Top 10 Broadway Shows That Bombed So Hard They Cancelled Them Immediately

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • These Broadway shows bombed so hard they were cancelled almost immediately. For this list, we’ll be looking at doomed musicals and plays that barely lasted more than a month, week, or even a night on the Broadway stage. Our countdown includes "High Fidelity," "Carrie," "Kelly," and more! Which Broadway show do YOU think got cancelled too soon? Let us know in the comments.
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    #Broadway #Musical #Theater #Cancelled #Bombs

Комментарии • 417

  • @abellewis3062
    @abellewis3062 Год назад +141

    Not every movie needs a broadway musical. Enough said.

    • @xak999
      @xak999 Год назад +6

      Now they're planning "The Karate Kid" musical and a few other inappropriate titles I can't think of off the top of my head. Anyone for "Last Tango In Paris," the melted butter musical?

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +3

      @@xak999 Years ago in Chicago I saw a hilarious late night musical parody version of *The Karate Kid,* with lyrics sung to the soundtrack's instrumental selections.

    • @dukearroyo2214
      @dukearroyo2214 Год назад +3

      @@xak999 😢 NOOOOO I WOUOD RATHER WATCH A MUSICAL ABOUT SOAP MAKING THEN A KARATE KID FUCKING MUSICAL 😭 😭

    • @jannamckeen4414
      @jannamckeen4414 Год назад +1

      Amen

    • @DDTC73
      @DDTC73 Год назад

      Agreed. And yet Thelma and Lousie is on it's way

  • @SK_2174
    @SK_2174 Год назад +164

    Tuck Everlasting deserved a longer run. It’s such a beautiful story/musical. So happy it’s getting performed in high schools and community theatres.

    • @fromthehaven94
      @fromthehaven94 Год назад +7

      *"Unless Disney is involved"*
      OF COURSE!

    • @carminecdinoproductions
      @carminecdinoproductions Год назад +2

      I definitely agree!

    • @Showtunediva
      @Showtunediva Год назад +2

      I was in a community production of Tuck Everlasting last spring. The plot drags on forever but the music is fantastic especially Time and The Wheel.

    • @dogratgirl4178
      @dogratgirl4178 Год назад +2

      Agreed. I was in it last year with my boyfriend. He played Angus and I played Mae.

    • @potterinu
      @potterinu Год назад +1

      A couple of the songs made my spotify musical list and I would rather listen to this than Cats or Phantom. I also loved the movie with Alexis Bledel.

  • @Michelenergy
    @Michelenergy Год назад +80

    True story -- I actually was at the one and only performance of your number one on this list "Moose Murders" back in 1983! I also saw another Broadway play you guys omitted from your list: "Teaneck Tanzie" with Andy Kaufman about wrestling. That play also closed opening day. In fact, one of the Moose Murder's reviews even said something like "Moose Murders made Teaneck Tanzie look like a masterpiece." Anyway, please don't ask me for details about MM -- I think I fell asleep... LOL

    • @thewkovacs316
      @thewkovacs316 Год назад +3

      tanzi was a hit in the uk
      probably would have been better off first opening off broadway...different type of crowd...different expectations

    • @christopherstuart9190
      @christopherstuart9190 Год назад +4

      Aside from Andy Kaufman, "Teaneck Tanzi: The Venus Flytrap" also featured Debbie Harry of Blondie fame.

    • @VesnaVK
      @VesnaVK Год назад +2

      Cool!

    • @babsbybend
      @babsbybend Год назад +1

      I guess revivals aren't on the list. "Little Johnny Jones" closed on its one night, in 1982, Donny Osmond as the lead.

    • @GoddessNeith
      @GoddessNeith Год назад +2

      @@babsbybend I was wondering if anyone would mention Little Johnny Jones!

  • @TheGadgetPanda
    @TheGadgetPanda Год назад +27

    I saw a production of Anyone can Whistle at the Southwark Playhouse in London last year. Yes, it's weird. Undeniably. But it is also pretty amazing. And the music is terrific.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +43

    I had no idea that "High Fidelity" ever had a musical adaptation. You learn something new every day, right?!😉😁

  • @JamesDavy2009
    @JamesDavy2009 Год назад +32

    Love the homage to _The Producers._ It's like all these shows were produced by Max Bialistock.

  • @EmmaChihuahua81
    @EmmaChihuahua81 Год назад +23

    Anyone Can Whistle is my favorite Broadway flop. I'd love to see it in a revival.

    • @leahsantavicca5323
      @leahsantavicca5323 8 месяцев назад

      There Won't Be Trumpets is one of my favorite songs...Heard it first on Streisand's Broadway album...didn't know it was written for Anyone Can Whistle.

  • @hanschristianbrando5588
    @hanschristianbrando5588 Год назад +20

    Sometimes Broadway musicals bomb simply because the audience wasn't in the mood at the time, and the cast album will make them wonder what they missed. (It's even more exciting when you find "Ed Sullivan Show" footage of a number from such shows; it's fun to see a cast album come to life.) That's why they should always film a performance; few shows are so bad they can't be sold to TV.

    • @brookelynnenewcomer943
      @brookelynnenewcomer943 Год назад +1

      Right I seen some shows bomb when it come out but become a hit later.

    • @alexmeyer5260
      @alexmeyer5260 10 месяцев назад

      @@brookelynnenewcomer943 That's what's happening with Merrily We Roll Along right now.

  • @Merylstreep1949
    @Merylstreep1949 Год назад +14

    The thing that made High Fidelity as a movie great was the John Cusack hand picked soundtrack, the musical probably would have done better if it had the movie soundtrack instead of weak sauce original songs...might as well have made Clerks into a musical lol omfg
    Spiderman Hold Back The Dark should have been on this list too

    • @keikekaze
      @keikekaze Год назад +1

      Spiderman was a truly terrible show--but it played 182 previews while they tried (unsuccessfully) to fix it, and by the time it opened it was already so notorious that it played two and a half years anyway! So, although it lost a lot of money, it doesn't really qualify as an "instant" flop.

  • @alyzu4755
    @alyzu4755 Год назад +13

    IMHO, it goes to show that not everything transfers well into a musical, and not every musical belongs on Broadway. Sometimes shows do better in smaller, more intimate spaces, with lower budgets.

  • @jacktaggart2489
    @jacktaggart2489 Год назад +33

    I saw 'Anyone Can Whistle' in tryouts in Philadelphia at the Forrest Theatre. I recall the sets being quite elaborate, but with Angela Lansbury and a superb cast, well, the story line was complicated and ahead of its time. I would have liked to see it again for clarity on the plotline.

    • @rodneykingston6420
      @rodneykingston6420 Год назад

      The original cast album has always sold pretty respectably. Would probably be a hit if revived.

    • @xak999
      @xak999 Год назад

      It went through significant changes between Philadelphia and Broadway. It might have looked all new to you. My mentor in the business said it wasn't the show that invented the old radio joke, but it certainly contributed to it lingering for so long. It went: "Announcer: First prize, a week in Philadelphia! Second prize... TWO weeks in Philadelphia!"

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад

      I love *Anyone Can Whistle,* and I love it exactly as originally written.

    • @SchwarzBass
      @SchwarzBass Год назад

      I recently saw a revival/updated production off WestEnd in London. I'm a big fan of the music... the story not so much. Pretty convoluted.

  • @CinnamonQuills
    @CinnamonQuills Год назад +11

    Tuck Everlasting was a gorgeous show with great choreography and performances and a stunningly emotional ending. It's really too bad that it didn't catch on.

  • @christopherbush9027
    @christopherbush9027 Год назад +3

    I’m not sure how you do a list like this and leave off Legs Diamond…legendary flop and the show that cost us the Mark Hellinger

  • @errorsofmodernism7331
    @errorsofmodernism7331 Год назад +2

    They should do a musical about a President with dementia that bumbles his country into nuclear annihilation. That could be a hit with the right music

  • @sheilaholmes8455
    @sheilaholmes8455 Год назад +9

    I did a production of Anyone Can Whistle. Underrated Sondheim that should have done better than it did.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад

      My prediction is that it will be revived to great success in the future

  • @michaelmoore2591
    @michaelmoore2591 Год назад +28

    Shows may not be
    Understood when they are first put on stage. I believe that is the case with “anyone can whistle”. I find the show incredibly beautiful and a work of sheer genius. It is not an easy show to understand but given the right production I think it can have a huge impact. Sadly the original Broadway cast album is heavily cut so look for the complete recording it does exist own on the CD it will bring the show into a whole new light. It is one of Stephen Sondheim’s saddest amazing works for the theater. Someday it may get it’s just rewards

    • @gljm
      @gljm Год назад +1

      The fact that the two leads Lee Remick and Harry Guardino had no rhythmic or music sense or abilities didn't help either. This is why Remick's big first act number "There Won't Be Trumpets" had to be cut.

    • @christinebutler7630
      @christinebutler7630 Год назад +3

      Typically for Sondheim, it was ahead of its time. Had it opened in 1969, not 1964, it might have made it.
      I belonged to a youth-run summer theater group, and we mounted a production of Anyone Can Whistle in 1979, to moderate local success. We wrote to Dame Angela Lansbury about it and received an incredibly ki d and gracious letter in response, wishing us well. We sent her a bottle of "miracle water."

    • @xak999
      @xak999 Год назад

      Remember when it was called "The Natives Are Restless?"

    • @jkrapenc1034
      @jkrapenc1034 Год назад +1

      I think I saw once that even Sondheim said that the musical was problematic. That the book didn't work. I think the score is so great, but the book was dreadful.

    • @billsnyder6391
      @billsnyder6391 Год назад

      @@jkrapenc1034 I agree. Audiences are so used to the 2 act format. And by that time audienced were tired of "Those damned dream ballets". "The Chase" in Brigadoon didn't work, nor did "The Jousts" in Camelot. So, the Cookie ballet in ACW was a goner. Sondheim supplied a good song for every opportunity...then we got Harry Guardino and Lee Remick.

  • @Pomoscorzo
    @Pomoscorzo Год назад +9

    I think I would have liked to see Carrie. I don't like horror stories, but the score, from what I gathered, was great. "I'm not alone" is one of my favorite songs ever.

  • @bobbybubby7977
    @bobbybubby7977 Год назад +20

    Broadway Shows don’t get cancelled. They close.

  • @thomasmiles340
    @thomasmiles340 Год назад +6

    Thanks. But how could you not mention "Breakfast at Tiffany's" with Mary Tyler Moore and Richard Chamberlain, which closed after 4 previews. Or "La Strada" with Bernadette Peters, which closed after 1 performance?

  • @JenInOz
    @JenInOz Год назад +11

    I saw Tuck Everlasting on Broadway, when visiting from Melbourne Australia, having never heard of it prior. Loved it!

  • @tlillis4
    @tlillis4 Год назад +8

    Whoa you left out a whole *bunch* of shows (although, when it comes to flops, it’s hard to beat _Moose Murders_ ). And before we get started (as you say) there’s a correction. The critic lambasting _A Broadway Musical_ was Stewart Klein. The call letters for the station were WNEW - it didn’t become WNYW until 1986. _The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public_ was another unloved sequel which ran 16 performances. Someone else mentioned _Via Galactica_ - that definitely should have been on the list.
    _Dude_ was Gerome Ragni’s follow up to _Hair_ . It racked up a total of 16 performances after disastrous rehearsals, disastrous previews and a disastrous opening. It was a disaster. It should definitely be on this list.
    Paul Simon’s _Capeman_ was another disaster but it lasted two months (almost exactly) so I suppose that doesn’t count. The venerable Cy Coleman’s _Welcome to the Club_ was another stinker only lasting 12 performances.
    For me the show that closed too soon was _Chess_ . It opened in April 1988 and closed in June just before I had saved enough to go see it. I actually saw the notice on the door of the Imperial Theatre when I went by at the end of June.
    “Step five: we open on Broadway and before you can say ‘step six’ we close on Broadway”.

  • @aschmarkl
    @aschmarkl Год назад +10

    I have to say Tuck was a beautiful show with a great score and a fine cast. It deserved more time to find its audience IMHO

  • @richardwhite3924
    @richardwhite3924 Год назад +4

    I am miffed, even angry, that we were forgotten.
    I was in the chorus of one of the biggest flops in the history of Broadway which had 4 previews and never had an opening night - 1966's "Holly Golightly"/"Breakfast At Tiffany's" starring Mary Tyler Moore and Richard Chamberlain and in a small featured role Sally Kellerman.
    I am prejudiced - it should have been #1 on your list.

    • @reserrano50
      @reserrano50 Год назад

      You are hilarious! Ms. Mojo pisses me off too. You tell her!

  • @mzmiller52
    @mzmiller52 Год назад +8

    How could you leave out Rachel lily rosenbloom? Jabari wrote it for Midler, who declined, but got Ellen Greene. Some great talent on that stage and many of the dancers were in Michael bennett’s tapes that led to a chorus line. And Peter allens’s legs diamond?

  • @alrosenbaum
    @alrosenbaum Год назад +16

    "Cape Man" should be on the list. We went with another couple. The music was written by Paul Simon and to this day I think he owes us $300 for the tickets. At intermission, I was going on about what was wrong with the lighting, the scenery, the acting, etc. The family behind us said, "You're right" and they left. We, unfortunately, didn't. Near the end of the play, Cape Man dies. I remember thinking, "Thank god. It will be over soon." (Not soon enough.) I don't know if it ever got out of previews.

    • @alexmeyer5260
      @alexmeyer5260 Год назад +4

      It did get out of previews; it only lasted for 68 performanes before closing.

    • @ronmackinnon9374
      @ronmackinnon9374 Год назад +3

      I recall a Village Voice cartoon mocking Simon for blaming the critics, depicting someone telling him: 'Don't blame the critics when audiences respond with "The Sound of Silence".'

    • @marlonmoncrieffe0728
      @marlonmoncrieffe0728 Год назад +1

      Ooh, good one, @@ronmackinnon9374 !

    • @GiftSparks
      @GiftSparks Год назад +1

      OMG- I saw Capeman too in previews. The odd thing is that on paper it looked good and the casting had great singers- but agree that the acting was bad.

    • @cenorton
      @cenorton Год назад +2

      It starred Marc Anthony, YES that Marc Anthony. Him singing Paul Simon songs, we were very excited... and then very disappointed...

  • @Nunofurdambiznez
    @Nunofurdambiznez Год назад +8

    It's a shame that "Anyone Can Whistle" wasn't on Broadway longer.. it's actually quite a good show in every way!

  • @topeogunmakinwa9347
    @topeogunmakinwa9347 Год назад +33

    Just like the " Carrie" musical that BOMBED so Hard; The anime series; Brynhildr in the Darkness (2014) BOMBED so Hard too during its initial released in 2014. Years later, both Horror settings gained Cult Classic. Carrie is one of the influences for Brynhildr in the Darkness (2014). If you love Carrie; then you should give Brynhildr in the Darkness ( 2014) a good Binge-Watch, at least once.

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan Год назад +7

    How about "Breakfast at Tiffany's," which didn't even make it to opening night?

    • @ronmackinnon9374
      @ronmackinnon9374 Год назад

      I think the list only included those that made it out of previews to have at least one Broadway performance before closing (while they mentioned a musical version of 'Lolita' that never opened on Broadway, that was only in the context of talking about the stage adaptation that quickly opened and closed ten years later).

    • @jasonhays8644
      @jasonhays8644 Год назад +1

      Or Prettybelle which closed out of town.

    • @orbyfan
      @orbyfan Год назад

      @@jasonhays8644 I'd never heard of it until you mentioned it, and I just looked it up. I'd file that under the category of "Who wants that?"

  • @arkady714
    @arkady714 Год назад +2

    #1 - Frankenstein. One performance on 4 January 1981 at a then-record cost of $2 million for the performance (mostly on overdone special effects). Closed on opening night, that is. Next time you do a video, please research all material. Thank you.

  • @Chapin-pc2kz
    @Chapin-pc2kz Год назад +10

    I was surprised not to see Frank Wildhorn's _Bonnie & Clyde_ on the list. It had successful out-of-town tryouts in San Diego, California, and Sarasota, Florida, but the snobby New York critics (who have it in for Wildhorn) tore it to shreds and it closed after one month. The joke is on them, because the show has had quite the afterlife. Since prematurely closing a decade ago, _Bonnie & Clyde_ has become popular with high schools/colleges and community/regional theaters. Also, it has had successful productions in Japan, South Korea, Germany, Czechia, Poland, Sweden, and Australia. A Brazilian production is set for this year. Last year, a limited West End engagement proved so successful that London is bringing it back this spring. The question now is: Will a Broadway revival (ever) follow?

    • @madhatterster
      @madhatterster Год назад +1

      Or "Dance of the Vampires", which like Carrie could be resuscitated successfully if they just simply did the original "Tanz" in English.

    • @billsnyder6391
      @billsnyder6391 Год назад

      Oh. I saw a local production of it and didn't think it was too bad. I saw a production of Company in the same space and can only remember once cast member of either production. My partner fell in love with Company at that production and does not remember Bonnie and Clyde at all. Maybe you should trust him more than me. LOL

  • @troygaspard6732
    @troygaspard6732 Год назад +9

    Of all the musicals you listed, it is Anyone Can Whistle that resonates still.

    • @kidkrowtaylor
      @kidkrowtaylor Год назад

      And Carrie, thanks to trends and shows like Riverdale helped its popularity grow.

  • @debbiedajko7272
    @debbiedajko7272 Год назад +7

    You forgot NICK AND NORA. It opened, then closed the same night.

    • @bobbybubby7977
      @bobbybubby7977 Год назад +5

      It actually ran 9 performances. And 71 preview performances.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +3

      Another show which survives as a fantastically interesting Original Cast Album, and which I'd love to see revived. Book by Arthur Laurents, music by Charles Strouse, and lyrics by Richard Maltby, jr.

  • @Jerry-hp5sf
    @Jerry-hp5sf Год назад +3

    Who in their right mind would think Carrie would translate to a musical?
    Good grief…

  • @briandouglasahern7067
    @briandouglasahern7067 Год назад +6

    I got to see a rather lavish Orlando production of the musical Ben Hur (yeah, it really happened). The idea was to use the vacation destination as a place to preview possibly shows for Broadway. They had it all. Solid performances, costumes, sets, truly gifted singers, and some pretty nifty special effects. And that includes the chariots! The horses were fake, but they had puppet legs that were controlled by hands unseen and never lost pace. It didn't actually look like the movement of horse legs, but you had to admire the dedication. At final curtain, I happily added to the applause of an entertained crowd, but walked away kind of...meh. I mean, it wasn't awful. Would I ever see it again? Nah. Never heard a word about it after that.

  • @gljm
    @gljm Год назад +4

    Then there was the 1981 adaptation of "Frankenstein" with John Carradine, John Glover and David Dukes which opened and closed the same night and at the time was the costliest flop ever to grace a Broadway stage.

  • @timothytikker3834
    @timothytikker3834 Год назад +2

    "[Actor Burgess] Meredith was set to direct and act in a musical, Happy as Larry, with choreography by Ann Sokolow and mobiles by Alexander Calder. Meredith persuaded [composer Edgard] Varèse to participate in the creation of this unconventional musical by composing a short dance. Varèse, out of friendship, agreed and subsequently referred to the piece as Dance for Burgess. The play closed immediately after its New York opening on January 6, 1950, and Varèse, subsequently, never bothered to have the piece published or performed."

  • @johnstrand7456
    @johnstrand7456 Год назад +4

    "Flahooly" - starring Yma Sumac and Barbara Cook - It was Barbara's first show and she went on to be a Broadway legend - at one time the cast album lp sold for big money -

    • @williamferry6573
      @williamferry6573 Год назад +1

      That was the first musical I thought would be on the list! Supposedly Ella Logan, from Finian's Rainbow was going to be in it, but wisely bowed out before Bdwy. A rare dud from Yip Harburg. "You dirty Red!" 😉

  • @gavinrehfeldt7389
    @gavinrehfeldt7389 Год назад +10

    TV shows are cancelled. Theatrical productions are closed.

  • @deadpan80
    @deadpan80 Год назад +3

    While Moose Murders definitely deserves the top spot on this list - Frankenstein from 1981 deserves placement here. Another "one night" only wonder, it was a very fascinating and costly bomb.

  • @jkrapenc1034
    @jkrapenc1034 Год назад +2

    I wish you had included something about Nick & Nora. That poor thing. Three months of previews (I think) and 9 performances only. Such a great cast though.

  • @spikewriter
    @spikewriter Год назад +6

    My personal favorite for failed musicals is 1976’s “Home Sweet Homer,” which I saw on tour in 1975 as “Odyssey”. Eleven previews and one Sunday matinee as the opening, with the closing notice posted as soon as the curtain failed. Even on tour, there was clearly second act trouble, but Yul Brynner had some delightful comedic bits and I don’t regret the chance to see both him and Joan Diener on stage. But that it failed, not a big surprise.

  • @davidhumphrey1040
    @davidhumphrey1040 Год назад +10

    I wish the OBC of Carrie had got to do a cast album, it has some great music in it.

    • @Portugal2025
      @Portugal2025 Год назад +1

      There is a recording of Carrie. If you go on Amazon music or RUclips, you will find it. The song When There is No One by Marin Mazzie gives me the chills. It’s absolutely gorgeous

    • @davidhumphrey1040
      @davidhumphrey1040 Год назад +2

      It's not the Original Broadway Cast, and I personally don't like some of the changes made to it. Plus it's not the same with Out For Blood the original Act 2 opening number missing, I love that song!

    • @Portugal2025
      @Portugal2025 Год назад +2

      @@davidhumphrey1040 Yeah this one is 2012 I believe. Don’t know the song you refer to. Sounds great

    • @this_Joe_Smith
      @this_Joe_Smith Год назад

      I greatly appreciate the 2012 revival, but my favorite was the 1988, it's amazing, i defend it, and I'm grateful RUclips has it all

  • @MrBBunny-rv1mk
    @MrBBunny-rv1mk Год назад +4

    There was the 1981 play "Frankenstein" which opened and closed on January 4, 1981 after 29 previews and one performance.

  • @arrow_of_ravenclaw5155
    @arrow_of_ravenclaw5155 Год назад +11

    Carrie and Rebecca to name two.

    • @EpixAndroid
      @EpixAndroid Год назад

      Rebecca is getting a West End revival!

    • @TheMuffystjohn86
      @TheMuffystjohn86 Год назад

      @Caitlyn Carvalho typical woke whiny baby behavior. Times were different back then. You can't change the past, no matter how many statues you remove/vandalize.

    • @thomasbradley4505
      @thomasbradley4505 Год назад

      @@EpixAndroid it’s actually it’s west end premiere. The show has never been professionally performed in English.

    • @ECKohns
      @ECKohns Год назад

      Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark lasted 3 years.

  • @notthatyouasked6656
    @notthatyouasked6656 Год назад +2

    As a big fan of Allan Sherman ("Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah", the Camp Granada song), I have to add his one Broadway effort, The Fig Leaves are Falling. A huge flop, it lasted 17 previews and just 4 performances before closing. This was despite being written with Albert Hague (Grinch soundtrack) and featuring Dorothy Loudon, Barry Nelson, and a very young David Cassidy. RCA released a 45 of Sherman singing 2 songs from it, but never officially released a full soundtrack. A soundtrack album made by Sherman and others to attract investors is a very rare collector's item. Several people did record the one semi-hit, "Did I Ever Really Live?", but even that realistically went nowhere.

  • @ECKohns
    @ECKohns Год назад +1

    Breakfast at Tiffany’s was such a flop it never even technically opened. It didn’t get past the preview stage. And it was gonna star Mary Tyler Moore and Richard Chamberlain.

  • @bighuge1060
    @bighuge1060 Год назад +3

    I truly wish all these plays and musicals were recorded for prosterity. I love watching bootlegged stage shows as there's a wonderful immediacy to them as there was for live television. To this day, I would love to watch the original cast of The Music Man, Hello, Dolly!, Man of La Mancha, etc. perform their shows. I'm very happy for the time PBS broadcast productions.

  • @mickjr270
    @mickjr270 Год назад +4

    I saw Kelley in a preview and Anyone Can Whistle. Back then, so many shows opened, it was hard to keep up. $9.90 in the orchestra, $2. way upstairs. It was a time.

    • @jasonhays8644
      @jasonhays8644 Год назад +1

      $10 in 1964 is about $95 today - which is still a very cheap ticket.

    • @mickjr270
      @mickjr270 Год назад +2

      @@jasonhays8644 In those days, all the delicatessens had twofor tickets on their checkout counters. These were for shows not in the habit of selling out. I sat many times in rear balcony $2 seats for a dollar. Even better, right before the curtain, I scanned the house for empty seats and moved down for a better view.

  • @tlabau
    @tlabau Год назад +6

    Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Merrily We Roll Along, Amour, The Grass Harp, Leap of Faith, Onward Victoria, Oh Brother, Nick & Nora, just to name a few honorable mentions

    • @Portugal2025
      @Portugal2025 Год назад +1

      Except Merrily has had an extended afterlife with numerous productions all over the world. There is a documentary called The Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened that profiles Merrily. It’s pretty good

    • @christinedunning8463
      @christinedunning8463 Год назад

      Merrily is great, but it did bomb on Broadway.

  • @LordChristopherOfMidway
    @LordChristopherOfMidway Год назад +3

    I have to give an honourable mention here to "Keep Off The Grass," which starred Jimmy Durante, Ray Bolger, Jane Froman, Virginia O'Brien, Emmett Kelly, Ilka Chase and Jackie Gleason, who said, "That show closed so fast, I nearly got caught in the door." He made that observation in his now-classic TV apology for the infamous game show bomb "You're In The Picture." In reality, the show ran for 44 performances.

  • @bcdside
    @bcdside Год назад +2

    Unless, perhaps, they happen to be housed in the smaller Broadway venues like the Helen Hayes or the Circle In The Square, musicals with more modest cast sizes like "High Fidelity" or "Amour" can still having fruitful runs Off-Broadway or in regional playhouses. "Reefer Madness" and "The Last Five Years" have yet to make it to Broadway, and they're both really, really good!

  • @charlesrabb5568
    @charlesrabb5568 Год назад +2

    I have a few bombs in my time. I took my mom to see Annie 2 Miss Hanigan revenge. The set got more applause then the cast. I've also seen Teddy a musical about Teddy Roosevelt. Using only Souza marches. I saw Satchmo . It closed out of town. And yes I saw Legs Diamond.

  • @LJB103
    @LJB103 Год назад +7

    I remember seeing Christopher Plummer in a musical version of Cyrano (in the Boston tryouts in 1973) which I enjoyed, but it only had 49 Broadway performances. I also saw Devour the Snow (luckily, they didn't try to make this a musical about the trial after the Donner Party deaths) on Broadway - they were giving out free tickets but it still cost too much: opened 11/7/79 and closed 11/10/79 (plus a few previews).

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад

      The Christopher Plummer musical version of *Cyrano* was recorded in a double-LP album, and it's definitely worth a listen.

  • @DDTC73
    @DDTC73 Год назад +4

    Carrie was ahead of it's time and it only closed because the producer withdrew all his money from the accounts and they couldnt pay anyone. I think if it had held on for a bit longer, it could have become something. But then it wouldnt have become the cult favourite that it was. The 2015 London productionwas superb, with orchestrations more like the original and a fabulous cast. Thankfully there is a pro shot of it here on YT.

  • @oliverbrownlow5615
    @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +1

    So ... no mention of *A Doll's Life,* the 1982 Harold Prince-directed musical sequel to Ibsen's *A Doll's House* with music by Larry Grossman, and book and lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green? Another unappreciated show that might fare better in an opera house revival, its original.production closed after only five performances. In 2017, a non-musical play called *A Doll's House, Part 2* by Lucas Hnath, based on exactly the same premise, had a bit more success, lasting about five months on Broadway.

  • @j.michaelbrounoff6129
    @j.michaelbrounoff6129 Год назад +7

    The Grass Harp, a musical adaptation of a Truman Capote novella, opened on January 17, 2003, and had its final performance 2 days later on January 19, 2003. It had a decent score by Claibe Richardson (music) and Kenward Elmslie (lyrics), a stellar cast including Barbara Cook and Carol Brice, and a somewhat improbable plot, the crux of which revolved around a cure-all elixer and a tree house where the protagonists hide from commercialism. They managed to cut a good original cast recording, worth listening to, before folding up shop. The show survives through occasional local productions. (I know--I was in one.)

    • @keikekaze
      @keikekaze Год назад +2

      All correct, except for the dates: The Grass Harp opened on Broadway on November 2, 1971, a Tuesday, and closed the next Saturday, after seven performances. But it's actually a pretty good show, with a wonderful score and a great cast, including Cook, Brice, and the phenomenal Karen Morrow. The cast album is definitely worth a listen, with some really catchy "earworms" among the tunes. Morrow, as a lady evangelist, sings an amazing 12-minute song cycle practically all by herself (with a little help from Cook, Brice, and Russ Thacker)--but when you've got Morrow's pipes, you don't need a chorus behind you!

    • @tomservo56954
      @tomservo56954 Год назад

      @@keikekaze After it flopped in both 1952 and 1968

    • @keikekaze
      @keikekaze Год назад +1

      @@tomservo56954 I think there's some confusion here. The original non-musical play, by Truman Capote, is what flopped in 1952. I'm not aware of any production of The Grass Harp on Broadway in 1968--in any version.

    • @tomservo56954
      @tomservo56954 Год назад +1

      @@keikekaze You're right...that was an off-Broadway production

  • @planestrainsdogsncars4336
    @planestrainsdogsncars4336 Год назад +1

    'Steel Pier' should be on the list for the patrons coming out of the theatre dead tired.
    Also I thought 'Titanic' was about as legit as a Musical as 9/11.

  • @robertd.carver6240
    @robertd.carver6240 Год назад +4

    The closing notice for "Kelly" was actually posted at intermission on its opening night!

  • @sschimel
    @sschimel Год назад +11

    Charles Strouse had another huge flop with Rags in 1986, also with esteemed colleagues. Book was Joseph Stein (Fiddler on the Roof), and lyrics were by Stephen Schwartz. Not only that, it marked the Broadway debut of famed opera star Teresa Stratas. Sort of a sequel to Fiddler, it tells the story of what happens to the Russian immigrants after getting to the US. But it also told too many other storys. It closed after 18 previews and 4 perfs. Personally, I think it's a terrific score.

    • @xak999
      @xak999 Год назад

      Don't forget that on opening night when all the critics were there, leading lady Theresa Strada refused to go on making it the only show in history to open with an understudy in the leading role.

    • @VesnaVK
      @VesnaVK Год назад

      @@xak999 why wouldn't she go on?

    • @xak999
      @xak999 Год назад +2

      Vesna VK: In Ken Mendlebaum's book, "Not Since Carrie" his compendium of flops, Theresa Strata was described as 'the contemptuous, cancellation-prone Opera Diva, Theresa Strata. We believe she wasn't confident enough in her performance. A Broadway musical is a long way from the Opera, where she made her home. She may have thought the material was too weak for her talent, ("Rags" had a few numbers that were excellent however). She might have just been scared out of her wits. But during it's 4 performance run, enough Tony Award voters caught the show to get Strata nominated for Best Actress in a Musical. She didn't win. There is a cast album and Charles Strouse wrote the notes himself, and they described his score and show incredibly well.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +1

      *Rags* was a remarkable show whose considerable virtues would likely be better appreciated in an opera house presentation.

    • @VesnaVK
      @VesnaVK Год назад

      @@xak999 thank you! What a story. I'll have to look for the cast album.

  • @babeandandy
    @babeandandy Год назад +1

    To be fair, Carrie would’ve run longer despite the negative reviews. It had the largest presale of a Broadway show at the time. But the producer stole the money and ran off to Germany. The actors, crew, and musicians ended up not even being paid.

  • @bobsanders9114
    @bobsanders9114 Год назад +13

    One huge point you're missing - possibly you've never lived in NY. The big legendary flops - Carrie and Moose Murders exemplify this - sell HUGELY just before they close. When the word goes out that a show is going to be a legendary, history-making bomb - EVERYONE in the industry (we're not talking tourists, New Jersey, Long Island, Upper East Siders, but the people who work, care, and really crave the professionalism of Broadway) wants to see it before it disappears "forever." I remember 'Carrie' and particularly 'Moose Murders' - I was living there at the time: and you couldn't get in for the last performances - the shows completely sold out. Legs Diamond. Home Sweet Homer. Gorey Stories. Etc. Crowds flocking, but only to see really spectacular train wrecks.

    • @mattbosley3531
      @mattbosley3531 Год назад +1

      Since Moose Murders only had one performance, it hardly seems likely that it was sold out. Otherwise it wouldn't have closed after only the one. And the audience didn't know that the first performance would be the last.

    • @ronmackinnon9374
      @ronmackinnon9374 Год назад

      @@mattbosley3531 Thanks, I was about to make that same point.

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Год назад

      @@mattbosley3531 There were 13 previews - no doubt that was when the word got around in the industry.

  • @timothyserabian5103
    @timothyserabian5103 Год назад +4

    It’s fascinating to see that in the history of Broadway, “It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s Superman!” was not in the top 10 worst shows of all time. Granted, I enjoy it, but it’s objectively not good. But 139 performances is still pretty ok by comparison!

    • @thewkovacs316
      @thewkovacs316 Год назад

      it's amazing it went that long

    • @timothyserabian5103
      @timothyserabian5103 Год назад

      @@thewkovacs316 some of the songs are catchy. The charm is to look at the show in the same way as we watch the Adam West Batman: campy and fun. Just the novelty of Superman flying on stage was something to see.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +1

      It's a hugely entertaining show if you ignore the abominable ABC television production from the 1970's and perform it with the sincerity and elegance it requires.

  • @jamesquivey1538
    @jamesquivey1538 Год назад +4

    Love never Dies, a Phantom Story never made it to Broadway because London Audiences disliked it. An Australian Theater person worked with Andrew Lloyd Webber to adjust the play to fix parts that didn't work. Now it is incredible. I saw it when it was travelling the country and I loved it! If it does make it to Broadway, I think it could do well.

    • @jamesquivey1538
      @jamesquivey1538 Год назад

      @@toffeestrange7706 Thank you for sharing your opinion. I loved it. Isn't it wonderful that we can agree to disagree in such a polite, unthreatening manor!

  • @arrow_of_ravenclaw5155
    @arrow_of_ravenclaw5155 Год назад +9

    I really like Carrie. I wish it did better

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Год назад +1

      Likewise, I adore Carrie, but maybe the 80's just wasn't ready for a musical adaptation.

    • @Jeremiah_Rivers76
      @Jeremiah_Rivers76 Год назад +2

      Well, there’s the 2012 off-Broadway reboot; reviews for that version were more positive.

    • @andrewbloom7637
      @andrewbloom7637 Год назад +1

      @@Jeremiah_Rivers76 On that note, "Anyone Can Whistle" could stand a resurgence in popularity (and perhaps a movie musical version). It was, in short, simply ahead of its time.

    • @SK_2174
      @SK_2174 Год назад +1

      Same!

    • @urmomssidechic
      @urmomssidechic Год назад +1

      there was a revival of it off broadway- it was phenomenal

  • @bluetarantulaproductions6179
    @bluetarantulaproductions6179 Год назад +2

    R.I.P. Angela Lansberry

  • @PaulTesta
    @PaulTesta Год назад +1

    Who could ever forget "Censored Scenes from King Kong"...? Op: 3/6/80, Cl: 3/9/80. Princess Theatre. Cast included Carrie Fisher.

  • @joanstolzar7802
    @joanstolzar7802 Год назад +2

    What about Via Galactica? That was one of the most expensive flops of its time and starred the wonderful Raul Julia.

  • @theresecallahan8548
    @theresecallahan8548 Год назад +3

    In 1975, there was a Broadway show called We Interrupt This Program, which closed after just one week. It was promoted with the line Not Recommended For Those With Low Panic Threshold.

    • @njatty
      @njatty Год назад

      It was about a group of terrorists who take over a Broadway theater during a performance.

  • @jujub4553
    @jujub4553 Год назад +5

    I love a good musical

  • @gmanandhislady
    @gmanandhislady Год назад +5

    Michael Park was in the Tuck Everlasting musical right before he did Dear Evan Hansen. I've been a fan of his since he was on the soap opera As The World Turns. His roots are in Broadway, but I loved him so much as Jack Snyder on ATWT! You can also see Michael Park guest star in famous shows, he was on season 3 of Stranger Things, and another Netflix show called You. He just recently guest starred on Law And Order.

    • @alexmeyer5260
      @alexmeyer5260 Год назад +1

      He graduated from the same college as me: Nazareth College in Rochester, New York. Of course, he went there long before I did.

  • @louislamonte334
    @louislamonte334 Год назад +3

    These lists never include the 1959 musical "The Nervous Set" which sadly only lasted 23 performances. Despite decent reviews, a truly wonderful score and a timely plot involving beatniks this sweet little musical which had a pre-"I Dream of Jeanie" and "Dallas" Larry Hagman in the cast died. The soundtrack album did moderately well in sales. I wonder why this show flopped?

    • @gljm
      @gljm Год назад +1

      "Ballad of the Sad Young Men" was actually recorded by quite a artists at the time including Roberta Flack and became something of a hit song.

    • @louislamonte334
      @louislamonte334 Год назад +2

      @@gljm Also, the song "Let's Have Fun" from this show is a great jazz tune and was recorded by several acts & jazz artists in 1959-61.

  • @thomascefalo938
    @thomascefalo938 Год назад +1

    Never heard of any of these being on Broadway. Very happy Angela Lansbury got her start in one of these though!

  • @AndrewRudin
    @AndrewRudin Год назад +1

    What about the version of THE LITTLE PRINCE with Michael York? It was mind-bogglingly inept. And what about "KELLEY", about the building of the Brooklyn Bridge. I think it ran less than a week.-(Ah... I see it only had one performance.). What about "MISS MOFFAT", which featured Bette Davis? Anyone besides me see "Rockabye Hamlet"? One of Gower Champions most notorious misfires. Back in the 1960's I loved seeing things try-out in Philadelphia. Sometimes they never made it into NYC. One such was "La Belle", an adaptation of Offenbach. I thought it was charming. And shortly after, a bigger, more clumsy and vulgar version called THE HAPPIEST GIRL IN THE WORLD came in directed by Cyril Richard, and somehow managed to survive.

  • @Blaqjaqshellaq
    @Blaqjaqshellaq Год назад +1

    The 1980 comedy THE ROAST lasted five performances. (It was co-written by Garry Marshall, who created TV sitcoms like HAPPY DAYS and went on to direct movies like PRETTY WOMAN.)
    Didn't they repaint the whole theatre black for CARRIE?

  • @lesliehobanblake6568
    @lesliehobanblake6568 Год назад +2

    At intermission, a humongous patron in my aisle at Tuck Everlasting, fell on me in his rush to the men's room. He broke my wrist and I spent the usual 6 weeks in an unforgettable fashion arm cast. But I don't remember most of the show's cast.

  • @jrthiker9908
    @jrthiker9908 Год назад +3

    I was at a performance of Bring Back Birdie when it was on Bway. The cast was excellent, the show very polished and well-rehearsed, and the charisma and dancing of the two leads carried the show (Donald O'Connor, even at his age, was spectacular!!) I think the difficulty was that ultimately there was not a lot of substance and heart to the book. It seemed like a flimsy Brady Bunch or Eight Is Enough reunion TV movie. Which is the issue with most sequels ...they have to be able to stand on their own merits without leaning too much into the original storyline. Otherwise, you are not drawn into the characters.

  • @williamwatson4354
    @williamwatson4354 Год назад +3

    How could you have left off Merrily we roll along?

  • @kenhallermd8897
    @kenhallermd8897 Год назад +3

    Two other shows I would add that I had the opportunity to see in previews are:
    - "Dance a Little Closer" (1983), yet another flop from Charles Strouse with book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner. based on Robert E. Sherwood's 1936 antiwar comedy "Idiot's Delight." It is is set on New Year's Eve "in the avoidable future" in the grand Alpine Barclay Palace Hotel, where the guests find themselves in the midst of a potential nuclear Armageddon.. Yeah... It closed on opening night, leading Broadway wags to nickname it "Close a Little Faster."
    - "Merrily We Roll Along" (1981) from Stephen Sondheim, George Furth, and Harold Prince who had struck gold with "Company" a decade earlier. It is based on the 1934 play of the same name by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart and tells the story of how the lives and friendships of three friends, Frank, Charley, and Mary, change over 20 years, told in reverse chronological order and moving from cynicism to innocence. The score is gorgeous, but the production was plagued with problems, many detailed in Lonny Price's wonderful documentary "Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened," Unlike most flops, however, "Merrily We Roll Along" has had a vigorous afterlife with a current hit New York Theatre Workshop production starring Jonathan Groff as Frank, Lindsay Mendez as Mary, and Daniel Radcliffe as Charley set to move to Broadway in the fall, and a film adaptation directed by Richard Linklater to be filmed over 20 years, allowing the actors to age with their characters. Ben Platt, Blake Jenner, and Beanie Feldstein are attached to play Charley, Frank, and Mary, respectively.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +1

      *Merrily We Roll Along* has continued to merrily roll along since its original legendarily quick Broadway closing, but based on *Dance a Little Closer* 's Original Cast Recording, I find at least as much merit in that unappreciated work, and I'd love to see a full production of it.

    • @kenhallermd8897
      @kenhallermd8897 Год назад

      @@oliverbrownlow5615 I agree. While it's been a really long time since I've seen - and heard it - I recall that the score to "Dance a Little Closer" is actually quite good. I think that the show had major book problems, especially in the second act. While that's not uncommon in Broadway musicals, it was enough to scuttle this show.

    • @alexmeyer5260
      @alexmeyer5260 10 месяцев назад

      Blake Jenner has actually been replaced by Paul Mescal in the film adaptation of Merrily We Roll Along, due to him admitting to abusing his ex-wife Melissa Benoist during their marriage.

  • @Melissent
    @Melissent Год назад +3

    Shogun the Musical had only 18 previews and 72 performances. It had many obstacles to overcome, including scenery falling on the leading man in the second act. Some of the effects (earthquake, horseback battle) were lauded, but ultimately a weak score and heavy ballet choreography, along with a difficult-to-follow plotline, proved too great to overcome.

  • @msalzberg4962
    @msalzberg4962 Год назад +1

    The Little Prince and the Aviator at the Alvin Theater. Written by Hugh Wheeler (Sweeney Todd, Irene, A Little Night Music), Music by John Barry (James Bond films), Lyrics by Don Black (Song and Dance, Aspects of Love, Sunset Boulevard), starring Michael York.
    Closed January 17, 1982 after 20 previews. Never opened. That's a bomb; and I was there.

  • @robertwilloughby8050
    @robertwilloughby8050 Год назад +1

    There is a legendary London flop, which probably doesn't count because it was a revue rather than a musical, but the "Intimate Revue" of 1930 was a hilarious (but in the worst way) confection that had battling stage hands, half cocked set changes, incomprehensible songs, and so many scenes that it had to be abridged (it basically had to finish two thirds of the way through). It is a legendary, massive, glorious flop.

  • @gometome
    @gometome Год назад +10

    One of my favorite broadway facts is that Carolee Carmello has been an imortal twice on broadway, both times lasting exactly 39 preformances (Tuck and also Lestat based on the Anne Rice novels with music by Elton John). She was also in Scandalous (the Kathy Lee Gifford musical) which lasted 29 preformances. For someone so talented, Carolee has made a career out of short run shows.

    • @alexmeyer5260
      @alexmeyer5260 Год назад +2

      And she often got Tony nominations for them, sometimes literally being the only nominee from some of those productions.

    • @PowerGlove79
      @PowerGlove79 Год назад +1

      I saw Scandalous when it previewed in Seattle, Back then, it was called Saving Aimee. The only reason I saw it was because the theater was giving away free tickets, I guess they weren’t selling that well. I think investors were there that night, because it was packed with people who got the same free tickets. But I really can’t remember hardly anything about it, except for maybe a song or 2. It just didn’t make an impact. Kathy Lee was at every performance. I met her after the show and she was lovely.

    • @rodneykingston6420
      @rodneykingston6420 Год назад +3

      Barbara Cook, a legend regardless, was known for going from flop to flop, her one big Broadway hit was She Loves Me. She was also in the original production of Candide, but it was a huge flop until it was extensively re-written and revived in the early 70s.

    • @gometome
      @gometome Год назад +1

      @@rodneykingston6420 and you can't forget music man. Her voice on that album is a staple! It's fascinating how many flops each many amazing performers have been a part of. It's so much more common than the hit. (And more fun lol)

    • @richarddixon7855
      @richarddixon7855 Год назад

      Such a talent!

  • @robbey10
    @robbey10 Год назад +1

    A few Sondheim songs? It is one of his best scores! It was ahead of its time. With the political insanity that is going on today, it is more meaningful now than it was in the 1960s.

  • @sallysimpson7
    @sallysimpson7 Год назад +1

    WHAT? No 'Bonnie and Clyde" ??? Mind you, I consider it an amazing musical. But it didn't last very long, sadly

  • @glsweeney721
    @glsweeney721 Год назад +4

    Paradise Square absolutely deserved a longer run. Its a shame it not only didnt do well but is dealing with all these legal issues.

  • @susansokoloski2233
    @susansokoloski2233 Год назад +2

    Fun list. A couple of items:
    Carolee Carmelo IS a big name
    Strangely, in NY, the Supreme Court is their common court and the Court of Appeals is their highest court.

  • @l.salisbury1253
    @l.salisbury1253 Год назад +1

    2:27 - Captain Beefheart's debut is NOT that rare, NOT too hard-to-find and NOT that expensive!

  • @ronmackinnon9374
    @ronmackinnon9374 Год назад +2

    In chronological order (with # of performances):
    'Anyone Can Whistle' - 1964 (9)
    'Kelly' - 1965 (1)
    'A Teaspoon Every Four Hours' - 1969 (1)
    'A Broadway Musical' - 1978 (1)
    'Bring Back Birdie' - 1981 (4)
    'Lolita' - 1981 (12)
    'Moose Murders' - 1983 (1)
    'Carrie' - 1988 (5)
    'High Fidelity' - 2006 (13)
    'Tuck Everlasting' - 2016 (39)
    Of these shows, the only ones which were NOT musicals were 'A Teaspoon Every Four Hours,' 'Lolita' (a musical version of which from 1971 -- as noted -- did not even make it to Broadway), and 'Moose Murders'.

    • @keikekaze
      @keikekaze Год назад +1

      A Teaspoon Every Four Hours and Moose Murders were also not musicals.

    • @ronmackinnon9374
      @ronmackinnon9374 Год назад +1

      @@keikekaze Thanks for catching that. I've made the correction above.

  • @vanaals
    @vanaals Год назад +1

    From the description, A Broadway Musical may have succeeded if Bialystock and Bloom had been the producers.

  • @frankbenham1745
    @frankbenham1745 Год назад +1

    If you liked this video and would like to know more about some of these shows or would like to hear more stories about tough-to-produce shows, then I'd recommend checking out the RUclips channel "Wait in the Wings". I have no affiliation with them, but I do know they have video about the making of the Carrie musical that is worth checking out.

  • @lorihock7444
    @lorihock7444 Год назад +1

    Breakfast at Tiffany’s starring Mary Tyler Moore; music and lyrics by Bob Merrill - MAJOR flop!

  • @gljm
    @gljm Год назад +1

    We won't even mention "Getting Away with Murder" a play written by Stephen Sondheim and George Furth, which ran for 17 performances on Broadway in 1996.

  • @lillie1050
    @lillie1050 Год назад +6

    Repo! The Genetic Opera definitely deserved a spot on this list

    • @BroadwayMe
      @BroadwayMe Год назад +3

      Repo! was never on Broadway though

    • @lillie1050
      @lillie1050 Год назад

      @@BroadwayMe Sorry! I've seen articles about Playbill talking about the show so I thought it was previewed

  • @DDTC73
    @DDTC73 Год назад +3

    I was expecting to see numerous shows in this list that weren't: In My Life, Glory Days and The Story of My Life, The Red Shoes, Shogun, you could makes a video on this topic last hours!

    • @leatherhil
      @leatherhil Год назад +2

      I saw Shogun. So bad it’s memorable.

    • @DDTC73
      @DDTC73 Год назад

      @Mr. Hilary i wish i had. I was in NYC when it was on, but went to see something else. There is barely anything about it online and I'd love to see some of the staging.

    • @rachelk7784
      @rachelk7784 Год назад +1

      @@DDTC73 , I only remember the staging for the musical number Karma, because we joked they had borrowed the Les Miserables choreography for One Day More. I regret not seeing Carrie.

  • @jacemultistan8846
    @jacemultistan8846 Год назад +1

    A more recent short lived Broadway musical is KPOP. Kinda sad as it was truly groundbreaking for its topic and pretty good too

  • @lindaeasley5606
    @lindaeasley5606 Год назад +2

    Broadway traditionally has not been a venue for children's entertainment and that's been one of my gripes about the theatre as it's trended the last 25 years.That also may explain the lack of quality and creativity it's seen during that time
    I also have a problem with turning Mickey Mouse ,goofy and the Flintstones into stage productions
    Long gone are the great play writers of the 20th century

  • @Portugal2025
    @Portugal2025 Год назад +1

    I remember seeing Side by Side by Sondheim and there are three songs from ACW. All beautiful. With respect to Harry Guardino and Lee Remick, fine actors. They are not singers and Angela can’t carry the show by herself

  • @Portugal2025
    @Portugal2025 Год назад +2

    Boulbil and Schoenberg created Martin Guerre in 1995 and it failed. They did a reboot a couple of years later. I did not see either, but I do own the soundtracks for both. The original is gorgeous. Songs like When Will Someone Hear, Working on the Land, Martin Guerre, and Bethlehem (stunning) are beautiful and are in the original. It was very hard to get when I bought it and now it’s on Amazon Music and Apple

    • @atomicx9158
      @atomicx9158 Год назад

      I also like the original, though I found some of the lyrics clunkly, like in 'Tell me to Go.' Still, a great song and mostly great music. I just don't think it works as a musical.

  • @Scorchy666
    @Scorchy666 Год назад +1

    Frankenstein (1981) Cost two million dollars and closed the same night.

  • @tarotbear
    @tarotbear День назад

    People are forgetting 'Mack & Mabel' for Broadway bombs ... and also 'The Grand Tour' - both with scores by Jerry Herman. Music great - shows meh.