The Golden Age
Rock Musicals
Megamusicals/Corporate Age
Current Trends
100

The decade that the Golden Era of musicals is most associated with

1950s

100

This one-word show is considered to be the first rock musical (it premiered in 1967)

Hair

100

This company is noted for producing multi-million dollar shows based on their movies

Disney
100

One of the most popular common trend in musicals today is to take these and turn them into shows

Movies or films

200

Two of the Golden Age's most famous writing partners, famous for "The Sound of Music" and "The King and I" (they also wrote "Cinderella")

Rodgers & Hammerstein

200

One of the most famous early rock musical writers, known for shows like "Jesus Christ Superstar", "Phantom of the Opera", and "Cats"

Andrew Lloyd Webber

200
Many shows produced in this era use this genre of music

Pop

200

Most new musicals have to premiere here to determine if they are successful enough to go on Broadway

Off-Broadway

300

These two popular themes featured in Golden Age musicals were due in part to what had happened in the world during the early to mid 1900s

"Americana" and war

300

Shows like "Dreamgirls" and "The Wiz" delved into this topic which was reflective of the changes in American society during this time.

Racial equality

300

Two features of mega-musicals that were quite different from earlier traditional shows

Large casts and extravagant costumes

300

These type of musicals feature songs centered around a theme or a particular artist/composer

Jukebox Musicals

400

This show was loosely based on Romeo and Juliet and centered around the racial tension of the late 1950s

West Side Story

400
Megamusicals are designed to run for years instead of limited engagements for this reason

The expense of producing such large shows

400

Classic shows like "Anything Goes" and "A Chorus Line" have enjoyed this in recent years

Revival productions