While I certainly agree that a discussion like this should give mention to Sondheim, others might well grouse over the lack of reference to Jerry Herman. That's the difficultly with short projects like this that cover broad areas--someone's favorite subtopic is always going to be missed. My own petty gripe here: the word "debuted" is pronounced without the "t" and with 2 syllables, not 3 (although Americans and British may differ on which of those 2 syllables receives the accent.)
Very nice & professional! l will using this video for the first musical lesson, and let all the students know that about history of musical theatre. Thank you very much!!! :)
that was very helpful! i'm working on an assignment abt musical theatre rn, so i'll be using some information from the video! i'll make sure to credit ur channel tho ::)))
Im a grad student studying music education. I found this source very informative, and put together very well. Would you be willing to share your sources for this project? I would love to cite your work
what is the song at the end? the one where they are tappdancing and singing at the same time. it looks like a school production or something like that. can someone give me the name of the song? thank you.
THANK YOU!!! I was searching for an engaging video about Musical Theater History appropriate for my 4th and 5th grade students. This is the best out there! Wonderful job.
This is extremely professional. I would really make this into a career. Maybe you could use your voice for different narrations of books on audio books.
Before you use this video to teach musical theatre, be aware there are some whopping huge errors in it. For example, Florenz Ziegfeld did NOT write "Show Boat" - that was Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein - and his shows, though predecessors to the modern musical theatre, are often seen as several steps removed from the form; he is not generally seen as writing "the first musicals." Also, where is Stephen Sondheim? Too bad, because there is a desperate need for a good history of the musical theatre, especially one that goes a little beyond history to explain aspects of the form.
Thank you for your correction. This was a project that I created for my uni assignment. I do know now that there are some errors, but at the time I compiled it, it was all the research I could obtain in my first term, backed up from other resources. My teacher said she liked the amount of work I put into it and told me to put it up for others to learn from. I do plan one day to update it but for now, besides some corrections people help me out with in the comments, majority of the work is still pretty accurate.
I will second the puzzlement of not a mention of Sondheim. Or Kander & Ebb. Something went drastically wrong with this video without these pivotal works. Please look elsewhere for the actual history of the musical after R&H; there is so much ignored.
all the dislikes are from music students forced to watch this
Trrrrue
yep
Fr
This is a very well put together video. Very informative. I'm going to have my music students watch it as part of my curriculum.
What kind of musical theatre documentary excludes Stephen Sondheim?
While I certainly agree that a discussion like this should give mention to Sondheim, others might well grouse over the lack of reference to Jerry Herman. That's the difficultly with short projects like this that cover broad areas--someone's favorite subtopic is always going to be missed. My own petty gripe here: the word "debuted" is pronounced without the "t" and with 2 syllables, not 3 (although Americans and British may differ on which of those 2 syllables receives the accent.)
Couple of corrections, Showboat was written by Kern & Hammerstein, not Zeigfeld. Oklahoma! was premiered 1943.
Thank you for informing me, If I do another musical theatre video I'll be sure to correct that. Thanks!🙂
@@chloeadel6149 No probs, they're small corrections!
Thank you very much for your interesting work. Shared it with my students. :)
Very nice & professional! l will using this video for the first musical lesson, and let all the students know that about history of musical theatre. Thank you very much!!! :)
I'm glad it can help!
Music students like me that were forced to watch this
that was very helpful! i'm working on an assignment abt musical theatre rn, so i'll be using some information from the video! i'll make sure to credit ur channel tho ::)))
I'm glad you found it helpful! Good luck on your assignment!
OHHHH GEEOORRGE
Im a grad student studying music education. I found this source very informative, and put together very well. Would you be willing to share your sources for this project? I would love to cite your work
what is the song at the end? the one where they are tappdancing and singing at the same time. it looks like a school production or something like that. can someone give me the name of the song? thank you.
The song is called 'Give My Regards To Broadway
'
from the musical Little Johnny Jones
Music and Lyrics by George M. Cohan
@@chloeadel6149 oh my god! thank you so much chloe for taking out your time and replying to my comment. thank you!
@@nickirafiei5306 You're very welcome!
@@chloeadel6149 thanks sister
👍THAT WAS EXCELLENT! ❤️LOVED HOW YOU PUT THE HISTORY OF THEATRE TOGETHER. THANKS SO MUCH! 😊🌟👯♂️💃
this was great! used it for a class. can you tell me which version of Oliver you used? thank you!!!
Thank you! I'm glad it helped. The version I used was from the West End Performance. I'm pretty sure it was the 2010 show. 😀
very nice, using this for a drama class assignment thank you very much!!
Glad it can help!
Excellent! I will be using this as an introduction to broadway to my music students
Thank you so much! I'm glad it can can help. 🙂
Well researched with great clips!
My choir teacher used this has a video for my online class. 10/10 would reccomend
Thank you so much, I'm glad you liked it and were able to use it!
THANK YOU!!!
I was searching for an engaging video about Musical Theater History appropriate for my 4th and 5th grade students.
This is the best out there!
Wonderful job.
Ilang pipino din kaya nanonood para sa module
This is extremely professional. I would really make this into a career. Maybe you could use your voice for different narrations of books on audio books.
I now know that yes i like theater, I just don't like certain genres
Actually, Rogers and Hammerstein's main source of inspiration on making musicals was Gilbert and Sullivan.
Before you use this video to teach musical theatre, be aware there are some whopping huge errors in it. For example, Florenz Ziegfeld did NOT write "Show Boat" - that was Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein - and his shows, though predecessors to the modern musical theatre, are often seen as several steps removed from the form; he is not generally seen as writing "the first musicals." Also, where is Stephen Sondheim? Too bad, because there is a desperate need for a good history of the musical theatre, especially one that goes a little beyond history to explain aspects of the form.
Thank you for your correction. This was a project that I created for my uni assignment. I do know now that there are some errors, but at the time I compiled it, it was all the research I could obtain in my first term, backed up from other resources. My teacher said she liked the amount of work I put into it and told me to put it up for others to learn from. I do plan one day to update it but for now, besides some corrections people help me out with in the comments, majority of the work is still pretty accurate.
In spanish please
I will second the puzzlement of not a mention of Sondheim. Or Kander & Ebb. Something went drastically wrong with this video without these pivotal works. Please look elsewhere for the actual history of the musical after R&H; there is so much ignored.
it is to long
It’s 14 minutes long lmao