John Lahr

Interview Date: 2001-01-09 | Runtime: 1:20:22
TRANSCRIPT

Speaker 1 Well, in the

Speaker 2 time before talking pictures, which is around

Speaker 1 1931, the great popular public

Speaker 2 musical entertainment was musical comedy, which is an outgrowth

Speaker 1 in

Speaker 2 American terms of

Speaker 1 a

Speaker 2 curious amalgam

Speaker 1 of operetta,

Speaker 2 was one strand of it and burlesque is another. The burlesque, which is misconstrued as a sex show now, was originally a kind of musical storytelling, a low comic, one with a sort of kind of travesty of a story that allowed young, talented and not so talented people to sing and dance and carry on for two hours. But it was extremely

Speaker 1 popular and

Speaker 2 especially popular since song in the 20th century became a sort of defining way in which the culture understood itself. Things started to

Speaker 1 change in America

Speaker 2 with the turn of the century. There was a new speed, a new industrialism, a new a new influx, a huge influx of immigrant population. And the musical caught this

Speaker 1 and reflected it back to the public. I remember reading a lyric of George

Speaker 2 M. Cohan’s which goes something like Kissme and

Speaker 1 Run Kid.

Speaker 2 It’s nineteen oh one kid.

Speaker 1 Oh God, I can’t. A Yankee with no how

Speaker 2 can’t afford to go slow. Now the whole idea of the momentum of the society changing and the song because song then was so much in tune with the public

Speaker 1 capturing and measuring

Speaker 2 the shifts moment to moment of

Speaker 1 the public.

Speaker 2 So the musical comedy became a kind of marriage of song and comic

Speaker 1 turn and light entertainment. People went there

Speaker 2 like they might turn on a television now for a good night out without too much thought,

Speaker 1 but with a

Speaker 2 lot of fun and contemporary references.

Speaker 3 Um, set the stage for us in the late teens and writers in the party to see what was happening on Broadway. How many theatres? Well, how much how many shows compared with today.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I can do it. I’ll let me let

Speaker 2 me say that Broadway was a very flourishing business. It was dominated before Rodgers and Hart came on the scene largely

Speaker 1 by the the

Speaker 2 high tone operettas of Sigmund

Speaker 1 Romberg and Jerome Kern.

Speaker 2 The regular sort of. Sort of. Jolly satirical musicals or satire is too strong a term comic musicals and sort of the very, very delightful, jingoistic sort of proletarian musicals of, say, George M. Cohan, which were really energetic and understood the

Speaker 1 public and really very, very pro-American

Speaker 2 flag-Waving, jingoistic entertainments. And the thing about Rodgers and Hart were that they were college boys and this was a new breed. This was the first really of most of the energy from American popular culture, came

Speaker 1 from the the brilliant but on

Speaker 2 uneducated talent of the immigrant

Speaker 1 population. My father, Bert La, Groucho Marx, Ethel Merman,

Speaker 2 all these people who came to define the musical comedy culture of the first half of the century

Speaker 1 were not literate in that in the way we now think of it. But the people who wrote

Speaker 2 the musicals that form the body

Speaker 1 of the great of

Speaker 2 the great catalogue of American musicals were educated and they reflected an American middle class and the values of a middle

Speaker 1 class.

Speaker 2 And it’s interesting that Rodgers and Hart came together in 1918, which is exactly the same year, and I think almost within a month or two of

Speaker 1 when

Speaker 2 George Gershwin and his brother sat down. To write their first song, which was Irag. Which was, again, interesting, syncopated

Speaker 1 borrowing of black rhythm,

Speaker 2 whose broken melody as a broken line allowed

Speaker 1 for a lot more, a lot more internal

Speaker 2 rhyming, a lot more interesting rhyming.

Speaker 1 And what what what Rodgers and Hart and Gershwin, the Gershwin boys

Speaker 2 saw was that there was a new time. It was a new time. America was changing and the musical had to speed up not only in its tempo, but in the smartness of its lyrics.

Speaker 1 And they were they were they had different

Speaker 2 language for this and different ways of expressing it. But they were all on the same course. It was a sort of

Speaker 1 the America coming of

Speaker 2 age defining itself not from a European perspective

Speaker 1 operetta, but

Speaker 2 from its own indigenous industrial. Cultural imperialism, a sense of what it was, what was happening in the culture

Speaker 1 and how that

Speaker 2 culture expressed itself, you know,

Speaker 1 I remember

Speaker 2 reading that when Rogers met Hart for the first time, Hart expounded on

Speaker 1 how how.

Speaker 2 Bad, the the rhyming was in popular musicals and it was crude. There was no internal rhyming. The references were very un literate. I mean, because people like George Cohan, who was one of the great popular songwriters and innovators of the early American musical, who was insisted on

Speaker 1 singing about

Speaker 2 Yankees, about

Speaker 1 America, you know, you know,

Speaker 2 don’t give me no Waggner strain.

Speaker 1 I want what does he say? I want I want to give me that

Speaker 2 Yankee strain with. So I’m going to get a little let me get this right. It’s worth getting what? It’s going to be hard for me to do it without me being

Speaker 3 close enough to really see. OK, start it started sort of introduce it again. Well, let me ask you. Yeah, um, maybe you could come at it this way, is it first generation Americans becoming American as opposed to immigrants?

Speaker 2 Americanising Cohen was the first to take that to try to seize the musical and shake off its Europe vestige of European sort of Whyatt qualities. He he saw it as it properly is, as business art

Speaker 1 for

Speaker 2 the proletariat. And his songs even sort of stated the sort of aesthetic. And in one call, one song which I love, called I Want to Hear a Yankee Doodle tune. He sings, Give me a tune that’s worth listening. Give me a tune that words that’s worth a whistling. I want to suza strain

Speaker 1 instead of a Waggner pain.

Speaker 2 Give me the trombones, give the trombones a chance to blow on it, give me a dash of rag and go in it you know. So he’s talking about the you know, let’s assert the Americanness of the musical, the noise of the city,

Speaker 1 the the energy and vulgarity of our

Speaker 2 own indigenous natures with something with music to please the gang, he said, with plenty

Speaker 1 of biff and bang.

Speaker 2 Now that’s really interesting as a statement, but also it’s very crudely rhymed.

Speaker 3 Start again. That’s interesting. That’s OK.

Speaker 2 That’s very interesting as a statement. But it’s very crudely rhyme that it’s exactly the kind of thing, although it’s a really energetic and showstopping song, you can see how it would stop a

Speaker 1 show and get

Speaker 2 the audience cheering. An American audience cheering. But at the other on the other hand, as a as a piece of songwriting, it’s crude, energetic, but crude, like the culture it was in the early part of the twentieth century. Now along comes an educated songwriting team like Rodgers and Hart. And of course, what they wanted was to create a much more sophisticated,

Speaker 1 ironic, mordant,

Speaker 2 witty songs that reflected their age, their generation, which was the next generation post-World War

Speaker 1 One, college educated generation, middle class, literate, already at home in America and

Speaker 2 wanting the music. And the lyrics to reflect.

Speaker 1 Their world,

Speaker 2 which was a world of promise, of ease, of abundance, of confidence and a certain amount

Speaker 1 of. Bourgeois ennui. They were they had everything. And yet they weren’t happy.

Speaker 2 And that is the that is the particular provenance of Lawrence Hart, who was a ship without a sail, as he wrote, who felt a kind of loneliness in the midst of plenty and. Who used the songs to define both that unusual state of affairs in the in the American conscience, which the culture didn’t always understand, especially at that time, and this sort of booster 20s and the sort of flush of the post-war sort of frenzied delirium to find happiness after a kind of bad for years, plus just a general sense of literate

Speaker 1 fun they want to.

Speaker 2 And lyrics and Rogers music really just were sprightly and

Speaker 1 young and confident that they were

Speaker 2 able to take the musical in a sort of

Speaker 1 more youthful, playful direction.

Speaker 2 The lyrics were

Speaker 1 really witty

Speaker 2 and different. There was a lot more interior

Speaker 1 rhyme, a lot more

Speaker 2 contemporary references and sort of knowing references to

Speaker 1 what life

Speaker 2 is really like. And I mean, the perfect example would be bewitched, bothered and bewildered, a song which was originally set to the lines Bitched, Buggered, and the dildo, as you know.

Speaker 1 But the. Vexed again, perplexed again. Thank God I

Speaker 2 can be oversexed again. Well, that’s just a huge

Speaker 1 wink at

Speaker 2 an audience that is just wonderfully

Speaker 1 playful and clever and sharp,

Speaker 2 which is what? The game of. Those lyricists, the great ones, Heart and Harbor II Harbor,

Speaker 1 being in my for my

Speaker 2 mind, the two most showy of the of the lyric wits

Speaker 1 of that period.

Speaker 2 Now, sorry, it’s so so where the where the Amusa the musical really got oxygen. Was when it’s an interesting convergence in

Speaker 1 which it really happens around 1925 and

Speaker 2 there are a lot of reasons for that. First of all, the subways come to Broadway, Neon comes to Broadway in 1924, the idea of your name being above the lights, The New Yorker starts

Speaker 1 publishing in 1925, making a myth of

Speaker 2 Manhattan as a playground. And a lot of the people who were writing for The New Yorker magazine were writing for Broadway. And it’s interesting that. The first Rodgers and Hart musical that was professional, they’ve done a lot of things in college, was a sort of revue called the Garagos in

Speaker 1 1925 in

Speaker 2 which they took a song out of

Speaker 1 their trunk called Manhattan.

Speaker 2 A great song which refers to Manhattan as an isle of joy. Well, that fantasy Manhattan as an isle of Joy is really a fantasy.

Speaker 1 Generated by broadcast

Speaker 2 Broadway and broadcast by lyrics.

Speaker 1 And. That. Comes together by

Speaker 2 nineteen twenty seven, there was a sort of sudden rush of building new theaters, it was a real demand

Speaker 1 for theater

Speaker 2 and it’s hard to imagine because now on Broadway as we speak

Speaker 1 and in the year

Speaker 2 2001, there are there are almost no serious plays on Broadway and there are probably all total maybe 35 productions a year on Broadway

Speaker 1 at the

Speaker 2 time of their entry into Broadway as serious composers. That’s to say around 1925,

Speaker 1 there were by

Speaker 2 1927 on Broadway, there were two hundred and sixty eight shows a year, two hundred and sixty eight. So there was a great

Speaker 1 demand

Speaker 2 for entertainment. There was, there was it was comparatively easy to comparatively easy to have to to find both an audience and to get to have a few. Very good to, to get something up. So there was a lot of action and a lot of activity and it was a great seedbed for

Speaker 1 talent and where they could they could really work, like

Speaker 2 perhaps nowadays the the rock world is

Speaker 3 are we OK outside? And we’re going to lose our barn doors. Well, there are times when there was plenty of great time and yet. Heart was lonely. Can you tell us why, what your take on that is and how sure Roger’s paired teams worked with didn’t?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, the issue between them over

Speaker 2 the years or, you know, all these songs. Of every composer are naturally because their songs, they are from the heart and they express the heart and no pun intended.

Speaker 1 And the thing about.

Speaker 2 Lauren’s heart was that he was a very small man, diminutive,

Speaker 1 and he

Speaker 2 had his his songs are very interesting. Each one of the great composers

Speaker 1 on the Broadway canon,

Speaker 2 the great lyricist, the Broadway came,

Speaker 1 each

Speaker 2 one of the great lyricists in the Broadway canon comes at sexuality, which is, after all, the centerpiece of all lyric writing, a romance, 85 percent of the songs, classic songs are about love and so forth with a different take. And for instance,

Speaker 1 Harburg

Speaker 2 is about is about sex is about having sex. Last night when we were young, Sondheim is about just being able to

Speaker 1 feel, you know, anything.

Speaker 2 Gershwin is sort of almost collegial.

Speaker 1 It’s not about

Speaker 2 really sexuality

Speaker 1 or at heart is about

Speaker 2 having someone hold his hand. It’s about companionship. It’s about wanting to be with someone

Speaker 1 on

Speaker 2 the ship without a sail is a perfect example. Still alone. Still at sea. Still no one to care. For me, something along those lines is that. Can I stop and just see if that’s right?

Speaker 1 Can I get if you can can I

Speaker 2 bring up here and just so you can get me a close up so I can read it so I’m not

Speaker 3 in trouble. Is looking

Speaker 1 ok. How about ok.

Speaker 2 OK, ok. I can do it this way with on my foot.

Speaker 1 All right.

Speaker 2 I mean for instance in a ship without a sail he says still alone. Still at sea. Still there is no one to care for me when there’s no hand to hold my hand. Life is a loveless tale. For a ship without a sail. So that’s it again, hand holding his hand, wanting to be with someone and eventually hearts sort of romantic involvements where hapless

Speaker 1 and he he

Speaker 2 he was, interestingly enough, caught in that bisexual situation, which

Speaker 1 he he couldn’t handle and which ended up in him

Speaker 2 increasingly becoming alcoholic, which was the

Speaker 1 trajectory, the tragic

Speaker 2 trajectory of his life through the 30s and finally

Speaker 1 ended up with him

Speaker 2 unwilling to collaborate with Rogers when he broached the idea of doing greengrocer’s lilacs, which became

Speaker 1 Oklahoma, and when Hart wouldn’t and couldn’t write that

Speaker 2 actually it was not in a spirit which heart could actually have embraced. I don’t think

Speaker 1 then

Speaker 2 Rodgers went with Oscar Hammerstein and the rest is history.

Speaker 3 Great, um, I was going to jump ahead, but I think I’m going to wait on that, um. What was their competition when they broke on the scene?

Speaker 2 Well, it’s hard. You know, there was one of the reasons they were good was that there was a lot of good competition. I mean, there was a lot happening. And they were just an enormous I mean, they were the Gershwins. There were there was Harburg and Arlen.

Speaker 3 OK, one of the reasons

Speaker 2 one of the reasons they were so good was the musical climate of the late 20s and 30s was just

Speaker 1 hugely, hugely competitive and very

Speaker 2 good. And those guys being we’re always trying to top each other and outdo each other. There was Irving Berlin in a class by himself. There was Harburg and Arlen. There was the Gershwins and himself. And that’s Vernon Duke. They were

Speaker 1 just a huge number of of good

Speaker 2 composing teams out there writing very witty stuff. So it’s a matter of it’s a matter of horses for courses. You know,

Speaker 1 I actually my own feeling is that

Speaker 2 Hearties wrote the wittiest some of the wittiest lines

Speaker 1 of

Speaker 2 his contemporaries. I mean, when love congeals, it soon reveals the faint aroma of performing Seale’s. But he also wrote some of the worst lover.

Speaker 1 When I’m

Speaker 2 near you and I hear you speak my name softly in my ear, you breathe a

Speaker 1 flame, you know, blow torch. I don’t know.

Speaker 2 I mean, it’s a it’s terrible

Speaker 1 and very fast.

Speaker 2 And he’s he’s so facile at rhyming that sometimes, as in Zipp, which is a completely brilliant song,

Speaker 1 theatrically and lyrically,

Speaker 2 the rhymes are he’ll just throw in anything to

Speaker 1 get a rhyme.

Speaker 2 And it’s it’s too easy almost for him.

Speaker 3 Tell us about Roger’s writing the music first and what is he giving? What’s the seed that he’s giving to heart?

Speaker 2 Well, now, that’s very hard for me to do. But, you know, the point is, you can’t I’m talking about heart more. One of the things is you cannot separate the song from the sound.

Speaker 1 And I think I think I think

Speaker 2 what he gives to heart is this

Speaker 1 wonderful lyric gift that

Speaker 2 he has sort of this wonderful

Speaker 1 melodic gift,

Speaker 2 which is sort of underpins.

Speaker 3 Perhaps you can start that again.

Speaker 2 Oh, yes. What Rodgers gives to heart,

Speaker 1 it’s like it’s like a current

Speaker 2 it’s a kind of steady melodic inventiveness.

Speaker 1 That count is kind of a counterpoint

Speaker 2 to the kind of quixotic

Speaker 1 wit

Speaker 2 of heart, the sort of

Speaker 1 mercurial

Speaker 2 quality of his wit. It’s a it’s something insistent and sincere

Speaker 1 that

Speaker 2 plays against. Hart’s own inveterate cynicism. I don’t feel that there’s any cynicism at all in in Hammerstein’s music. I think it’s heartfelt and earnest

Speaker 1 and beautiful and and that

Speaker 2 comes out when he collaborates more with someone who’s actually in sync with his sensibility, like Hammerstein.

Speaker 1 Whereas I think that they that Hart and Rodgers were

Speaker 2 interesting contrasts, because

Speaker 1 I think that I look at I look

Speaker 2 upon Rodgers as a as a as a rather earnest, sincere, serious, obsessive individual

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 2 Hart as a cynical, lost soul,

Speaker 1 mordant, quixotic, not very had great trouble getting heart.

Speaker 2 Rodgers always had great trouble getting heart in the room to work. I think Hart’s life was too. He was too. As he writes, he was too uneasy in his easy chair.

Speaker 1 And that comes

Speaker 2 through that sort of feistiness, that

Speaker 1 edginess and.

Speaker 2 I think that there’s something centered in Rogers music, something some sort of. Plaintive. But optimistic because, of course, again,

Speaker 1 very American, very bourgeois, very full. Why should he not be optimistic? He lived a life of total privilege,

Speaker 2 which is the gift and the problem

Speaker 1 of the

Speaker 2 American musical.

Speaker 3 I wonder if we transposed people around. You started by saying I’m Hammerstein’s music. I did, yeah, I think you want to hear it or do you want to?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, I meant I meant that

Speaker 2 Roger’s music and the implications in it, the sincerity, the lyrical qualities were

Speaker 1 much more

Speaker 2 in sync with Hammerstein’s own lyrical intentions, having wasn’t as Mordente was a heterosexual, was sincere, was patriotic, was not as ironic

Speaker 1 and bitter and unhappy

Speaker 2 in himself. And so that means that the that the words sit on the lyrics in a different way entirely. And it’s also, you know, it’s something about age here. When they started writing, when Rodgers and Hart began writing, they were youngsters and youngsters with all the sort of impudence. The music is imputed. The lyrics are really important.

Speaker 1 And of course,

Speaker 2 as you get older and suffer and lose

Speaker 1 in life, then

Speaker 2 a certain other kind of tone, a sadness in the case of Hart’s lyrics

Speaker 1 comes into it. And I think I think that the thing about Hart

Speaker 2 and Rodgers is that they were right for their time.

Speaker 1 And, you know, when Hart was at the opening night of Oklahoma and

Speaker 2 came up to Rodgers after.

Speaker 1 The show and with genuine

Speaker 2 enthusiasm said this is going to run for 20

Speaker 1 years, the

Speaker 2 time he died about two weeks later, but the times had changed.

Speaker 1 And I think

Speaker 2 that in some sort of unconscious way, Rodgers was

Speaker 1 had shifted, even though he hadn’t wanted to had shifted

Speaker 2 to a sensibility that was

Speaker 1 going to ride the next generation better than

Speaker 2 the generation that wanted to consolidate itself, wanted to

Speaker 1 take. They wanted to retreat from the world to find

Speaker 2 happiness after a decade of depression and then four years of a world war. It wanted to seek out individualism. It wanted to hold the dream. And it was Rodgers and Hammerstein

Speaker 1 that wrote, If you don’t have a dream, how are you going to have a dream come true? But that dream

Speaker 2 was always being teased in the 30s because indeed it was never a dream

Speaker 1 that came true for heart, emotionally

Speaker 2 or for the society which was in complete disarray.

Speaker 3 So tell me whether you’re saying that if Rodgers was better suited to Hammerstein, I think it’s, um. Was he not well suited to.

Speaker 2 Say that again,

Speaker 1 I don’t get your question.

Speaker 3 You’re saying that he mellowed, he he was very and entitled to Hammerstein’s what music for himself? Was he not well suited sort of devil’s advocate?

Speaker 1 No, but what happened

Speaker 2 was that

Speaker 1 the game changed.

Speaker 2 When Walt Rodgers and Hammerstein, Rodgers and Hart. In the 20s and in the 30s were really writing musical comedy, that is to say the show, the stars of the shows were really the songs. I mean, you know, those those song like Zipp or song like The Lady is a Tramp or You Took Advantage Of Me

Speaker 1 are just huge

Speaker 2 showstopping songs. They’re sensational, nothing. They’re just sensational.

Speaker 1 They will live forever.

Speaker 2 Now, one of the reasons they’re sensational is that the rhymes are sensational. The music, which is great and memorable, the rhymes are sensational. Now, when the musical’s job description

Speaker 1 changed

Speaker 2 to telling a story in song, first of all,

Speaker 1 the notion of comedy dropped from the

Speaker 2 definition of the musical. So it was no longer musical comedy, but a musical. Second of all,

Speaker 1 the goal of

Speaker 2 the lyricist was

Speaker 1 now

Speaker 2 to make the song serve the character and the story and not to call attention to itself as a as a star turn. And that is where rhyming changed. So Hammerstein’s goal was not to use rhyme often because it called

Speaker 1 attention away from the plot and the character. And of course, in the Rodgers and Hart

Speaker 2 shows where there really wasn’t very much plot to speak of and there wasn’t much character to speak of. The rhyming served as a kind of star turn to as its own story, as its own plot, as its own expression.

Speaker 1 And when

Speaker 2 the musical changed, as it did with

Speaker 1 Oklahoma finally and forever, then that

Speaker 2 particular strong suit of hearts.

Speaker 1 Would have had to have been

Speaker 2 subsumed in something else,

Speaker 1 you know, in a in a narrative, and he

Speaker 2 died before that was ever tested. But even in their greatest shows together of the Rodgers and Hart shows, pal, Joey, if you really listen to Pal Joey, the songs are wonderful. And it is true that the story is more there’s an attempt to tell a story and it’s certainly more Mordente and and adult. But the reality is it’s not a very good story. It’s not a very well told or well-built musical, however good John O’Hara’s original tale was, it doesn’t work as a musical story. It needs to be rewritten if it’s ever

Speaker 1 going to be really done again in a major way, however

Speaker 2 good the musical numbers are. So we, you know, in a sense, in the way that these things happen, people I think maybe as tragic as Hart’s death was. He died at. The time.

Speaker 1 That he may not have weathered

Speaker 2 the discipline of subsuming his gifts to the story, the way Rogers was able to to weather that because the music was always there to be used

Speaker 1 in any narrative way.

Speaker 2 It’s just that what changed in the American musical was the intention to make the musical grow up

Speaker 1 by making it.

Speaker 2 Serve something larger than. Giving an audience a good time.

Speaker 3 It was the big thing. And why why do people go now?

Speaker 2 Well, just as the there was this boom in theater in 2007 when the Depression hit, and it really although it officially hit in 1929, it really didn’t sink in.

Speaker 1 And the culture didn’t really

Speaker 2 feel it strongly until about 1931.

Speaker 1 But when that happened, that happened to be the year that Rodgers and Hart went to Hollywood.

Speaker 2 There was a huge exodus that coincided with.

Speaker 1 The depression, on the one hand,

Speaker 2 closing a lot of the theaters, there was not work, these two hundred and sixty six shows dropped dramatically and the number of musicals, I think, dropped from something like to something like

Speaker 1 by

Speaker 2 1934 or five, like 35 musicals a year

Speaker 1 now.

Speaker 2 Therefore, where there was steady work was in Hollywood that had just discovered this technique called sound. So that the musical

Speaker 1 became

Speaker 2 and this is an important thing that the musical had a now a cinematic. String to its bow, and the difference was that the these theater artists were now controlled by corporate executives, which is why Rogers hated it. They were they were writers for hire. They weren’t making up their own stories, but they were just jobbed in living in the lap of luxury in the sun, making a fortune. But it’s interesting because to me, because the musical.

Speaker 1 In film,

Speaker 2 merely exaggerated what because of its. Power to broadcast song deeper into the souls of the citizens of America. It merely exaggerated the political importance of of the musical as a as political theater. The it’s often said it’s

Speaker 1 often thought that political

Speaker 2 theater is only left wing.

Speaker 1 Which is wrong.

Speaker 2 The musical is America’s great political theater.

Speaker 1 It is profoundly

Speaker 2 effective as political theater because it’s not seen as such. But what it does is it convinces in the in the joy that it creates its sells a

Speaker 1 worldview, a worldview

Speaker 2 that tells you, as Rodgers and Hammerstein did,

Speaker 1 that if you don’t have a dream, how are you going to have a dream come true?

Speaker 2 It tells you as it sells in ideology, it sells a sense of abundance. It sells a belief in the goodness of the culture which the culture and the musical sustained until it till until it

Speaker 1 came around with Vietnam and couldn’t that that believe

Speaker 2 couldn’t be sustained in song anymore. But but the musical is the most important. Messenger of the status quo that American society ever

Speaker 1 had,

Speaker 2 and so that makes somebody like Rodgers and Hammerstein

Speaker 1 major

Speaker 2 unwitting perhaps agents of. Reaction because in their pleasure, they are telling a society in the 30s,

Speaker 1 cool it, they

Speaker 2 are you know, this is a society that is breaking down. This is a society

Speaker 1 with

Speaker 2 millions of people out of work with

Speaker 1 the culture, not

Speaker 2 capitalism in real disarray. It’s it’s providing its true joy and pleasure and distraction

Speaker 1 on the one hand. But the

Speaker 2 implications of that distraction

Speaker 1 are. To put it in a

Speaker 2 phrase, don’t rock the boat. And that’s where the musical always serves a political purpose and a propagandistic purpose.

Speaker 3 Again, I think we switched names, you say, in the 30s and Rodgers and Hammerstein.

Speaker 2 I did. I’m sorry. I meant in the 30s.

Speaker 3 Just give it a short sentence about that.

Speaker 2 In the 30s, Rodgers and Hart served

Speaker 1 as real political, unwitting, albeit unwitting politicos of of political

Speaker 2 influence, but a reactionary one, as all musicals did,

Speaker 1 even the ones that purported to be left wing. It’s odd that

Speaker 2 because the musical as a as an enterprise really is a is as is like a macrocosm that right now is it is capitalism in in microcosm. It’s it’s its investment, it’s big risk and big return. And the story of every musical is the story of, you know, it’s the story of the American dream. It’s going out an unknown and coming back a star. It’s it’s it’s long runs, it’s money, its privilege.

Speaker 1 It’s it’s the good life.

Speaker 2 It’s pluck and luck. It’s all those themes rolled into

Speaker 1 one little game of show and tell.

Speaker 3 And Rodgers wasn’t just a composer.

Speaker 1 It what do you mean by that? It was a producer. He was a businessman and he was. That’s right. And he wrote the book, too.

Speaker 2 And he was living

Speaker 1 that life, say?

Speaker 2 Well, yeah, Rogers wasn’t just a composer. He was a businessman. He was a producer. He was a book writer. He was living the big life, small man, living the

Speaker 1 big life and and being.

Speaker 2 And these you know what

Speaker 1 what what we

Speaker 2 realize about All Stars is and you have to consider Rodgers and Hart and Rodgers and Hammerstein huge stars of American

Speaker 1 entertainment.

Speaker 2 All stars are. Are performing workhorses that prove that the system works. You look at these guys, you say, huh,

Speaker 1 see,

Speaker 2 I just keep at it, if

Speaker 1 I keep working

Speaker 2 and I trust myself, it’s going to pay off.

Speaker 1 I’m going to have a big payday. You know what I mean?

Speaker 2 And they’re sort of their stars of free enterprise is what they are. And that’s what they’re

Speaker 1 that’s part of in

Speaker 2 a competitive society, they are the they

Speaker 1 are the the high watermark that

Speaker 2 by which everybody sets their standard, you know, so they inspire envy, which is the gasoline of American culture, as we know.

Speaker 3 It’s a great line. Let’s come back to that.

Speaker 2 Yeah, because, I mean, it’s a bit, but it will explain again why.

Speaker 1 What was radical about Oklahoma?

Speaker 3 OK. Let’s finish this, OK? Yes, for sure. So what were they missing by by

Speaker 2 the time

Speaker 1 by the time they got you

Speaker 2 know, by the time the culture was in a quandary, the society couldn’t how to celebrate

Speaker 1 when

Speaker 2 everything was collapsing.

Speaker 1 I told you the plane I thought was there.

Speaker 3 It was like they died or something. And he said, you’re right. I’m going to go back to New York.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, oh, yeah, well,

Speaker 2 that happens a lot of their rusticated out

Speaker 1 there,

Speaker 3 yeah. OK, so what did they miss?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean,

Speaker 2 what they missed is what every artist who went to Hollywood missed. They they missed art. They missed self-expression. They were hired hands who were simply not the center of

Speaker 1 of

Speaker 2 the of their world, but simply extras in the epic of producers

Speaker 1 turning out

Speaker 2 these these musicals, which they could not shape. So what they missed was individual expression. They were great artists. And if you could go back to Broadway, people like

Speaker 1 my father and Harburg, Arlen, they did and

Speaker 3 need you to say that again, because we may not yet know who

Speaker 1 you’re OK. If you’re OK, if you’re OK, if you could if one of the things about if you could go back to Broadway, one

Speaker 2 of the ironies is that most of the performers couldn’t

Speaker 1 if you could go back to Broadway like my father, Burt La, you did because you could be the center of the show, you could have more control

Speaker 2 over your destiny. You could say what you wanted to say.

Speaker 1 You couldn’t do that in movies.

Speaker 2 And so by the

Speaker 1 time

Speaker 2 the Rodgers and Hart came back to Broadway in

Speaker 1 1935,

Speaker 2 you know, that is when. For instance, waiting for lefty. Was first done, it’s odd to think that it took half a decade before that first protest play was going on,

Speaker 1 but, you know, the culture

Speaker 2 was in upheaval,

Speaker 1 but.

Speaker 2 It was at that time to the Cole Porter.

Speaker 1 Was. In inplay and, you know, on form and, you know, when you have big

Speaker 2 troubles, you need big

Speaker 1 magic and and

Speaker 2 part of the magic of song is the wit so that the stronger the more difficult the times than

Speaker 1 that wit and humor become more potent,

Speaker 2 more potent ways of

Speaker 1 of. Diluting trouble.

Speaker 2 And so I think that

Speaker 1 the I think that

Speaker 2 gave a lot of energy to subsequently to the shows, although I have to say that some of the early shows, they were spectacular. I mean, Jumbo was really about a circus, you know, on your toes, which was which they rode with George Abbott was essentially they did the book in that case was essentially a ballet.

Speaker 1 It was about ballet, but the the lyrics.

Speaker 2 Got smarter and for instance.

Speaker 1 I think a good

Speaker 2 example of this, I mean, my I’m one of my all time.

Speaker 1 Favorite.

Speaker 2 Lyrics is zip in Pal Joey, which is a strip tease in which. What it’s a great song because it’s so

Speaker 1 theatrical and the

Speaker 2 joke is that this Gypsy Rose Lee type, Gypsy Rose Lee in life fancied herself a stripper, fancied herself as something of an intellectual. And so they were sending that up in the song. And so but what the song does is play the same game that Cole Porter was playing

Speaker 1 in a different

Speaker 2 way. But it’s the first sighting of that

Speaker 1 very modern pop culture thing where high art and

Speaker 2 low art say advertising and literature coalesce into song. So you’re seeing the emergence of a very modern sensibility of where everything sort of is in this big cultural stew and it’s all coming together like, you know, in Porter’s case, it would

Speaker 1 be you’re the top,

Speaker 2 you’re Garbo’s salary, you’re cellophane or something like, you know you know, you’re where everything is sort of tossed in, where the thing I love is where she says, zip, she’s stripping. I was reading Schopenhauer last night,

Speaker 1 Zipp, and I think

Speaker 2 Schopenhauer was right. Well, the

Speaker 1 idea of Schopenhauer being

Speaker 2 somehow getting into a song with a stripper doing a strip and it’s a list song of all sorts of famous people, Walter Lippmann, Lily Saint Cyr and other stripper. You know, it’s just a brilliant pop song, pop culture song.

Speaker 1 But it’s a thrilling for an

Speaker 2 audience, a middle class audience who has all those references. It’s so smart. It’s a smart song. People don’t write smart songs in 2001, the audience, it has to be more democratic, more democratic. It’s a sort of a has that. It’s delicious. It’s something that they

Speaker 1 did in review.

Speaker 2 It’s very knowing. And it assumes an intelligence of the audience, which, of course, also musicals don’t do now, unfortunately, because perhaps the audiences are as intelligent.

Speaker 3 Tell us that they missed the political message of the reason.

Speaker 1 Well, sure. I mean well, I mean, you know, you can’t you don’t look to Broadway

Speaker 2 to go to the barricades. You just don’t see Broadway is business art. It’s about abundance. It’s not about criticizing society or thinking against society. It’s about defining the mainstream of American life. And when these when Rodgers and Hart went out to Hollywood, as they all

Speaker 1 did, they went out to live the life of Riley to get a steady pay day. They were living well. I mean, you know, it’s

Speaker 2 hard to understand that in

Speaker 1 1941, only

Speaker 2 10 percent of the

Speaker 1 population were paying income

Speaker 2 tax on over ten thousand dollars a year. So these guys were making 10000 dollars a month almost.

Speaker 1 I mean, they were making a lot of money and

Speaker 2 the society was in a severe depression.

Speaker 1 So, you know, they were not up against the barricades. And I don’t think that their whatever their political

Speaker 2 persuasion, I mean, they were

Speaker 1 probably liberal, but they were liberal.

Speaker 2 They weren’t serving

Speaker 1 any they weren’t living any in any kind of

Speaker 2 political context that you could

Speaker 1 call radical.

Speaker 2 And in that sense, they really didn’t feel or could express the disarray of the culture. They didn’t

Speaker 1 know it.

Speaker 2 What they expressed was the disarray of the

Speaker 1 heart,

Speaker 2 perhaps. But that’s as far as it got, you know.

Speaker 3 Good. Let’s go back and explain to us what we were talking about, about why musicals are starting. Yeah. Is there such a thing as a sophisticated musical?

Speaker 1 Well, the most well, the

Speaker 2 real sophisticated writing of the 30s was in reviews where you had all those not great Noel Coward reviews and songs and the Arlon songs.

Speaker 1 Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg

Speaker 2 wrote special material for my father, Burt Law, which was sendup of opera, send

Speaker 1 up of a wonderful Sholay often. And they come on the idea of Sholay often and chopping

Speaker 2 trees in my father’s case to set up, my father did a sort of satire of opera singing. They wrote material for him that set up Noel Coward. Love was made for the bourgeoisie, but only

Speaker 1 God can make. A trio

Speaker 2 was set up of design for living about a menage a

Speaker 1 trois.

Speaker 2 But what I’m saying is that

Speaker 1 the real wit

Speaker 2 and satire was in review, which was a thriving form in the 30s. But in the musical, a musical

Speaker 1 comedy in the 30s,

Speaker 2 comedy was still king in the musical.

Speaker 1 And a lot of the people who

Speaker 2 drove the musical Bobby

Speaker 1 Clark, Bert La Eugene and Willie Howard,

Speaker 2 Fanny Brice,

Speaker 1 they were why they were great

Speaker 2 and why they they they they controlled the musical because the musicals had no

Speaker 1 plot. They had no real story.

Speaker 2 So the stars brought their larger than life personalities to these shows and they were the drama. More or less, their personalities were the event, they were extra ordinary now.

Speaker 1 What happened when the when the

Speaker 2 Rodgers and Hammerstein shows came in? Not no. I mean, Hammerstein

Speaker 3 say it

Speaker 2 again.

Speaker 1 So what happened after the 30s? When.

Speaker 2 Rodgers and Hammerstein collaborated

Speaker 1 what they really

Speaker 2 invented for the musical, in my view, was the equivalent of the interchangeable

Speaker 1 part.

Speaker 2 What was important was the story and the star. Didn’t matter in the same way, of course, it was great to have a star in a play, but their personality had to be subsumed in a character so that whereas in the 30s, the star was always him or herself. It was Ethel Merman, whatever show she was in,

Speaker 1 or Burt LA,

Speaker 2 whatever show he was in. But in the context of

Speaker 1 Oklahoma or

Speaker 2 it’s Nellie or South Pacific, it’s Nellie

Speaker 1 Forbush or whoever, you know, I mean, it’s it’s the character in the play. And those

Speaker 2 characters could be played by

Speaker 1 anyone

Speaker 2 with a good voice. So what happens

Speaker 1 in that shift is the power in the as the

Speaker 2 controlling force, the musical shifts from the star being the star performer, being the controlling force, the musical to the creators of the musical, being the stars of the musical. So it becomes the lyricist and composer who become the star of the musical, not the performer.

Speaker 1 And that is the main sort of seismic shift in the movement

Speaker 2 from the musicals of Rodgers and Hart to the musicals of Rodgers and Hammerstein.

Speaker 3 Right now, I get that. Talk about some of their innovations or look at some of the innovations and how they broke the mold for what came before the music that you

Speaker 1 write or not. I don’t think I can do that.

Speaker 2 I can talk about the difference between

Speaker 1 I don’t think that there were that

Speaker 2 many innovations in terms that they were just better at doing what the musical was doing

Speaker 1 at that time. The innovation came with

Speaker 2 Hammerstein, not

Speaker 1 with heart, I think.

Speaker 2 You see, maybe your writer thinks differently, what does he think?

Speaker 1 Doesn’t matter. I mean, I mean, I mean, maybe there’s a point that I can talk to.

Speaker 3 Well, it was the first. The first. Musical about dance on your toes that really used dance on your toes, the first with Shakespeare.

Speaker 2 That’s just not true.

Speaker 3 OK, and do you want to react to that then?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean I mean I mean, you know, they had ballets

Speaker 2 in seven lively arts in nineteen thirty seven. You know, they had Stravinsky writing for my father for chrissake.

Speaker 1 They had. You see, when you

Speaker 2 say it was the first to use Shakespeare. The. I mean, they were smart. But they didn’t use Shakespeare, they didn’t write Kiss me, Kate.

Speaker 1 Somebody else did that. You know, I don’t know. I mean,

Speaker 2 it’s sort of. It’s sort of. I think I mean, I don’t see I think that sort of actually detracts from their importance, rather, because what they did in that form wasn’t so good. They were the first to do it. But it wasn’t great.

Speaker 1 You know, I don’t know, maybe I better not talk about that because I really I’m not confident about my opinion on that.

Speaker 3 We’re starting to hear the change. OK, OK, sorry.

Speaker 2 Let that

Speaker 1 go.

Speaker 3 And we have the full range. So that’s perfect timing. Let’s move to Rodgers and Hammerstein. Sort of going to the end before we go to the beginning, why are the heart musicales refined as much as

Speaker 2 very simply they’re bad stories? The reason why the heart Rodgers and Hart musicals are not revived as much as the Rodgers and Hammerstein stories. The Rodgers and Hammerstein. The reason why the Rodgers and Hart musicals, the reason why the Rodgers and Hart musicals are not revived with the same enthusiasm

Speaker 1 or as the

Speaker 2 Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals isn’t that the songs aren’t as good, but that the stories aren’t as good. They just are. The audience now expects and wants more complexity, more.

Speaker 1 They want a moral universe.

Speaker 2 They want a debate. They want the musical to be about something. And that is a kind of relatively alien idea to Rodgers and Hart. It comes only at the very end

Speaker 1 of their collaboration

Speaker 2 with, say, pal Joey. And so that they date as good as they are musically very often. You can take those songs out of the shows and just do them as songs, you have a

Speaker 1 wonderful evening, but when you put the book in them, it

Speaker 2 really sinks them.

Speaker 3 Let’s talk about Oklahoma. Can you talk about what was being done contemporaneously and what if there were innovations in that? What was startling about that?

Speaker 2 Well, everything was

Speaker 1 startling about Oklahoma. It was different in every way.

Speaker 2 It was somebody walking on stage singing about America in the middle of a war.

Speaker 1 Singing with no introduction, oh, what a beautiful morning

Speaker 2 it was telling an American story, it was insisting on it was a look. It was a consolidation of. Of American history at a time when. The culture was seeking the same kind of consolidation in itself, you know, it’s very hard to do theater in the time in wartime.

Speaker 1 And the thing about

Speaker 2 because it’s such a polemical time. And so that what was what was good about Oklahoma and why it was just it hit the moment so clearly it was about the culture was.

Speaker 1 Fighting a war. To keep America safe from.

Speaker 2 The Nazis, right,

Speaker 1 and all of that meant

Speaker 2 safe for democracy. Well, what was the democracy? What is the heartland? What is the heart of America? It was sort of confirming the sort of essential goodness and righteousness of the culture

Speaker 1 in a apparently non-political way. But it caught the mood of the moment

Speaker 2 and continued in subsequent after the war was over to explore issues of. Goodness abundance, the corners as high as an elephant’s eye, innocence to praise those is to praise those qualities in the culture and to and by the very success of those musicals, to prove to assert them and be them, to embody the very principles that they were singing about.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 2 they were singing about goodness and.

Speaker 1 Innocence and in giving it a story, you know, a myth and.

Speaker 2 It was a. It was also rather progressive

Speaker 1 in the

Speaker 2 way that Hammerstein was progressive, Hammerstein was political in that sense, and he

Speaker 1 you

Speaker 2 know, there’s the whole East and South Pacific, there’s a whole

Speaker 1 issue of interracial marriage and

Speaker 2 or I forget the story entirely, but.

Speaker 1 She has a

Speaker 2 he has a child who’s. Colored and the line is hilarious when you hear it

Speaker 1 now, you mean her father

Speaker 2 was or her mother was a she was a dot,

Speaker 1 dot, dot, dot, dot, dot, dot. You know, that’s the level

Speaker 2 of the liberalism. But anyway, there is a sort of there is a sort of progressive sentimentality in them which made them to a post-war

Speaker 1 America, made them hopeful, made them righteous, which fit the mood of the time. Morency wit detachment,

Speaker 2 all the aspects that come with wit thinking against the

Speaker 1 culture after a world war.

Speaker 2 Forget it. It was a it was an era of homogeneity, of

Speaker 1 belief, of

Speaker 2 insistence on the goodness of life.

Speaker 1 If you walk through a cloud, keep your head up high and don’t be afraid.

Speaker 2 It’s about giving courage to people to seek their destiny,

Speaker 1 to believe in their dream. That is what the music is about. And no, no

Speaker 2 musical team ever stated that

Speaker 1 more

Speaker 2 brilliantly or consistently

Speaker 1 in narrative than.

Speaker 2 Rodgers and Hammerstein, Sondheim

Speaker 1 in in

Speaker 2 a couple of songs has been

Speaker 1 more brilliant in

Speaker 2 defining other aspects of the dream, like something’s coming, something’s coming, something

Speaker 1 good. If you can wait.

Speaker 2 Express’s again the status quo brilliantly. In other words, don’t shake the boat. If you believe in the system

Speaker 1 and and hang in, you know you will be rewarded. Well, that’s a white man

Speaker 2 talking to white audiences, believe

Speaker 1 me. You know, no black man ever believed

Speaker 2 that in a million years. But the reality is that’s what the audience is speaking to. It is it is the

Speaker 1 glue of

Speaker 2 the musicals are the

Speaker 1 glue of the American dream. You know, they are central to it’s the backbeat of promise.

Speaker 2 In the culture in the century.

Speaker 3 How much time do we have on this role, we got about four minutes, you started to talk about the you talked about him coming on stage, you starting to know what it say and no real overture. Right. Can I ask you to say what were the rules of the musicals and what did they break that list?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, there you know,

Speaker 2 the first rule, one of the one of the rules which no one had succeeded in

Speaker 1 breaking

Speaker 2 in the musical, which Oklahoma broke, was how to get beyond the the song plot, song, plot, exposition.

Speaker 1 And how do you you know, how do you develop

Speaker 2 character and song. And this was a way of of telling a story in song rather

Speaker 1 than having production.

Speaker 2 No song production. No.

Speaker 1 You know, that kind of thing.

Speaker 2 There was no I believe there was no overture. There was a lot of telling a story with dance. Agnes Guess Mills dances were extraordinary there. Was it added to the vocabulary of expressiveness of the musical and found new ways of telling a story with music and so on, you

Speaker 1 know, and they just broke open

Speaker 2 the musical and also broke open the notion of telling an American story.

Speaker 1 I mean, Oklahoma hadn’t been on for more than a year when Harburg and Arlen came in with Bloomer Girl,

Speaker 2 which is a story about Bloomers American

Speaker 1 and what it did to liberate women and the and the underground railway and then Berlin. Not to be outdone, the greatest of them all came back

Speaker 2 and had to in order really to show that he still was you know, he was the best

Speaker 1 he had. He had to weigh in with Annie, Get Your Gun again. Another American story about American mythology.

Speaker 2 It was all part of the rediscovery and

Speaker 1 redefinition of of a new America after World War, you know,

Speaker 2 a sense of self involvement, which was. The real

Speaker 1 mutation of character in the in the nation after the war,

Speaker 2 a new sense of,

Speaker 1 you know, they have they had a decade of depression and and and

Speaker 2 self-sacrifice. They’ve had four years of war and more self-sacrifice. Once that was over, the dreams had been deferred for 15 years. People took to return to American society. And they’ve got to remember, it’s hard to realize this, that

Speaker 1 between with after the war, America

Speaker 2 has found itself

Speaker 1 in an extraordinary

Speaker 2 situation. It was the most powerful and the richest nation ever in the history of the world.

Speaker 1 Between 1945 and 1955, the

Speaker 2 average income of the American citizen tripled, tripled. So the culture was wealthy, it was powerful. It was determined to assert itself and find itself.

Speaker 1 And what happened in the culture and

Speaker 2 in individuals and in the arts was a new self involvement. The individual was pursuing his own self-interest in

Speaker 1 a way that had never happened before. And Art was looking in the

Speaker 2 theater, especially Tennessee Williams was

Speaker 1 in complete

Speaker 2 interest in self involvement and the story of

Speaker 1 the inner life of an individual

Speaker 2 death of a salesman. Was originally called inside his head, everything was moving into, you know, they

Speaker 1 were going away from

Speaker 2 it was moving away from social realism, say in art to abstract expressionism, you

Speaker 1 know, from sort of

Speaker 2 social protest to personal lyricism with Tennessee Williams. So the movement was always inward interior toward the self and defining the self. And that’s true of the musical. The musical is now

Speaker 1 defining what America, the

Speaker 2 great ones were defining, what America was, who we are as a nation. What do we believe?

Speaker 1 What are our

Speaker 2 and that and what is our history? What did we preserve? Why are we preserving? So those were the issues that

Speaker 1 changed that Oklahoma began and that wrought a huge change in the in the real sort of watershed

Speaker 2 changes, which led by turns to West Side Story and by turns even to Sondheim.

Speaker 1 I mean, that

Speaker 2 was the major. And the Sondheim

Speaker 1 in the end, is the.

Speaker 2 Is the antithesis that leads to the new synthesis, if you said

Speaker 1 I mean, is that right? Yeah.

Speaker 2 In other words, the Rodgers and Hammerstein shows with the new synthesis. And then inevitably and ironically, Sondheim was the.

Speaker 1 Kind of live in

Speaker 2 son of Oscar Hammerstein,

Speaker 1 who then essentially killed the father

Speaker 2 and deconstructed the Hammerstein. Style is metabolism, it comes out of the body, it’s actually

Speaker 1 as palpable

Speaker 2 so that each if a person has a style, it’s a reflection of his personality so

Speaker 1 that you don’t have to if you

Speaker 2 really read the songs well or hear them well, you hear the person. So the defining

Speaker 1 thing, what you hear.

Speaker 2 In heart is a very sharp wit.

Speaker 1 And a kind of.

Speaker 2 Ruefulness about the

Speaker 1 nature of the human heart,

Speaker 2 the difficulty in in making connection with other

Speaker 1 people and holding

Speaker 2 that connection, a kind of loneliness,

Speaker 1 a kind of hopeful hopelessness for lack of a better word.

Speaker 2 And then all you have to do is, is read a lyric

Speaker 1 and you hear it

Speaker 2 uneasy in my easy chair.

Speaker 1 I’m just trying to think of another one.

Speaker 3 And you’ll tie this back to Rogers.

Speaker 1 That is Roger who said the hard lyrics. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2 Well, you ask but you ask about Rogers.

Speaker 1 I mean, you ask about hard to know Mike Rogers.

Speaker 2 Oh, well, I’m sorry.

Speaker 3 What is it? Oh, that makes

Speaker 1 it harder for me. Ah, I can’t I don’t think I can do that.

Speaker 2 I guess I can’t tell the difference sometimes. If I were just here, if I heard the song without the

Speaker 1 lyric,

Speaker 2 if I just heard

Speaker 1 the melody, I don’t, I couldn’t

Speaker 2 always tell.

Speaker 1 I don’t. I mean.

Speaker 2 I’m so I’m sorry about that I missed. I misheard you, I thought you were

Speaker 1 talking about heart. No, no, say.

Speaker 3 So let’s go sort of back to where we were talking at the beginning, why is he so American? Richard Rodgers.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 2 there is no such thing as so American,

Speaker 1 he’s

Speaker 2 you know, he’s assimilated, he brings all sorts of and I think it’s the assimilation that makes him very American. He brings a comedy. He’s Jewish.

Speaker 1 I mean, the

Speaker 2 American musical is a Jewish art form. So he brings a lot of European influences. He brings

Speaker 1 you know, these people are not first

Speaker 2 generation Jews.

Speaker 1 They don’t bring the old world

Speaker 2 to their songs. They bring the new world.

Speaker 1 They bring the world that they’ve inherited. They bring

Speaker 2 what they bring is a sense of blessing

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 2 buoyancy

Speaker 1 and the loneliness that comes from being

Speaker 2 transported across the water, not a slave

Speaker 1 ship,

Speaker 2 which is another story and probably more relevant than the musicals,

Speaker 1 but

Speaker 2 nonetheless transported and having to psychically adjust

Speaker 1 to make a make

Speaker 2 and make oneself comfortable, psychically and in the world that you’ve that is your inheritance, you know,

Speaker 1 but

Speaker 2 so that there’s a loneliness, a

Speaker 1 longing

Speaker 2 which is never answered, which is part of the

Speaker 1 lyrical gift and the defining

Speaker 2 thing about Rogers, a wistfulness which hooked up with heart, you know, a wistfulness, a gentleness.

Speaker 1 And this wonderful, full hearted. Big hearted thing.

Speaker 2 Which has to do with the wonder of being

Speaker 1 in a land like America where you can. You know, the whole point of

Speaker 2 the place is to try to be what you

Speaker 1 want to be,

Speaker 2 and there’s a certain I mean, people who

Speaker 1 aren’t American

Speaker 2 sort of don’t understand that,

Speaker 1 that that

Speaker 2 leads to both great, barbarous, terrible things that freedom, but also to extraordinary, miraculous things.

Speaker 1 And it’s that that

Speaker 2 that’s what one of the things that I think that Rogers gives. Voice two, which is the sort of the miraculous aspect,

Speaker 1 the the miracle

Speaker 2 of American life which exists,

Speaker 1 the idea of being reborn into a world where

Speaker 2 there is enough. So they say to. Create a sort of sense of optimism, because optimism is a form of abundance. I mean, it’s based on abundance. You have to have a big place to support that kind of idealism

Speaker 1 with a lot of wealth. You can’t do it in

Speaker 2 England, which is the size of Utah. You know, that’s why the English art forms are all ironic.

Speaker 1 That limits about

Speaker 2 boundaries, about not having your dreams come true because they can’t in a context where it’s a it’s a world without a surplus. So.

Speaker 1 There’s that that’s that I think

Speaker 2 defines it would make some very American, which is a you know. He’s in a he’s in a kind of wonderful world and he knows it and his music expresses it, you know,

Speaker 1 of privilege and pleasure and comfort,

Speaker 2 which is his he’s he doesn’t he takes it as his as a second generation American as his right. And he has all the. The like the Gershwins as all the sort of bumptious and the Gershwins are actually. Lower class, but that bump business, the sort of sense of fun that comes with privilege. You know, he’s an empowered.

Speaker 3 How should Richard Rodgers be remembered?

Speaker 1 Oh, my gosh, how should Richard Rodgers be remembered in the world, in the in the in the theatrical world of the century? He is he would be like a pillar of the church, the theatrical church. He would be a pillar of it.

Speaker 2 One section of it, the musical comedy section of the

Speaker 1 great of the Great Academy of Theatrical World. He’s right up there with

Speaker 2 Tennessee Williams

Speaker 1 and. One of the great. Cornerstones of of

Speaker 2 of the entertainment world and of course, you see one of the

Speaker 1 it’s hard at one of the

Speaker 2 things that’s hard to measure is.

Speaker 1 And hard to manufacture is joy.

Speaker 2 And you see, in a way.

Speaker 1 Depending on your point of view.

Speaker 2 I think that’s the greatest thing you can do in theater, which is why put the clowns very high, some almost higher than the playwrights, because it’s OK to manufacture thought that’s great. But it’s a it’s a tough world. It’s a sad

Speaker 1 world.

Speaker 2 And we’re continually seeking solace and the purest solace.

Speaker 1 To me,

Speaker 2 among the most pure of the of so far is is the sheer,

Speaker 1 incredible,

Speaker 2 majestic. Sweet pleasure of that music, which is incomparable. What else can you say?

Speaker 3 Great. Are there any other musicals that you want to talk about, Carousel, the Twins, the Little Carousel, two

Speaker 1 people or oh God, I’m not against each other. We don’t know. I mean, I don’t I mean, I like you know, I like

Speaker 2 I mean, there’s so many things I like. I mean, I like.

Speaker 1 I like the

Speaker 2 all the sort of production numbers and South Pacific, I love

Speaker 1 that, I love the King and I

Speaker 3 like if there was an epiphany for you and for you about them. And then I’d love to talk about it.

Speaker 2 Just, you know, I’m not. I wasn’t ready for this one. I mean, I have, but I have to

Speaker 1 think about, OK, I’d rather so much

Speaker 3 about Roger’s on his own after what started jiggling sorry. And what must have happened. What must have been like. It doesn’t sound like a sentence for Rogers to have to follow the two greatest lyricists in the world. You know that the first lyric he wrote himself was the sweetest sounds I’ll ever hear. I didn’t know Simon had.

Speaker 1 And I didn’t know that. That’s great. He wrote that lyric was pretty good. I saw

Speaker 2 that show.

Speaker 3 What must that have been like for.

Speaker 2 You know, it’s interesting that,

Speaker 1 you know, I think it probably I mean, it’s

Speaker 2 it’s amazing that you wrote such a good

Speaker 1 lyric.

Speaker 2 I would have thought of an impossible. Because it’s like operating without a hand that you’re used to, you know, I mean and also, you know, musicals, I mean, I think it’s so sad.

Speaker 1 However good you are,

Speaker 2 there is a moment because the musical is lives in such a symbiotic relationship with its audience

Speaker 1 there. There’s a moment when the culture changes. And and

Speaker 2 change is forever and the society

Speaker 1 can’t go back, but you

Speaker 2 can’t go with the society because you no longer have the wherewithal, it’s not part of your experience. And all these guys felt that

Speaker 1 the minute Vietnam happened, the minute

Speaker 2 Kennedy was assassinated

Speaker 1 and then Vietnam came

Speaker 2 into the culture, took a turn

Speaker 1 that

Speaker 2 these. Artists just could not deal with they didn’t psychically

Speaker 1 have the ability to.

Speaker 2 The irony, the fury, the mockery, the to to think against

Speaker 1 the culture, because they’d spent generations building it up

Speaker 2 and there was there was no place for them or their sound. I mean, Irving Berlin closed the greatest songwriter composer in the in the whole history of

Speaker 1 of the form

Speaker 2 Pachi, Rodgers and Hart and Hammerstein. Closed up shop, there was no place for his music because even the verse form, the coherence of the rhyme couplet no longer suited the chaos. Of the time, it was too ordered, it was to the cemetery, it was about like neoclassicism and romanticism, it was not the first form, no longer reflected the society.

Speaker 1 And you had

Speaker 2 you had to find some other way

Speaker 1 through,

Speaker 2 amusingly, which happened almost a decade later with

Speaker 1 company Sanho, but in another

Speaker 2 shape, music and musical in another shape with another sour Mordente vindictive tone, which was an alien, completely alien to to

Speaker 1 people like Berlin or. Rogers, you know.

Speaker 3 Talk about seeing that show.

Speaker 1 Oh, gosh, if I can remember it, I can’t remember it very well.

Speaker 2 I’m sorry I saw it in New Haven. I was at Yale

Speaker 1 and I went to it, uh. I can’t remember anything about it, Roger, really.

Speaker 2 I just remember it was. I can’t remember.

Speaker 3 OK, last truly the last question, if they’re. If there isn’t a Richard Rodgers composing today, why not tell me if there is or where is

Unidentified it and why not?

Speaker 2 The musical is a. The musical has changed as it has to change,

Speaker 1 and I think one of the

Speaker 2 problems, I think the musical is going to come back to the point where there can be another Richard Rodgers. What is it? It’s had to contend for the last 25 years with the prestige of the deconstructions of the narrative musical that Sondheim that’s entirely Sondheim. Sondheim is our Samuel Beckett in the musical field. He’s defined a road that

Speaker 1 only he can go down and other people have tried to go down. It end up

Speaker 2 right on their face. And one of the problems with Sondheim, which is different from Rodgers and Hammerstein and Rodgers and Hart, those guys were theater people who loved the mass audience, that the Broadway musical is a mass entertainment.

Speaker 1 And that’s good.

Speaker 2 But they loved the mass. One of the problems with the Sondheim musicals is he wants a mass communication, but he doesn’t respect the mass or want it. So what the musical has had has for about two two decades has been under the influence of a sort of pseudo avant garde aesthetic couched in a in a in a in a sort of Broadway form. And the audiences aren’t buying it, haven’t bought it there. One or two really great Sondheim musical, Sweeney Todd being the greatest in my opinion. But he’s made the musical almost more serious than

Speaker 1 it can bear. I don’t think it can

Speaker 2 carry the intellectual baggage that

Speaker 1 but it can carry a narrative

Speaker 2 baggage and it can sing about it can sing about feelings. And I think that the musical in some areas is coming back to that. But because the musical is now so expensive, much more expensive than it was in their day,

Speaker 1 there are fewer of them. There are fewer people who know how to do the craft. If you wanted

Speaker 2 you and I wanted to do a musical today, there are only five directors in America and England who know how to do it. Your list, the list you can put on the list one

Speaker 1 page, the people who actually know how to fight that war.

Speaker 2 So as there is less and less opportunity

Speaker 1 to do the craft, the craft

Speaker 2 slowly,

Speaker 1 inevitably

Speaker 2 becomes obsolete. So unless there is

Speaker 1 more

Speaker 2 musical activity, which there may be, but not necessarily in the

Speaker 1 big Broadway tradition, it may have to again be redefined.

Speaker 2 It will be redefined inevitably because people can’t afford to put on ten million dollar revivals forever. You know, it’s not going to happen.

Speaker 1 I mean, well, it will happen.

Speaker 2 But the musical as an art form will

Speaker 1 not continue

Speaker 2 in that direction, because

Speaker 1 if you can’t afford to do that and make innovation

Speaker 2 but the musical, you know, it’s a billion dollar industry musical and it’s the only billion dollar industry that does no research and development,

Speaker 1 you know,

Speaker 2 so, you know, if it dies, it deserves to die.

Director:
Roger Sherman
Keywords:
American Archive of Public Broadcasting GUID:
cpb-aacip-504-dv1cj8867x, cpb-aacip-504-v11vd6pw13, cpb-aacip-504-862b85430g
MLA CITATIONS:
"John Lahr , Richard Rodgers: The Sweetest Sounds" American Masters Digital Archive (WNET). January 9, 2001 , https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/archive/interview/john-lahr-2/
APA CITATIONS:
(1 , 1). John Lahr , Richard Rodgers: The Sweetest Sounds [Video]. American Masters Digital Archive (WNET). https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/archive/interview/john-lahr-2/
CHICAGO CITATIONS:
"John Lahr , Richard Rodgers: The Sweetest Sounds" American Masters Digital Archive (WNET). January 9, 2001 . Accessed September 30, 2025 https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/archive/interview/john-lahr-2/

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