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Barnes and Noble

Breaking into Song: Why You Shouldn't Hate Musicals

Current price: $16.95
Breaking into Song: Why You Shouldn't Hate Musicals
Breaking into Song: Why You Shouldn't Hate Musicals

Barnes and Noble

Breaking into Song: Why You Shouldn't Hate Musicals

Current price: $16.95
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Size: Paperback

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“This book is a fascinating cri de coeur and made me question everything I think about musicals”
Alan Cumming
A book for those who can’t stand musicals, those who love them, and every theatregoer, academic, practitioner and student in between.
Breaking Into Song
explores theatre’s most divisive genre, and asks the fundamental questions:
What makes a musical?
Why are they so polarising?
And why have we allowed a form so full of possibility to become so repetitive and restrictive?
Through a series of essays, London-based director, dramaturg and musical theatre specialist Adam Lenson asks what audiences can do to stay open minded and what creatives can do to make new musicals better. Examining both sides of the divide, he explores how those who both love and hate musicals can expand the possibilities of this misunderstood medium.
Dive in and discover the political foundations of the form, the difficulties in pinning down exactly what it is, the connections between musicals, video games, opera and comic books, and why a musical is, actually, a lot like a poopy baby.
“A passionate and cogently argued call to arms and a very enjoyable read”
Lyn Gardner

This book is really brilliant. If you care about/enjoy/work in/struggle with/want to understand/have concerns for the state of musical theatre, it is essential reading. Hugely recommended”
Howard Goodall
I would advise anyone who… hates musicals… to read this book
” Musical Theatre Review
Bold, inclusive and willing to adapt, Adam Lenson’s blueprint for musical theatre above all looks at sustainability.
” The Reviews Hub
Contents
:
Breaking Into Song The Wound On Hating Musicals Cash Machines Musicals and Comic Books Superpowers Musicals are Political Poopy Babies When Words Are No Longer Enough Collaboration Time and Memory Photocopying a Photocopy I’m Not a Genre, Not Yet a Medium Expertise What’s The Point? Definitions Audiences Musicals and Video Games Can Musicals Ever Be Cool? The Triangle Tiny Bowls Musicals and Opera Digging vs Telescopes The Musical Cardboard Cities Musicals Cost Too Much Autobiography Opposites Build it and They Will Come What’s in a Name? Replicas Stacks Making Space

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Barnes & Noble does business -- big business -- by the book. As the #1 bookseller in the US, it operates about 720 Barnes & Noble superstores (selling books, music, movies, and gifts) throughout all 50 US states and Washington, DC. The stores are typically 10,000 to 60,000 sq. ft. and stock between 60,000 and 200,000 book titles. Many of its locations contain Starbucks cafes, as well as music departments that carry more than 30,000 titles.

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