Average customer rating:
|
Discovering Natural Israel
Michal Strutin Manufacturer: Jonathan David Publishers ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 082460413X |
Customer Reviews:
discover israel with ms. strutin.......2001-09-05
Average customer rating: |
Bactericidal effects of algae on enteric organisms, (Water pollution control research series)
Ernst M Davis Manufacturer: [U.S. Federal Water Quality Administration]; for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off ProductGroup: Book Binding: Unknown Binding ASIN: B0006CI5FY |
Average customer rating: |
Bactericidal effects of algae on enteric organisms;: Technical report to the Federal Water Pollution Control Administration, (CRWR)
Ernst M Davis Manufacturer: Center for Research in Water Resources, Environmental Health Engineering Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin ProductGroup: Book Binding: Unknown Binding ASIN: B0006CXG7Q |
Average customer rating: |
Travel Guide to Tribal Casinos in the Pacific Northwest
Jim Roll Manufacturer: Peanut Butter Publishing ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback ASIN: 0897166248 |
Average customer rating:
|
Open a New Window: The Broadway Musical in the 1960s
Ethan Mordden Manufacturer: Palgrave Macmillan ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403960135 |
Book Description
In the 1960s, the Broadway musical underwent a revolution. What was once a form of entertainment characterized by sentimental standards, such as Camelot and Hello, Dolly! became one of brilliant and bittersweet masterpieces, such as Cabaret and Fiddler on the Roof. In Open a New Window, Mordden continues his history of the Broadway musical with the decade that bridged the gap between the fanciful shows of the fifties, such as Call Me, Madam, and the sophisticated fare of the seventies, including A Little Night Music and Follies. Here in brilliant detail are the decade and the people that transformed the Broadway musical--from the writer who knows it best.Customer Reviews:
An Accessible and Enjoyable Book.......2002-07-26
I am not an expert on musicals by any stretch of the imagination. However, I found "Open a New Window" very readable and interesting. I was continually surprised to find people in musicals that I never would have imagined. (Vincent Price starring in a Broadway musical in 1968? My universe is still reeling.) To someone who knows "Funny Girl" and "Cabaret" as films, it was revealing and useful to read about the plays they started as.
As for complaints that Mordden overlooks the big picture in the development of the musical, I would disagree. Granted, I am no expert, but to me he kept referring to the social changes going on and kept emphasizing how the subject matter of musicals kept becoming darker.
"Open a New Window" isn't a heavy, scholarly tome, but it is fun and accessible to readers who are curious about Broadway musicals while not obsessed with the subject.
Mordden's first slip.......2001-12-29
1960s witnessed the implosion of the Golden Age musical theatre format, as one show after another tanked trying to recapitulate the old formulas. New practitioners were blowing new life into the game with the "concept musical"; meanwhile, the countercultural revolution and the incursion of rock were eating away at the very space that musicals once occupied in the culture.
One would expect, then, that a chronicle of musicals in the 1960s would hold these developments front and center -- chapter headings might include "The Concept Musical", "The Rock Revolution", "The Countercultural Revolution", "The New Ethnicity", etc. But in OPEN A NEW WINDOW the new America musicals existed in hovers far in the background -- when these changes were, after all, the REASON the form had to change the way it did.
Instead, Mordden basically takes the occasion to dish and do post-mortems on almost every show that hit the boards from 1960 to 1969, dividing the shows into butterfly-collection subsets like "flops", "English shows", "dark shows", "three shows of 1969" that he just happens to find particularly interesting, etc.
Of course, his descriptions of and opinions on the shows are razor-sharp as always, and often laugh-out-loud funny. By the 1960s, Mordden was old enough to actually see all of these shows in their original performances, and this lends especial vividness to his tour.
But ultimately it's just a tour, or more precisely, an excuse to gab about the subject at book-length, getting his particular impressions on each show between two covers. And in a book by Mordden, this by itself is a let-down. Mordden specializes in taking whole swatches of theatre history and identifying dominating themes within them, rendering that theme in almost novelistic prose. Even when you can see that he has carefully fashioned his outline to allow him to hang every single show on it at some point, the result is still caviar.
His survey of the 1920s, MAKE BELIEVE, is also a tad too "taxonomic", but he gets away with it because he emphasizes theme overall, and describing the shows requires an archeological virtuosity that Mordden never ceases to dazzle me with. The 1940s and 1950s volumes are masterful in keeping larger points front and center, even when at times he has to shoehorn some shows into thematic points that they do not really quite fit.
But in OPEN A NEW WINDOW, archaeological smarts are largely beside the point; these shows are well-recorded and recent memories. And then Mordden's interest in theme here is for some reason weaker than in any of his other books. He covers the concept musical -- but sprinkled throughout. He gives little more than a page to the place of rock in musicals, in contrast to his articulate discussion of that issue re film in his THE HOLLYWOOD MUSICAL. The emerging black presence is something we largely must glean here and there, and it really won't do for HALLELUJAH, BABY! to get half a page while the misbegotten MATA HARI gets three.
Discrepancies like this do not follow from anything inherent to charting how the sixties musical developed, and reveal the problem with the book. HALLELUJAH, BABY was an attempt to engage the times, was written by top pros, won a Tony, had something of a run, and contained some fine performances. MATA HARI was just business as usual, written by semi-talents, no one really shined in it, and it didn't even make it to New York! The only reason to dwell lovingly on MATA HARI and rush past HALLELUJAH BABY is that MATA HARI fascinates in its obscurity (Mordden's archaeological bent again). The choice is natural for a few hundred die-hard show buffs, but it's questionable historiography. As the events themselves proceeded, MATA HARI was an ignominious, passing mistake. And yet we get loving, even musicological rundowns of some of its numbers, while HALLELUJAH BABY gets a polite nod.
The result is a book whose audience is a little unclear. People who don't know the shows are going to get winded with the endless procession of descriptions, ticking off of key songs, etc., especially in, say, a chapter on Off-Broadway musicals few people even noticed when they were running. A particular problem here is that there were an awful lot of weak shows in the 1960s; in the 1940s and 1950s books one reads about one gem after another, but how much will most people want to read about how magnificently inept one show after another was? Certain show buffs cherish campy dishing about "Flops", but that little joke does not travel far beyond this little set. Most people want to read about good work.
But then the small coterie of people who know the shows well and have all of their recordings -- who I suspect are Mordden's main audience -- do not need the listings, and do not need to be apprised of the existence of each and every musical. Or if we must have this, it must be cast in readable form, where we have a REASON to follow Mordden through several dozen productions.
I imagine people like us are supposed to just enjoy reading Mordden's opinions. And we do. But a sort of show-by-show reference book would do just fine here. This book barely needed to be cast in prose. OPEN A NEW WINDOW, as much as I hate to say it, left me a little bored about halfway through -- for the first time in twenty years of reading Mordden.
Mordden will always be God when it comes to chronicling musicals, and anything he writes is worth reading and re-reading. But in the end, the 1960s throws him a bit.
Another Fine and More Personal Addition to the Series.......2001-12-24
Musical theater history as good as it gets.......2001-12-09
Another entertaining entry in this series.......2001-12-03
Average customer rating: |
The Ancient Greeks (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter , and Pat Taylor Manufacturer: Heinemann Library ProductGroup: Book Binding: Library Binding Similar Items:
ASIN: 0431057044 |
Average customer rating: |
The Indus Valley (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403400814 |
Average customer rating: |
The Maya (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403400261 |
Average customer rating: |
The Cinema of V'ctor Erice: An Open Window
Linda C. Ehrlich Manufacturer: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback ASIN: 0810858843 |
Average customer rating: |
The Sumerians (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 140340027X |
Average customer rating:
|
The Ancient Egyptians (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann Interactive Library ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1575725908 |
Customer Reviews:
an excellent book in a wonderful series for children.......2001-09-07
Easy for children to understand!.......2001-04-07
Average customer rating: |
The Aztecs (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403400245 |
Average customer rating: |
The Incas (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403400253 |
Average customer rating: |
The Renaissance (History Opens Windows)
Jane Shuter Manufacturer: Heinemann ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback Similar Items:
ASIN: 1403488215 |
Book Description
How did people in the Renaissance live? What were their social, economic, political, and cultural lives like? How did their lives values and attitudes help shape our world? This title answers these questions and more with informative text, colorful photographs and original source materials, and clear maps and diagrams to show readers what life was like in ancient civilizations.Books:
Recommended Books