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When I was a kid growing up, I went to public school in the Bronx, and it was in the sixth or seventh grade. I had a math teacher. I'm sure he was a fine to good math teacher. The reason, however, that I remember him most is because I recall him, vividly recall him, taking an inordinate amount of time the year that I had him to have us read and listen to the lyrics and music for the musical Les Misérables. So instead of teaching math, he would play what I assume was the cast recording in class, and he would explain to us what was going on in the story. Then eventually, we went to see a live Broadway performance of Les Misérables.
You're a lucky boy.
Yeah, I think for some people, that would be the ideal math class.
I cannot say it wasn't. I cannot say it was. All I remember is, why are we not learning math here? I feel like math will be more useful to me, this is what I was thinking at this age, then theater. And, buddies, I was wrong because theater has proven much more useful to me in life than math, at least today. At least today. This is the Sunday Special. I'm Gilbert Cruz. Joining me today is Jessie Green, a culture correspondent here at the Times and a longtime theater critic for the paper. Welcome, Jessie.
Thank you, Gilbert.
And Elizabeth Vincentelli is the former chief theater critic for the New York Post and a regular arts and culture contributor to the Times. Hello, Elizabeth. Hello. I just want to start by saying, particularly given what the two of you do, that, of course, seeing Theater Live is the best possible way to experience it. But I think we all know that it's not always possible, it's not always accessible, it can be rather expensive sometimes. So today, we're going to talk about all the ways to experience theater if you cannot actually get there. Jesse, what was your first encounter with theater before you ever saw a live performance?
Well, aside from my parents fighting in the house, that was like Virginia Wolf right there. That's very dramatic, yes. No, cast albums, I think, like most people of my generation. My parents had, among the jazz and classical and opera, they had a lot of the classic musical theater, Guys and Dolls, Carousel, Oklahoma, things like that. They were in regular rotation in our house. Regular rotation, what did that mean? I mean, you didn't exactly have a playlist. You just picked up the LP. Yes, they were LPs, and you put them on the turntable.
People are really into vinyl. Again, Jesse, they know exactly what you're talking about.
Okay, well, so my parents would go to Broadway and go see shows, and they developed an interest in Sondheim, and we didn't know who that was. They would bring back cassette tape recordings. We had a cassette tape recording of a Little Night Music, and I was obsessed it. This is 1973 or something like that. I couldn't really understand all the lyrics. It's very contrapuntal. There's voices here and there. I was so obsessed with it. Because it was a tape, there was no Lyric Booklet. I actually transcribed the entire musical by hand. Get out of here. I did. In order to get some of the lyrics, you had to switch, you had to move to the right speaker, move to the left speaker. Of course, I got a few Mondegreens out of that, like crazy I see wrong lyrics, but that I was convinced were the right lyrics. But when you want to be part of the musical theater and you can't be there yourself, you will find these weird ways to incorporate it, almost physically, in my case, into my body by writing it and then singing it, unfortunately, whenever I played it again.
What about you, Elizabeth?
Well, I had a completely different experience because I grew up in a very tiny, I can't even discover it as a village because it was the middle of nowhere in France. We had no cast album, no theater. But what we did have is we had a lot of theater on TV, actually, because French TV has done a live broadcast or what would now be called live captures. They were on all the time. I used to watch them a lot. One in particular, I think, was very informative on my taste because every Friday, there was a show called, which means at the theater tonight. The only... That was not the classics. It was all boulevard stuff with actors who were comic tornadoes.
When you say boulevard, I know the word, but you're referring to timely comedies?
Yes, exactly. It's comedies very often involving cheating husbands and- Thirteen roots of l'amour, things like that. And mistaken identities, all that. So a lot of slapsticky stuff. So I would watch that religiously with my grandmother, which tells you how edgy that was. And yeah, I was completely obsessed with them, and they would have some new boulevard, and then they had like, classics. They had Fédou and Labish. That's really what I grew up with.
I forgot. That brings up that back in the day, there would be variety shows on television. And often they would include incredibly long stretches. They were taped in New York. They would get the cast of some current show. They'd come on and do an eight-minute segment, an 11-minute segment, and you would get particularly brassy dames musicals. But it was a great way to see that stuff, and it was a way for people to learn what musical theater was about.
Also, the borders between pop and Broadway were very porous. You had the Supremes doing a Broadway medley that went on for 29 minutes, or it felt like it.
The Beatles sang So There Was Love.
The Beatles covering a musicman song.
We were gone for the same reference.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay.
But yeah. Then I got into MGM musicals when I was a teen. I would say a big breakthrough was one of my aunts had a cast album of hair. I let her realize It was the British cast.
Uh-oh.
Didn't know that at the time.
Like the inferior cast? Always.
That is true. Actually, that is- It is true. No, it's- Absolutely. We can go- Rule number one, get the original Broadway cast. I did not realize it was- Apologies to our British listeners.
I did not realize.
No, no, no, no. No apology to them. Get better performers.
It's true. No, I mean, I'm not going to argue on that.
That's absolutely true. So you listened to Hair.
Like, I ran that LP into the ground.
Me too.
Well, of course, in the year since then, besides cast recordings, which we're going to get into in a little bit, the only way to actually experience theater live was to go and see it live.
For decades, it was, yes. There were some live broadcasts, but for the most part, it disappeared because there was this assumption in the industry that having a live capture would cannibalize a live show. Nobody would go see something live if they could just rent the VHS or the DVD or stream it. And that, I think, has been proven wrong.
What would you say was the big story that changed that? Was it Hamilton or was it before Hamilton?
I would say it's Hamilton.
I I am curious, since you were avid theater enthusiast during this time, was it just... It was like, if you don't see it live and you don't have a cast recording, that's it. There's no other way to experience it.
For the most part, yes.
It feels like how it used to be with movies decades ago. If you didn't catch a movie in a theater before, VHS beta, DVD, et cetera, you could go a decade without seeing it unless you caught it on late night TV, channel 11 or what have Well, I think it's important to say that recording a cast album is very expensive because you also have to buy in everybody.
I think usually the price that's given now to record a cast album is between 200,000 and 700,000, which is quite a bit of cash. But for a lot of producers, even if the show wasn't doing well, having a cast album meant that you were able to license the show, and that would bring in money down the line. The show would stay alive. So it was worth spending that money and then hope for the best that it would keep interest going. And very often it did happen, actually. But capturing a show live, the expense is multiplied. Even more if you want something decent. There was also this mentality. There were all these obstacles. All we had were cast albums for the most part.
Another thing, this is dated, but When you interview actors, Broadway performers, I think 100% of them refer to seeing the Tony Awards show as the way they knew that they had to be a performer.
Please talk a little bit about this.
Well, I don't know whether that's a good thing, generally.
But it is a true thing.
But it is a true thing. I mean, there are, obviously, economically, there's too many actors and not enough shows. But nevertheless, it is an amazing way to see what's going on and to feel, in a way, part of it, just like any awards show can be.
You're seeing actual live staged numbers, not just clips.
Often they are staged by the director of the show himself or herself.
So they have incredible authenticity to the staged experience.
I believe I'd have inside of me everything that I need to live a broken voice.
I have been very moved, even having seen the show, some of the shows two or three times, to see them again in that format and also to think about what it would mean to be a young person experiencing some pretty quality stuff in that way.
If you talk to musical theater performers now, I would say half of them will mention that performance at the Tonys. I guarantee you it comes up so often in interviews. Oh, yeah, I saw that, and then I knew I was nine, and I knew that was going to be my life. I mean, it's wild. I would say if there's one that influenced the destinies of so many actors.
All of them are available quite easily on YouTube and places like that.
It would be irresponsible not to talk about how the pandemic changed. The industry's appetite for releasing some of the stuff via streaming or other media and the audience's expectations that these things would be made available. Could you take us back to that terrible, terrible time and talk about what changed and what good came out of it for people who love theater?
Well, two things were going on at once. One is that you could see the work of people anywhere in the world suddenly, which even if you lived in New York, you couldn't really do that. Anyone in the world who wanted to create something theatrical could do so in this limited format and have it seen. For me, it was a vibrant time, not always an excellent time, but a vibrant time. I learned a lot about what was going on in the world, particularly in musicals. Then you could see things that now or then you would never see live because they It didn't happen.
I'd like to propose a toast.
Here's to the ladies who lunch.
Everybody laugh.
Meryl Streep, Audrey McDonald, and Christine Poransky singing The Ladies Who Lunch.
I was just thinking about this.
Another reason not to move. Another one just stinger.
You're never going to have that on a stage. You couldn't afford those women. If you could, it would be for three days.
This was the 90th It was a celebration of Stephen Sondheim's 90th birthday that was livestreamed in April of 2020 or thereabouts.
Right. I believe it's still available today.
It totally is. I was watching it before this conversation of ours.
Anyway, that was how the change began. It's because people were terrified we would have no live theater, and they quickly developed ways of creating a substitute.
Yeah, I think we also saw the emergence of people who were trying to create specifically for live streaming, trying to do live theater and streaming it. And I think we saw the emergence of people like Josh Gelb, who created Theater in Quarantine. He was putting on plays in a closet in his East Village apartment, a A really small closet, too. Not a walking closet, a real East Village closet.
It was 2 foot by 4 foot by 8 foot tall.
Incredibly resourceful, and he would act live. He continues to do that, and his projects have become more and more ambitious. And that, to me, was the birth of a real talent, someone who really changed things in theater. I think for people who were open to that and thinking, okay, well, theater will come back, but maybe theater can be something else.
Yeah, unfortunately, the something else a little too often in that period was magicians. I just- You don't like magicians? Well, they're not high on my list, but they are above mimes. Okay. Sorry, French. But it was something you could, with a certain amount of cleverness, you could do virtually. Some of them were quite good, I have to say, but then it became a thing because theaters were desperate to have some show they could do that was not very expensive to produce. Other than a saw it in Half-Lady, what does it cost to do a magic show? I saw a ton of them in that year and a half or whatever. But there were also amazing experiments that were as good as any live stage production I've seen that would come out of the desperation of theaters to have content. They would not be able to it live before an audience, but they would often do it as if live. So it was not a movie. It was not a television show. It was theater. It was just theater where the audience wasn't actually in the room. And also a lot of the actors basically gave their time to do it because they were all so desperate to work.
What are they doing? They're doing their ballet bar in their apartment. That's all they can do.
It is interesting because I remember seeing during the pandemic, the National Theater put on production of Romeo and Juliet, I believe, starting Jessie Buckley and Josh O'Connor. Yes. Those reminded me later, something that we haven't really touched on, but we've had CBS's great performances, right? There's always been that little, through public media or what have you, that little peak into some of these stage performances. Britain has its national theater, has become a robust streaming home for some of these productions. I'm wondering now, outside of national tours, you take a big trip to Broadway and spend a lot of money, you go to your local regional theater. What do you think are some of the most exciting ways that people can experience theater at home?
I think the audio domain. I mean, audiobooks have long been very popular. And when you see a company like Audible, really invest in theater, because it's not just that they do audio productions. They put on the productions live on stage, and then you can access them in an audio format. And there's one that just came out with Hugh Jackman. We saw it in the spring.
The sexual misconduct of the middle classes?
Correct, with L. A. B. D. And Hugh Jackman. Actually, I was just listening to it yesterday, and it really works in an audio format. Audible had, I think, its first Tony-nominated show, Dead Outlaw, just this past season. That is a big move for this company. And I really I like that they're not just taking from theater, they're also giving to theater by producing all those shows.
I do want to... Recently, I've become aware, I'm not a TikTok-follower, generally, but there's a huge musical theater world on TikTok. Not just the things you might expect, but something I love is people are recreating for themselves in their own bedrooms or in the alley behind their apartment or some moment that is available from a live clip of a Broadway show. And so you'll find there's one in which Jonathan Groff, who's in this Broadway show just in time, is trying to learn a dance. He's not a dancer exactly, but he's a hard worker and he gets it. And that little clip is then interpreted by hundreds of people trying to do the same dance. And it reminds me of my writing down the lyrics to a little night music the need and the power of putting that art form into your own body in your own home. And there's a bunch of them. There's some from the Great Gatsby. There's Some from Chicago, famous. There's a great one from Chicago. So TikTok is another one.
Well, I think the fan art has also really exploded because if you're watching this stuff on YouTube or on TikTok, I mean, usually it's a two-way street. I would say the show that was really a turning point for that was Be More Chill, because Be More Chill had a very short run in a New Jersey theater in 2015, I believe. But they did manage to make a cast album, and that cast album started picking up streams. That led to an off-Broadway run in 2017. Then that led to a Broadway run. That was entirely entirely fan-fueled, and people would travel from all over the country, and actually the world, to see that show.
That's something that happened with the musical 6, the musical about the six wives of Henry VIII in a competition to see who had the worst luck. At his hands. Listen up, let me tell you a story.
A story that you think you've heard before. We know you know a name.
Which began basically as a mixtape, almost. And by the time I saw it, pre Broadway in Chicago, the audience was full of people already singing the song.
I open to the show, to the history mix, switching off the phone as we had- Which, interestingly, that used to be the case before the Beatles, let's say.
When pop music was theater music and theater music was pop music, people would already know the songs when they came to see the show because they'd been recorded by 10, 12, 15 people and were on the radio all the time. That completely disappeared, and now it's back in a different form.
Okay, let's take a short break, and when we come back, we're going to talk about cast albums. I know you both have some recommendations. We'll be right back.
Hey, it's Lauren Dragon from Wirecutter, the product recommendation service from the New York Times, and I test headphones. Sweat is actually conductive because of the saline content in it. So we basically make our own fake sweat and spray it over and over on these headphones to see what happens to them over time. This is 85dB of airplane noise. We're going to put on some noise canceling headphones and see how well they actually block out the sounds. Put them on the ground and kick them over there. Okay.
Go.
Are they broken? No. I have 3,136 entries in my database. Kids, workout, running. Does it have a connector that's lightning or USB-C? What version of Bluetooth is it? Does it have FDX HD? We have ones that track your-At Wirecutter, we do the work so you don't have to. For independent product reviews and recommendations for the real world, come visit us at nytimes. Com/wirecutter. We even have one that's solar-powered.
So I think that three of us would agree that the cast album is a gateway for most people, right? Particularly people who become true Broadway fans. And not to keep going back to the pandemic, but during the first month or two of that time when all of live theater was shut down, you, Jessie, and our former critic, Ben Brantley, did a great and a very useful starter guide to cast albums.
Okay, we were desperate.
We were all desperate. I remember saying to the theater editor, That's a great idea. Do it. Let's do it right now. We need stuff. I thought it was very helpful to me, who still will never know as many cast albums as the two of you. You had a lot of recommendations for readers then. I'd love to dig more just into that concept. What do you think are some good ones to start with, and what are some of your favorites?
Well, if you're actually starting from zero, I think any way in that interests you is the way to go. But let's say you know something about it and you're looking for what are the greats, whether it's contemporary or classic, we could call them. I think you can't go wrong, and a lot of people have not gone wrong with Chicago.
Come on, Dave. Why don't we raise the tab? And all that day I'm now talking about the original Broadway cast recording, please.
Are you disagreeing?
No, no. Okay.
Chicago is about two women in 1920s Chicago who aimed to become stars by becoming murderers.
So I took the shotgun off the wall and I fired two warnings shots into his head. He had it coming, he had it coming. Before they had it coming. He was only hiding his self for the air.
And it's about the American justice system. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. It's so funny. It's so funny, but it is brilliantly snarky and satirical. And every single song... See, one of the things I love in a cast album is when there are no dubs.
I don't think Chicago has a single duck.
No, it's a perfect show. Yeah.
It's a perfect show. I mean, they can a lot of the songs that they wrote, and they whittled it down to the ones that were… It just jumps off.
That's why it's a perfect show.
Yes, exactly. Well, they did the work. Chicago is a great start. To me, the most romantic musical of all time and on record is a very little known one these days called The Most Happy Fella.
Well, I want to be wanted. This is by Frank Lesser, who also wrote Guys and Dolls, but had amazing inner ear.
It's in the style of an opera, almost, but it's definitely musical theater, just long musical theater. And it's about a mail order bride. It's about an old guy who has a grape farm in California who's too shy, and he invites this waitress he meets in San Francisco to come visit him and switches the picture so that she thinks he's going to be this hunky young worker.
I'm scared to look in your eye and shake your hand hallowed. I'm scared you slap on my face and you go.
Is that a catfishing musical?
Is that what that is?
Well, yes, broadly enough. I hadn't thought of it that way, but well before it's time. Hairspray. Can't go wrong with Hairspray. Again, is there a dud on Hairspray?
No, there's no dud in Hairspray.
I can't believe I'm agreeing with everything you're saying so far.
This is not good podcast. You guys need to disagree.
Well, maybe you need to do one because I'll disagree with that.
Elizabeth. No, no, no. Go ahead, Elizabeth. What are some of your all-time cast recordings? Okay, Classics.
Classics, I am a I'm a huge fan of the Leonard Bernstein and Comdon and Green collaborations. I would say on the Town and... Okay, this is very divisive, but I like the cast album and the movie sound track.
They changed a lot of the for the movie.
And of course, the peers are like, No, I like them both.
I do, too. I'll go with you there.
And then I was a Gipsy.
You'll be well, you'll be great. Got to have the whole world on a plate.
Startin' here. Again, perfect. No notes.
Honey, everything's coming up, Rosen.
I have one note about Gipsy, but we'll leave it alone.
But maybe a little note. I love Company. Bobby.
Bobby. Bobby, baby. Bobby, Bobby.
Bobby.
Rabbit, darling. Bobby. We've been trying to call you Bobby, Baby.
Company is a Stevenson musical about Bobby, who's a bachelor, who's married friends always pressuring him to basically find someone and pair up, and he's very torn about it. That's it, It's a series of little vignettes about him and his friends.
Somebody make me come through. I'll always be there, as frightened as you, to help us survive. Which recording, now that there have been so many productions.
I'll take whichever comes first.
The original cast.
Original cast, yes. Also, of course, because of the Penny Baker documentary about the recording of the original cast.
Can we take a detour? I'm sorry to take a detour here, but it feels like this is one of the most famous, the most famous theater documentary?
Yes. Of all time? And the best.
Is it perhaps the only? Is it the only one?
Yes, that's where I was going.
Well, there's others. Well, it's the only one about the making of a cast album that I'm aware of. But it is, whether it was the only or not, it is amazing.
So this is original cast album Company. It's DA Pennebaker who worked on a Bob Dylan documentary. He later worked on The War Room, done a million documentaries. And it was essentially recording all of these people making the cast recording to Company. There's a famous scene of...
Another long See, I'm just improving every point. Roon.
Elaine Strich getting progressively angrier and drunker as she can't sing her song? Correct. Oh, shut up. This was all probably planned on her part, in my opinion. That's great. That's one hell of a good take. I want you to come in and listen to it.
Perfect. Let's hear it for the ladies. I would say also Another big favorite for me is Jesus Christ Superstar. Go to, We'll Never Get Tired of It. I never thought I'd come to this.
What's it all?
Say more because Jessie is making some faces over here.
Well, Jesus Christ Superstar is a peak of musical theater. In his book, Andrew Lloyd Webber, the way he talks, I highly, by the way, if you can't go to the theater, read Andrew Lloyd Webber's autobiography.
Oh, for God's sake, that is not the top choice.
Listen, it's 700 pages of Insane drama. Self-aggrandizing drama.
Insane drama is the perfect description of Jesus Christ Superstar.
Can I admit something terrible? The only verse of Jesus Christ Superstar I've ever listened to or heard was the one that NBC did when they were doing live musicals. With John Legend? With John Legend, yes.
That was unfortunate.
So as a result, I could never listen to it again because that was not the best.
We didn't mention those musicals, which were a pandemic experience.
Yes, the live ones.
I'd love to use those as a transition to talk about full performances. I have a child, he's a pre-teen, and as many kids of his generation, he went through a Hamilton face. He streamed the hell out of it on Spotify. Eventually, it came to Disney+, and he watched it over and over and over again. We had a copy of the Deluxe Lyric Book that is annotated, and he would read the lyrics while he was listening or read the lyrics while he was... And then we eventually went to see it on stage, and it was still as good as he thought it would be because he had essentially memorized the entire thing before going to see it. He was in a production of the Spongebob Square Pants musical, and he was able to see the Ethan Slater production on Amazon Prime in the months leading up to actually having to perform one of those roles. I feel like there's a way in which watching some of this stuff, as you said before, doesn't cut you off from enthusiasm for wanting to see it live. Seeing Waitress on HBO and listening to that recording, if it comes back, people are still going to want to see that.
Yeah, I I think it's pretty obvious that those captures make people want to see the shows more, not less. That has really is going to lead to a very deep rethink of the industry, I think. I think we need to talk about something very important, actually, The George Clooney capture of Good Night and Good luck just dropped on Amazon.
There is a great and perhaps decisive battle to be fought. Against ignorance, intoler, indifference.
So George Clooney did a stage adaptation on Broadway of his own movie, Good Night and Good luck, that came out in and five. And so the question is a very simple one.
Not what power unchecked can do. We have seen that answer. No.
The question is, What are you prepared to do? Except in the Broadway version, he was playing the part of Edward Morrow, that he didn't play that part in the film.
Good night and good luck.
It was a huge hit on Broadway. The ticket prices were astronomical. And they actually did a live broadcast. They livestream the penultimate performance on CNN. When not only you had to be there, it was appointment theater. And now, actually, now you can see it on demand. It is a huge deal, I think. I actually watched it yesterday, and it's a very good capture. Because the capture director worked very well with the David Kromer staging. It's a very handsome capture, and I think it's going to do great for this particular property.
We We've been talking a lot about musicals, but this is a play about a very serious and dark subject that was quite successful on stage. I was curious how it was going to work on film because a lot of it takes place on screens. It takes place in a television studio where Edward R. Morrow is broadcasting his CBS news show and responding to the Communist witch hunt. How did it work?
I think it works really well because there's a really good balance of close-ups, for instance, which is a very cinematic thing that you don't… Well, you don't get it the same way on stage, where you get a more bird's-eye view of the whole thing. Then they pull out a very judicious moment because there's a lot of projections and use of video in the show. We were just talking about that. I think it works really well as this hybrid of film theater. Again, I feel that we're coming full circle because the theater on television used to be big in the '50s and '60s, where people were writing. Also, playwrights were writing specifically for that medium. Then it disappeared, and now maybe it's coming back. I would love to see that.
Sort of like Rod Serling doing Requiem for a Heavyweight or John Frankenheimer directing live theater on TV. Tv? Yeah. I come prepared. Okay. I come prepared. What are some other recommendations, if you have them on things, theater that people can watch?
Well, the Andrew Scott Vanya, which I believe It's still available from National Theater Live? No.
Yeah, I love life. I love being alive. As for my personal life, there's absolutely nothing in it that is in the slightest bit good.
It was a great production, and it's a great capture as well.
I I would say I'm a big fan of Heather's The Musical.
And there's actually a pretty good capture of a British production that used to be on Roku, may have migrated somewhere else, but it's around.
We haven't talked too much about movie versions of musicals, largely because many of them are so bad. But one I particularly love is Little Shop of Horrors.
Feed me. Does it have to be human? Feed me. Does it have to be mine?
Feed me.
Where am I supposed to get it? Feed me, see, mo. Rick Moranis. Rick Moranis, exactly. Yes, Frank Oz directed. Yeah.
Of that period, it's one of the few that's excellent.
It's so good. We watched it at home. We listened to Little Shop of horrors on vinyl a bunch, and then we watched the film first.
You are the perfect example of what we're talking about. It's not just that this engagement in other forms of theater does not eat into the ticket sales. It enhances the experience when you do go.
This is what we did. You're absolutely right, because we listened to it on record, even though it's the 21st century. We watched the film. I showed my son the film version, and then he and his uncle went to see it off Broadway or wherever it is, right on 40, whatever street. So he He got to experience it in all three versions.
I think that's always been the way, and it's great that there's now more ways for that to be the way.
What are some other... We could have a whole episode on great movie musicals, but I would just love to hear some of your favorites.
The best movie musicals are generally not made from Broadway shows, singing The Rain, would you agree?
Ben Weggen.
Right. With that proviso, what do you think of Chicago? I'm a little scared to say because I'm sitting right near you.
Anything directed by Rob Marshall, that's what you're saying.
Not a fan of Chicago because of the editing, which I think does a huge disservice to the dancing. Yeah, no, you're right. So I'm not a fan of chopping off body parts and editing.
No, really? I heard you were.
I know. It's only in my other life as a serial killer of shows.
Aren't we all?
Okay, on that high note, let's take another short break. And when we return, we're going to play a little theater game. Okay, so now we've come to the last act of the show, and it is, as always, a game. Jessie and Elizabeth, I have four rounds of theater-related questions for you. Elizabeth, you seem like you don't want to participate.
No, I do. I do, but I know I'm going to fail unless there's a Heather's question.
The point here is not to win. The point here is to have fun. However, someone will win, and someone will win something, an actual thing that I'm going to give that person at the end of this quiz. Are we ready?
Ready?
Yes.
The first round is titled Strike Up the Band. I'm going to play you a clip from a famous musical, Overture, You Name the Show.
First, Elizabeth.
That's Jesus Christ Superstar.
Jesus Christ Superstar. That is correct.
I'm proud that I didn't know it.
Next one. Jessie.
That's The Producers.
The Producers is correct. Very good. Next one. Jesse.
Merrily, We Roll Along.
That is correct. Final question in this round.
Honestly, neither of you are going to get this.
My subway ride? No, no, no. It is October, so we have chosen The Overture from the musical, Carrie.
Oh, whoa.
Seven people could have gotten that in the world.
Next round. This is Move Carton Upwards, we're calling this one, a. K. A. The MCU round. I'm going to play you a clip, and you tell me what actor from the Marvel Cinematic Universe is performing.
Oh, no, I'm out.
This is a little bit- You are not out. You're in. Get your hand on that buzzer. All right. All right. Let's go. First one.
There's a bright golden haze on the middle.
Jesse, actor.
Hugh Jackman.
That is correct.
Hugh Jackman.
I actually knew that one, but you were faster. That was a good one.
That was Hugh Jackman, who has played Wolverine in Oklahoma.
And it looks like it's climbing clear up to the sky.
Next. To be or not to be. That is the question.
Who played Hamlet?
Everyone played Hamlet. But who from the MCU played Hamlet? Slings and arrows of outrageous Jessie.
Scissor Man. Incorrect. The guy who plays Loki.
Incorrect. That is Tom Hiddleston. Good guess. This is Benedict Cumberbatch, who plays Doctor Strange in the MCU films in Hamlet. For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come when we have shuttled off this mortal coil must give us pause. Not Scissor Man?
Not Scissor Man.
Everyone's favorite superhero. All right, final question in this round. A customer. Oh, wait. What you rush, what you hurry. You gave me such a fright. I thought you was a ghost.
We know the show.
The two of you clearly know the show. This is Patty Lupone in Sweeney Todd. It's a little vague. What is that? But you think we had the plague? Patty Lupone played a character in the Marvel TV series, Agatha, all along.
I was going to say she's in the MCU, but yes.
Tv counts. Round three. Intermission is just a grown-up word for recess. In this round, I'm going to ask you questions about some of the most performed musicals and plays at American high schools. Question number one. Perhaps it's the colorful cast that has made this board game adaptation, one of the most popular non-musical plays in American high schools. Clue. Jessie rang in first. There is a buzzer. Clue. Jesse is correct. I hit the buzzer. The buzzer. The buzzer is how we keep order. I don't know how it's to keep order.
I pressed the bar. By the way, in France, Clue is called Clue et deux.
Clue et deux? And in England also. Isn't that weird? Yeah.
They're so weird over there. Okay, second question. Of the top 10 musicals performed in high schools in 2023, three were based on cartoons. Name any of the three. Jessie. Shrek.
You're a good man, Charlie Brown.
The answer is Beauty and the Beast, Little Mermade, and Sponj Okay, you said cartoon, and I was thinking like a cartoon, like an illustrated cartoon, not an animated film. Like Tintin, the musical? No. Tintin?
She is culturally deprived.
Question number three. This collection of nine short plays never played Broadway, but it's become a favorite of high school since its off-Broadway debut in 2006.
Something Maine.
You have to ring the buzzer.
Jessie. Something Maine.
Almost It's almost Maine.
It's almost Maine.
Almost. You're almost.
You guys are both almost doing great. Round four. This is the 11 o'clock number, Jessie and Elizabeth. A great place to see what's going on on Broadway, as Jesse talked about, is at the Tony Awards. Every year, performers from the nominated shows perform as part of the telecast. Now, I'm going to play you a bit of a Tony performance. You get one point if you name the show, and you get a bonus point if you can name the Tony-winning performer in the clip. First clip. There is a brotherhood of man. Up on apple, a brotherhood. Jessie.
How to Succeed in business without really trying. Correct. It's Daniel Radcliffe.
No, it's Matthew Broderick.
It is Matthew Broderick, but you did get the musical. Next clip.
No canary in a cage for me.
Jessie.
That's Sutton Foster in Thorough Modern Millie.
Correct. You got both right. Well done. That's very true. Well done. Next clip. Jessie.
I think that's Katherine Zeta Jones in A Little Night Music. You got it both right.
Oh my God. Amazing poll.
I knew it wasn't anyone who did it well. Oops.
Final clip.
Wow.
You live in my house.
You sleep your behind on my bedcloths. You put my food in your belly because you are my son. You are my flesh and blood, not because I like you. It is my privilege- Jesse, James Earl Jones, Fences. Correct. Wow. I don't need anyone in the booth to tell me who the winner of this quiz was.
Respect.
It was Jessie Green.
Wait, let me dream for a minute. What am I going to get?
Jessie, I have a prize for you.
It's the lyrics to a Little Night Music printed out instead of my having to write them out.
We have something for you that we call the Gilby. It is a small plastic golden trophy with my face on it. It is now yours, my friend. Cherish it. I'm so touched.
It's just the right size for some liquor. So I agree.
I have to say- Take a shot of absent.
The MCU round was like taking a nerd sandwich and then putting on a very thick layer of nerd jam on top and then closing it and Putting some nerd icing on the top of the top.
That sounds delicious to me, Elizabeth. I think so. Elizabeth Fittsentelli, Jessie Green. Thank you both for being on the Sunday special.
Thank you, Gilbert. Thank you.
This episode was produced by Luc Vandenploeg and our quiz master, Alex Baron, with help from Tina Antalini and Kate Lepresti. We had production assistance from Dahlia Haddad. This episode was edited by Wendy Dore and engineered by Ron Nemistow. Original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Alishiba Itup, and Diane Long. Special thanks to Paula Schumann. Thanks for listening, everyone. We'll be back next week. See you then.
Broadway represents some of the best and most exciting of what American theater has to offer. But for many people, it’s inaccessible. Whether because of geography, cost or other considerations, most people will never sit in a Broadway theater and experience a play or a musical in person.For years, cast recordings have offered a way to experience Broadway shows at a remove. And now, in the streaming era, some Broadway shows are making themselves available to be watched remotely, in movie theaters and on television. Distance and expense aren’t the impediments they once were to culture lovers looking to experience world-class theater.In this episode, Gilbert Cruz talks with Jesse Green and Elisabeth Vincentelli, two of The New York Times’s culture writers, about new ways to experience some of the joys of theater from the comfort of your own home. On Today’s Episode:Jesse Green is a Culture correspondent, focusing primarily on the fine arts, including theater, classical music and art.Elisabeth Vincentelli writes about culture for The Times. Background Reading:Want to Listen to Musical Cast Albums? Our Top 10 Desert Island PicksTheater to Stream: Mark Rylance in ‘Twelfth Night,’ and MoreTimes Theater Fans on Their Favorite Musical Cast Albums Photo Illustration by The New York Times; Inset: Disney+
Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.