While it’s spent many years on Broadway, The Music Man is pretty much the ideal community theater production.
That’s not an insult! I know it sounds like one, but consider:
The Music Man is about finding home.
Now, of course, the show isn’t perfect. If we celebrate its virtues, we need to call out its flaws as well:
But let’s be real, corniness is not the worst flaw a Broadway show can have, and we shouldn’t hold the fact that it won the Tony over West Side Story against it.4
When the show works, it really does work, and one of the keys to its success is its sense of community. Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” talked about the price of conformity and the stifling pressure of tradition in small towns. Our Town insists the greatest value is staying home. The Music Man is about finding home. Marian grew up in River City, but she’s standoffish and prickly, tired of people expecting her to marry and exhausted by rumors about the old man who left her his library collection. The neighbors tease her little brother about his lisp. Harold Hill (almost certainly not his real name) is a man from nowhere. He may tell everyone he’s from Gary, Indiana,5 but if you believe him, well, I have a full set of high-quality band instruments to sell you. He comes in ready to run his usual scam, but soon finds himself the muse of a barbershop quartet, the slightly unwilling accomplice to the local Romeo and Juliet, and, of course, in love. Love makes both Marian and Harold see the world in a different light, and realize that maybe the people around them aren’t so bad after all. River City might be idealized, but not perfect, not even close. It’s the connections Marion and Harold make — and the music they make together — that turn River City into a place they can call home.
And some of the songs are genuine bangers. “76 Trombones” is a lot of fun:
“Ya Got Trouble” is even more fun:
and “Gary Indiana” is the stickiest of earworms.
And the main love theme, “Till There Was You,” is lovely and romantic. Even the Beatles covered it.6
The Music Man’s most recent revival was a big blockbuster show with Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster. It ran from late 2021 (in previews, officially beginning in 2022) through 2023, closing when Jackman and Foster left the production. If The Music Man is ideal for community theater, it’s also emblematic of the problems plaguing current Broadway: an over-focus on big stars and well-known productions, a need to make significant profit that makes shows less sustainable when those big stars leave, and an atmosphere that leaves little oxygen for more diverse and challenging productions7. The Music Man may be easy to cast colorblind, but that doesn’t guarantee it’ll happen, and all the happy endings are blandly heteronormative. The inoffensiveness is part of the charm, but it cuts off any sense of exploration or innovation. It’s a greatest hits album: sure it sells well, but there’s nothing new there. What makes The Music Man great for apple-cheeked high school kids in rural Vermont is part of what’s killing innovation on the Great White Way.
Even in 1957, the show was a throwback to a nostalgic “simpler time,” standing out in bright, candy-colored contrast to its Tony competitor West Side Story. Theater is weaker when it’s filled with nothing but sure hits and riffs on an imagined past.
But sometimes you just want a chocolate milkshake, not a matcha latte with raspberry cold foam. Sometimes the comforts of an imagined past are just that, comfort, and the joys of summer in a small town can be very real. Teenagers are flirting in the park, and the sky is full of stars. Somewhere in the distance, the kids in the community band are trying their best.
For how few people in the United States live in rural communities, we’re talked about a lot. In political circles, we’re talked over more than anything else. We’re symbols: the heartland, the boonies, ignoramuses, Real Americans. Sometimes it’s true. We’re “The Lottery” and we’re The Music Man and yes, sometimes even fucking Our Town, at least a little. The Music Man is better than most at getting at the truth of things.8 The gossipy bitch who ruined your life in high school might also be the one who bakes a really good casserole when your mother-in-law is recovering from surgery. The guy with the fucking MAGA poster is the one who tows your car out of the ditch. As long as you choose to stay, you’re stuck with each other, and that’s what’s wonderful and what’s miserable about it.
And that’s why The Music Man is the ideal community theater production. It’s a little behind the times, a little predictable, and not nearly as progressive as it thinks it is. I’d be disappointed in a world with no matcha lattes out there. But, under the right circumstances, it can hit the spot just like that chocolate milkshake.
About the writer
Bridgett Taylor
Bridgett Taylor has a day job, but would rather talk about comic books. She lives in small-town Vermont (she has met Bernie; she has not met Noah Kahan), where she ushers at local theatrical productions and talks too much at Town Meeting.
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Conversation
The movie with Preston reprising his Broadway role was a huge favorite in the Crockford household! I actually don’t remember the racist number and it’s possible that either they (wisely) cut it from the film or I’ve blocked it out of my memory. “Til There Was You” is a perfect song and “Gary Indiana” has been in my head since I was about seven years old.
I’ve had similar thoughts about the nostalgia infusing the story, something to live with and also take note of. (Sondheim was essentially deconstructing this kind of very white, happy go lucky book musical for the rest of his life.) Will strongly recommend as well Broadway Bound’s episode on Meredith Wilson’s last musical, 1491, about Columbus, and what a disaster it was. It seems like the flipside of The Music Man where Wilson’s retroactive view of the past was toxic to the production. You learn a bit too about his wife Rini, who he loved and considered his collaborator before her death shortly before 1491 opened. (He dedicated 1491 to her.)
The racist number is very brief – it’s an “Indian dance” the Mayor’s wife puts on, and it’s just as wretched as it sounds, and then she gets interrupted by some River City shenanigans. Which is one of the reasons it would be ludicrously easy to change or cut.
Thanks for the rec! I’ll check it out.
Yeah I’m almost certain it was cut and for the better. It’s a fun podcast, the last episode was on Road Show AKA Bounce.