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“…that you might find in a musical”: reclaiming intertextual traditions in Urinetown

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 17:32 authored by Adam Rush
<p>Despite the twenty-first century musical incessantly refashioning a diverse series of popular works, the phrase ‘musical theatre’ continues to inspire flamboyant, and often outdated, images of top hats, feather boas and jazz hands in the minds of its audience. Whilst such excessive images are ingrained cultural perceptions of the art form, rather than universal conventions or tropes, contemporary musical theatre continually recycles its presumed legacy and artistic heritage in metatheatricalising such perceptions in a host of highly intertextual productions. Considering the 2001 hit Urinetown: The Musical as a case study, this paper argues that such ‘metamusicals’ exploit many presumed conventions of musical theatre as an art form, whether flimsy love songs or stock characters, and, in doing so, re-energise a traditional model of musical theatre established in the 1940s and 50s. Rather than performing the back catalogue of a legendary pop group or adapting a celebrated film, such musicals knowingly reference a presumed rulebook that keeps the action in check and, above all things, a ‘musical’. Such productions therefore render musical theatre an art form that cannot succeed without a loving community, a doting heroine and an act one finale sung in counterpoint to drive forward the action. In particular, this paper utilises Hans Robert Jauss’ reception theory to present Urinetown as solely constructed from presumed conventions and traditions, and thus a need for conformity. Furthermore, it identifies the musical as a particularly apt case study through which to extend any consideration of intertextuality beyond specific texts and into a broader conceptual framework.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Creative Arts (Research Outputs)

Date Submitted

2016-05-31

Date Accepted

2016-05-31

Date of First Publication

2016-05-31

Date of Final Publication

2016-05-31

Event Name

Song, Stage and Screen XI

Event Dates

27-30th June 2016

ePrints ID

23218

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