The Musical as Drama

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

basic questions as the next steps. What does it mean for indi-
viduals in a musical to break into song, and how does this con-
vention differ from songs that are called for by the book?
Speaking of ensembles, what gives the orchestra its omnis-
cience from its hidden position in the pit, and how is this qual-
ity changed when the orchestra is placed on the stage (as hap-
pens, for example, in Cabaret)? And if the orchestra is an
all-knowing ensemble, what are the special conditions of nar-
ration from within the book of the musical? Why, given these
conditions of narration in the book, does the musical nearly al-
ways take its plot from a preexisting text—a novel, a play, or
with increasing frequency in recent years, a film? These are
questions worth discussing before we can proceed to the heart
of the matter and discuss the final question, what kind of
drama is this?


CHARACTER AND VOICE OF THE MUSICAL 77
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