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Directed by François Ozon, written by Ozon and Marina de Van. [1] 9 to 5: 2009 Broadway: Dolly Parton: Dolly Parton Patricia Resnick: Based on the 1980 film. [2] 13 + film (2022) 2008 Broadway: Jason Robert Brown: Brown Dan Elish and Robert Horn The only Broadway musical ever with a cast and band entirely made of teenagers. [3] 21 Chump Street ...
List of musicals: A to L; List of musicals: M to Z; List of musicals by composer: A to L; List of musicals by composer: M to Z; List of musicals filmed live on stage; List of rock musicals; List of stage jukebox musicals; List of Tony Award- and Olivier Award-winning musicals; Long-running musical theatre productions; Long runs on the London ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; ... 1965 musicals (20 P) 1966 musicals (1 C, 21 P) 1967 musicals ...
This is a list of musicals, including Broadway musicals, West End musicals, and musicals that premiered in other places, as well as film musicals, whose titles fall into the M–Z alphabetic range. (See also List of notable musical theatre productions , List of operettas , List of Bollywood films , List of rock musicals .)
Marie, Dancing Still (musical) Marilyn! The New Musical; Mary (musical) Menopause The Musical; The-Merry-Go-Round; Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (musical) Midwestern Gothic (musical) Miss You Like Hell; Mulan Jr. My Romance (musical)
Rodgers (left) and Hammerstein (right) watching auditions at the St. James Theatre on Broadway in 1948. Rodgers and Hammerstein was a theater-writing team of composer Richard Rodgers (1902–1979) and lyricist-dramatist Oscar Hammerstein II (1895–1960), who together created a series of innovative and influential American musicals.
The longest running off-Broadway musical to date is The Fantasticks, which starred Jerry Orbach. When it closed on January 13, 2002, it had run for 42 years and 17,162 performances, making it the world's longest-running musical.
The musical has become associated with the Presidency of John F. Kennedy, which is sometimes called the "Camelot Era", because of an interview with Jackie Kennedy in which she compared her husband's presidency to King Arthur's reign, specifically mentioning his fondness for the musical and particularly the title song's closing lyrics, which end ...