Jeopardy tonight

phantom8019
#1Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 7:37pm

Anyone see Jeopardy tonight? The Final Jeopardy category was "Billboard top 100 albums."
The clue said something like "This album, from a movie based on a PLAY, spent a record number of weeks at number 1 in 1962 and 1963." I am paraphrasing all this, but I clearly read and heard the word PLAY.
The answer was "West Side Story."
Do the meticulous writers of Jeopardy really not know the difference between a play and a musical? Did anyone else see this?

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ljay889
#2Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 7:39pm

Did any of the contestants get it?

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supportivemom
#2Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 7:41pm

I hate when people call musicals a play! It's a pet peeve of mine!

phantom8019
#3Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 7:43pm

Yeah when the Final Jeopardy music ended Alex said, "I can think of three possible good guesses."

The first woman answered "Sound of Music."

Alex said, "That's one of the good guesses, but wrong."

The second guy said "West Side Story" and Alex said it was right.

I do not remember the third person's answer, as I was in shock.

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bjh2114
#4Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:01pm

I mean, I hate to be THAT guy, but technically it is a play. The definition of a musical is " a play or motion picture in which the story line is interspersed with or developed by songs, dances, and the like." The use of the word play here is NOT to distinguish a stage play from a stage musical, but RATHER to distinguish between a stage musical and a movie musical. The term play is being used to denote that it was based on a stage piece, hence "play".

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bjh2114
#5Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:03pm

And just to clarify, I don't like when people refer to stage musicals as "plays" either, but that wasn't the intention here. If in fact the wording was, as you say, "This album, from a movie based on a PLAY..." there is no problem. You can't say "the album from a movie based on a MUSICAL" because the movie isn't BASED on a musical. It IS a musical.

phantom8019
#6Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:06pm

I agree with you a bit. But it seems a little misleading. I was thinking, "Geez a movie from the 1960s based on a play... what the hell could it be?" I didn't even consider any musicals because I really took it as meaning PLAY.

PS--Haven't I seen in certain opening credit sequences in movie musicals something like "Based on the musical with music by X and lyrics by Y?"

Updated On: 11/27/12 at 08:06 PM

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dramamama611
#7Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:11pm

1. I'm jumping on BJH's comment: it IS the musical, it wasn't based on the musical.

2. Melodramas are PLAYS, Dramas are plays, Comedies are PLAYS, Musicals ARE plays.

3. Could it be the PLAY (for you purists) the writers were referring to was actually R&J?


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.
Updated On: 11/27/12 at 08:11 PM

WiCkEDrOcKS Profile Photo
WiCkEDrOcKS
#8Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:11pm

A few weeks ago, the final Jeopardy question was "what is the longest running American Broadway musical of all time?" Only one contestant guessed the right answer, I believe (CHICAGO). The other guesses were RENT and LES MIZ.

flossie2
#9Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:27pm

I assume it was meant that West Side Story, both the movie and musical, were based on the play Romeo and Juliet. Anyway....WSS was the answer I came up with.

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bjh2114
#10Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:32pm

The other guesses were RENT and LES MIZ.

This makes me oh so sad.

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DottieD'Luscia
#11Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:32pm

The 3rd contestant also came up with The Sound of Music. That was my first guess, followed by West Side Story. Alex said a 3rd good choice would have been The King and I. I don't believe that movie opened in the 60s. I too was kind of thrown when the question read "play" as opposed to "musical".


Hey Dottie! Did your colleagues enjoy the cake even though your cat decided to sit on it? ~GuyfromGermany

Phyllis Rogers Stone
#12Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:35pm

I saw it and knew the answer. I also don't go apoloectic when I hear a musical play referred to as a play.

I mean, if you really want to pedanticly nitpick, I would nitpick why Alex thought "Sound of Music" would be a good answer, since the movie version of that didn't even exist in 1963.

I don't understand that question from the one WickedRocks mentioned. Chicago is the longest running what?
Updated On: 11/27/12 at 08:35 PM

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WiCkEDrOcKS
#13Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:36pm

This was the actual phrasing of the final Jeopardy: "Based on a 1926 play & real-life events, it’s now the longest-running American musical in Broadway history."

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bjh2114
#14Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:37pm

Haven't I seen in certain opening credit sequences in movie musicals something like "Based on the musical with music by X and lyrics by Y?"

I'm not sure. I've definitely seen "A musical with music by X and lyrics by Y." I'm trying to think of an example where I've seen the "based on" as part of the credits. The only time I've ever seen the words "based on" is when the title of the work has been changed.

Phyllis Rogers Stone
#15Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:38pm

Oh, I get it. I guess the category was specifically American musicals?

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WiCkEDrOcKS
#16Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:39pm

Nope, the final Jeopardy category was just "Broadway Musicals."

Phyllis Rogers Stone
#17Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:39pm

The only time I've ever seen the words "based on" is when the title of the work has been changed.

Really? Then you haven't been paying attention.

phantom8019
#18Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:43pm

The fine print on the back of my Sweeney Todd DVD case says "Based on the musical by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler"

But on other movie musicals it is worded differently.

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bjh2114
#19Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:44pm

Let me rephrase: The only time I can currently REMEMBER the words being used is when the title has been changed. It's totally possible I've seen it hundreds of times and just can't remember because it's so common I don't even think about it.

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bjh2114
#20Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:46pm

It's so funny you said that Phantom. I was just going to say that I feel like the one I remember recently that MAY have done what you said was Sweeney. My other thoughts were Nine and Chicago, only because they were such huge reimaginings of their respective stage shows.

Phyllis Rogers Stone
#21Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:50pm






Yeah, it's really virtually like every movie that's been made of a movie or play. I'm not being snarky, but whether it's written "based on the play/muscial of the same name" or in like Chicago's above, I think it's phrased that way like 99% of the time.






Updated On: 11/27/12 at 08:50 PM

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bjh2114
#22Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:53pm

Thanks Phyllis. Do you have any specific examples of "Based on the musical" with nothing else after it? I'm racking my brain, and I can't come up with any other than Sweeney.

phantom8019
#23Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:53pm

Anyway, seems plenty of people figured out the Jeopardy answer.

I just fixated on the word "play." (There are lots of movies based on regular old plays, and they too have music and soundtracks.)

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bjh2114
#24Jeopardy tonight
Posted: 11/27/12 at 8:57pm

That have been on the Billboard Top 100?