Behind the fake tinsel of Broadway is real tinsel.

MeggilyWeggily08 Profile Photo
MeggilyWeggily08
#13What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:17pm

When I was five and wanted to see Rent my mother told me that it wasn't a good show for a five year old. I asked my older sister why and she told me that there were monsters and so for like a year I was deathly afraid of Broadway because I thought there were monsters. True story. Pathetic, but true.

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#14What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:18pm

Ha! BroadwayBound, I too thought the theaters were ginormous, that the stage was the size of a football field. :-P


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

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Rudy2
#15What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:19pm

When little I thought all shows ran indefinitely unless flops. I had never heard of a limited engagement.

The biggest overall misconception in the popular consciousness is, as far as I can tell, that Broadway is exclusively musicals.


2010

Feb. 28 - Looped, Feb. 28 - Next to Normal, March 4 - Hair, March 11 - A Little Night Music, March 24 - Time Stands Still, April 6 - La Cage Aux Folles, April 10 - Anyone Can Whistle (City Center), April 10 - Looped, May 9 - Enron, May 15 - A Little Night Music, May 15 - A Behanding In Spokane, May 30 - A Behanding In Spokane, May 30 - A Little Night Music, June 20 - A Little Night Music, June 23 - Red, June 23 - Sondheim on Sondheim, July 13 - A Little Night Music, July 18 - The Grand Manner (Lincoln Center)

BroadwayBound17 Profile Photo
BroadwayBound17
#16What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:21pm

StageManager2, imagine my surprise walking into Chicago for my first broadway musical. I was shocked. FAIL. haha.


2011: In The Heights Tour 1/16/11, The Color Purple Tour 2/11/11, West Side Story Tour 3/18/11

ClapYo'Hands Profile Photo
ClapYo'Hands
#17What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:31pm

I used to think that the actor playing the lead role was ALWAYS someone famous. I think many people do still think this.

Whenever I go to the theatre I get asked "Oh! who was in it?"

"If I say Rachael Wooding will you know i'm talking about?"

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best12bars
#18What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 5:45pm

Sue, I love this thread.

I think there have been so many misconceptions about Broadway over the years.

1) The "Golden Age" was a flawless time with flawless shows and flawless actors, directors, writers, and craftsman.

Not hardly. Shows were very rough around the edges. Talent was hit and miss. "Legends" such as Gertrude Lawrence and Jerry Orbach regularly sang off-key. Actors were hammy. Costumes were cheesy and cheap. Sets were painted flats.

But what they did have, more than ever in any other time in American theatre history, was heart. And Broadway today is a machine. A corporate entity. A commodity. The "business" side of "show business" has taken over. People aren't theatre anymore. And that can't be duplicated today. I've seen it attempted producers, writer, actors, etc.), and they fail, because no one recognizes it, and no one is genuinely interested in "heart." If the leading lady sings off-key, that's all they care about. I can't imagine a Carol Channing, Zero Mostel, or Gertrude Lawrence making it as a star today. They didn't hold their pitch-perfect notes long enough. They didn't riff enough. They needed a "tune adjuster."

Most of the people who wax poetic about the golden age are "seeing" it from a very distant memory. It's selective. And rose-colored. But what they DO remember is the emotional impact of what they saw. And that is clear as a bell.

2) Broadway is dying. It never has been, and it never will. It's been changing. Drastically. Not for the better, IMO. But it's not dying. Not even close.

3) The really talented actors, dancers, and singers are all on Broadway and in NY. This attitude is usually adopted by people in NY. Most of them have never left NY.

4) Broadway is the pinnacle of American theatre. I will say there was a time when it used to be. That time is gone. The only thing Broadway has now is bigger budgets and bigger stars. Not bigger talent and not better shows.

5) As aspiring actors, you do theatre for respect, movies for money, and TV for fame. Theatre doesn't have the respect it used to have. I would say you do movies for money AND respect. You do TV for fame (the viewing audiences still dwarf both theatre AND film audiences).


"Jaws is the Citizen Kane of movies."
blocked: logan2, Diamonds3, Hamilton22
Updated On: 6/19/10 at 05:45 PM

eatlasagna
#19What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 6:34pm

that you can't go to the theater unless you have money

this is probably the big myth that keeps my friends from seeing shows anywhere... and i always tell them.... if you want to sit up front and close then you more than likely need money... but most shows have cheap options... ugh... my friends annoy me because they won't see a show unless they sit up close but they won't pay... and they won't pay for cheap seats because it's too far back... ugh!

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#20What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 6:47pm

BroadwayBound, I hear ya! BEAUTY AND THE BEAST was my first Broadway experience and disappointed is not even the word. More like disenchanted. As a kid I used to have a picture book of entertainment through the centuries and they mentioned that in the 1700s operas became very elaborate with large companies and giant sets. They even used live animals (like horses and doves and sometimes trained wild animals) to complete the spectacle. So I was expecting nothing short of cannons and firework displays, so to speak. But then I walked in and saw the "small" stage, not much bigger than some of the local theaters here. Hahahaha


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

SweeneyPhanatic
#21What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 7:04pm

I live in Georgia, and most of my "Broadway" experiences have been seeing the touring companies at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. For fun, here's their interactive seating chart: http://www.foxtheatre.org/seatingChart.aspx

Yeah. It's huge. But as far as I was concerned, that's what a "Broadway" style theatre was. Fast-forward to my senior year of high school, and the theatre group's trip to NYC. Our first night we saw "Les Miserables." I was stunned at how small the theatre was, and by how much smaller the show itself looked compared to the photos I had seen. That weekend of shows was a bit of a reality check for me.

So, yeah, I guess one of the biggest misconceptions (as far as I can tell by reading this thread, and from remembering my own misconceptions) is that BROADWAY is this huge street lined with flashy theatres packed with thousands of people watching shows.

Side note: The ceiling at the Fox is so high, the chandelier can't go all the way up during "Phantom." Since I was sitting nosebleed the first time I saw it, the effect was kinda ruined by being able to see the top of the chandelier during the whole show. :/


-- SDG

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strummergirl
#22What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 7:20pm

So many misconceptions as a child:
Beauty & The Beast was my first Broadway experience too. I still liked it but subconsciously it did not touch the movie nor when I used to watch the Tonys or The Sound of Music or (gulp) Annie as a kid.

I used to think as a kid Upstate that NYC was not that far at all. Plus Schenectady had its own Broadway which did leave my seven year-old self confused.

I did think all the shows played at one place like musical chairs churning out show after show.

Zero concept of flops. Watching the Tonys, I thought there was something for everyone and shows ran forever (Les Miz and Phantom did not help) too.

Even watching the new stuff for the Tonys, I just thought stuff like The Sound of Music, West Side Story, and My Fair Lady were still on Broadway, none of this revival stuff came to mind. So when I heard Cats became the longest running show, I did a major double-take.

I also thought being a Broadway actor people led a life like Julie Andrews. I just considered her the gold standard of anything to do with music for the longest time, meaning there was no workers comp needed or appearing in Law & Order or a film shot in NYC as an extra to make it by.

rmusic11322
#23What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 8:04pm

StageManager2: Random, but I really like your avatar and signature. :)

defygravity24 Profile Photo
defygravity24
#24What is the biggest misconception about Broadway?
Posted: 6/19/10 at 8:09pm

I used to think all of the Broadway theaters were on broadway, until I saw Rent, and that an off-broadway show was simplay a show that wasn't on the street, broadway. I also thought shows ran forever.