They Don't Write Them Like That Anymore Really? Richard Rodgers, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and the fate of American musical theater. John H. McWhorter
January 1, 2002
The first biographies of Golden Age theater composers tended to be American Masters-style valentines written by members of the family's outer circle. The results were pleasant but left much to be desired as serious engagements with their subjects. Meryle Secrest's life of Richard Rodgers, Somewhere for Me, represents the second generation of musical theater biographies. Now that the main players and their comrades are mostly deceased, these bios offer—albeit respectfully—the warts-and-all readers expect; they are charier of legends passed along the grapevine while still falling well short of real substance. Rodgers was something of a late bloomer. He teamed up with lyricist Lorenz Hart in 1919, and the two banged around penning forgettable college productions for six years before finally making a hit with a smart benefit revue, The Garrick Gaieties of 1925. Rodgers had been on the verge of taking a job selling underwear, but after the success of this little show he and Hart never looked back. Through the late twenties they blessed Broadway with a succession of bonbons, hanging fine little songs on airy plots. After an uneven stint in Hollywood when work on Broadway dried up during the depths of the Depression, they entered into a halcyon period, producing scores bursting at the seams with some of the choicest songs Broadway had ever heard. But as the years passed, Hart, a serious alcoholic, grew increasingly unreliable. Rodgers often had to trawl New York's bars in search of his gifted collaborator, sometimes resorting to writing lyrics himself. Finally, in the early forties, Rodgers was forced to jump ship to the seasoned and steady Oscar Hammerstein, and the result was a series of musicals tying song to story in a fashion ... —John H. McWhorter is associate professor of linguistics at the University of California at Berkeley. His book, The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language, has just been published by Times Books.
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