Acknowledgments
Introduction
Broadway Musicals of the 1960s
1959–1960 Season
1960–1961 Season
1961–1962 Season
1962–1963 Season
1963–1964 Season
1964–1965 Season
1965–1966 Season
1966–1967 Season
1967–1968 Season
1968–1969 Season
1969–1970 Season
Appendixes
A. Alphabetical Listing
B. Chronology (By Season)
C. Chronology (By Classification)
D. Discography
E. Filmography
F. Gilbert and Sullivan Operetta Productions
G. New York City Center Light Opera Company Productions
H. New York City Opera Company Productions
I. Music Theatre of Lincoln Center Productions
J. Other Operetta Productions
K. Published Scripts
L. Theatres
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Dan Dietz taught English and the history of modern drama at Western Carolina University, and later served with the U.S. Government Accountability Office and the U.S. Education Department. He is the author of Off-Broadway Musicals, 1910-2007: Casts, Credits, Songs, Critical Reception and Performance Data of More Than 1,800 Shows (2010).
Between the forgotten Beg, Borrow or Steal (February 1960) and
Meredith Willson's 1491 (which closed pre-Broadway in October
1969), 271 musicals opened or tried to open on Broadway. Dietz,
author of Off-Broadway Musicals, here discusses all book musicals
with new music, revivals, revues, imports, and other works that
appeared in New York venues (plus 29 pre-Broadway closings). Each
chronologically arranged entry includes opening and closing dates,
number of performances, crew, cast (with character names), setting,
musical numbers (and performers), a two-page plot summary and
critical reception, awards, book availability, and recording
history. If a performer's name was billed above the title, it is
presented in italics. Entries are well written, with subjectivity
kept to a minimum (the critics do the talking), and the commentary
is well informed. Included in the 12 appendixes are a discography
and a filmography. More detailed than Thomas Hischak's Broadway
Plays and Musicals, and more comprehensive than Stanley Green's
Broadway Musicals: Show by Show (7th ed., rev. and updated, or
Ethan Mordden's Open a New Window: The Broadway Musical in the
1960s, this is a valuable resource for all theater collections.
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-level undergraduates through
researchers/faculty; general readers.
*CHOICE*
This hefty volume examines all 271 musicals that opened on Broadway
from 1960 through 1969, from the familiar (Camelot, Fiddler on the
Roof, Funny Girl, and Hello, Dolly!) to the obscure (Holly
Golightly and 1491). As author Dietz notes in the introduction to
this book, the 1960s saw the last hurrah of the traditional book
musical. In this decade, there were 98 new musicals (with original
music) produced on Broadway. (Compare this to the years 2000 to
2009, which saw 38 new musicals and 42 revivals.) This reference
covers those musicals, as well as a number of musical revues,
imports from London’s West End, revivals, and pre-Broadway
closings.The technical details for each production include opening
and closing dates; number of performances; names of the writers,
composers, directors, and casts; and a brief description. This is
followed by a full listing of the musical numbers and a narrative
(ranging one to three pages) about the show. The narrative portions
of the entries consist of facts and figures, quotes, and
interesting details—and Dietz does a wonderful job of remaining
objective, not allowing personal bias or preference to show. There
are 12 appendixes, including an alphabetical listing of shows, a
chronology by season, a chronology by classification (i.e.,
'Revues' and 'Institutional Revivals'), and a list of shows by
Broadway theater. There are a number of books about Broadway
musicals, but this one—set to be the first in a new series
examining musicals by decade—stands out as a rich and readable
resource. General theater enthusiasts will enjoy perusing this
book, and students or researchers in the field will find this to be
a great starting point. Recommended for medium and large
public-library reference collections as well as academic libraries
supporting performing-arts programs.
*Booklist*
Numerous and notable musicals made their initial runs in the 1960s.
. . .[The author] compiles plot summaries, cast members, composers,
writers, directors, producers, and information about the musical,
for shows produced from 1960 to 1969, encompassing the 1959-1960
through the 1969-1970 seasons. Additional information in each entry
includes the number of performances, specific songs, opening and
closing dates, and reception history. Dietz adds his own critical
commentary, as he calls the 1960s the 'last hurrah of the
traditional book musical.' In that decade, 98 new book musicals
with new music appeared on Broadway. This is compared to the recent
decade of 2000-2009, which saw only 38 premiere with new musical
content. However, there were several more revivals. The book
presents 271 musicals that opened on Broadway during the 1960s;
this includes 98 with new music, 3 with pre-existing music, 22
revues, 16 personality revues, 58 revivals, and several imports.
Several appendixes add data. . . .The first, an alphabetic list of
musicals, designates the years only when another musical of that
title was produced. Others appendixes present chronologies (one by
season, another by classification), discography, filmography, the
operettas of Gilbert and Sullivan, three lists by the theater
producing the musical (e.g., New York City Center Light Opera
Company, New York City Opera Company, Lincoln Center), published
scripts, and theaters (with the musicals they presented). The
author uses italics to display cast members who were billed above
the musical’s title.
*American Reference Books Annual*
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