{"title":"Love Is Love Is Love: Broadway Musicals and LGBTQ Politics, 2010–2020 by Aaron C. Thomas","authors":"Ryan Donovan","doi":"10.1353/tj.2023.a917491","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Love Is Love Is Love: Broadway Musicals and LGBTQ Politics, 2010–2020</em> by Aaron C. Thomas <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Ryan Donovan </li> </ul> <em>LOVE IS LOVE IS LOVE: BROADWAY MUSICALS AND LGBTQ POLITICS, 2010–2020</em>. By Aaron C. Thomas. London: Routledge, 2023; pp. 183. <p>Does the Broadway musical matter to U.S. American political discourse? If so, how and why? These are central questions Aaron C. Thomas asks in his new book, in which he argues, “The politics of Broadway musicals […] matter a great deal more to U.S. American culture than they might seem to mean, and Broadway musicals are especially important to mainstream politics surrounding sex, gender, and sexuality” (10). <em>Love Is Love Is Love: Broadway Musicals and LGBTQ Politics, 2010–2020</em> chronologically charts the sometimes direct, sometimes tenuous relationship of Broadway and film musicals to LGBTQ politics over five chapters. Though the book is primarily about the stage musical, Thomas’s compelling insights into the complexities of identity and identification will be of interest scholars of theatre studies and film studies and apply to a range of theatrical forms beyond the musical.</p> <p>Thomas’s study aims its focus on five musicals that all “revive a film and a previous musical” (25). For a book ostensibly about the stage (if the subtitle is any indication), Thomas devotes quite a lot of time to films and their stage adaptations and contributes to the growing body of scholarship on musical revivals. The interplay between the stage and screen is another primary concern, occasionally at the expense of a deeper analysis of Thomas’s perceptive points about LGBTQ politics. In fact, a longer elucidation and historicization of LGBTQ politics would have been especially useful for students in the book’s introduction.</p> <p>The explosion of LGBTQ representation in musicals since 2000 means that Thomas had ample opportunity to select case studies from dozens of options; that he chose “five in which no characters explicitly identify as L, G, B, T, or Q” (23) announces that this book proposes to do something different than much contemporary scholarship on identity and identification. This choice echoes earlier musical theatre studies scholarship, particularly Stacy Wolf’s foundational <em>A Problem Like Maria: Gender and Sexuality in the American Musical</em> (2002). In this light, Thomas could be said to take up Wolf’s call that “the challenge is to determine how lesbians appear where none officially exist” (Wolf, 4). He explains that he is “working with . . . the idea that queer audiences and queer performers–what they say about the shows and what they do with the shows–are more important or more interesting than any of a show’s own ideas about queerness” (23). Much space in the book is, however, spent on Thomas’s queer readings of the shows in question rather than on audiences, a notoriously hard subject to tackle—much like queerness itself, spectators resist generalization. Throughout the book’s five chapters, Thomas’s nuanced, salient readings of identity and identification invite readers “to move away from the consideration of identity positions as essential” (123). And, since the musicals in question feature no characters who explicitly identify as LGBTQ (some readers will likely quibble with the inclusion of <em>Hedwig and the Angry Inch</em> and <em>The Color Purple</em> in this book), they too invite readers to conceptualize the process of identification queerly. As numerous musicals with LGBTQ characters were produced in the 2010s, Thomas’s daring choice <em>not</em> to include them subverts usual conversations around queer representation; yet it also raises questions of how and why queer spectators might undertake the process of “projecting our own subject positions onto these characters and interpreting their (fictional) sexualities as a method for making sense of our own” (23) when this strategy of identification is no longer the necessity it once was.</p> <p>Indeed, several musicals pose conundrums for spectators precisely because their writers purposefully avoided having the characters identify themselves. Thomas capitalizes on this fact, arguing that the lack of a clearly defined identity “does not prevent them from being available for the powerful <strong>[End Page 377]</strong> work of audience identification” (123). Instead, Thomas proposes that a musical like <em>Hedwig and the Angry Inch</em>, for instance, has much to say about gender, sexuality, and...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2023.a917491","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Love Is Love Is Love: Broadway Musicals and LGBTQ Politics, 2010–2020 by Aaron C. Thomas
Ryan Donovan
LOVE IS LOVE IS LOVE: BROADWAY MUSICALS AND LGBTQ POLITICS, 2010–2020. By Aaron C. Thomas. London: Routledge, 2023; pp. 183.
Does the Broadway musical matter to U.S. American political discourse? If so, how and why? These are central questions Aaron C. Thomas asks in his new book, in which he argues, “The politics of Broadway musicals […] matter a great deal more to U.S. American culture than they might seem to mean, and Broadway musicals are especially important to mainstream politics surrounding sex, gender, and sexuality” (10). Love Is Love Is Love: Broadway Musicals and LGBTQ Politics, 2010–2020 chronologically charts the sometimes direct, sometimes tenuous relationship of Broadway and film musicals to LGBTQ politics over five chapters. Though the book is primarily about the stage musical, Thomas’s compelling insights into the complexities of identity and identification will be of interest scholars of theatre studies and film studies and apply to a range of theatrical forms beyond the musical.
Thomas’s study aims its focus on five musicals that all “revive a film and a previous musical” (25). For a book ostensibly about the stage (if the subtitle is any indication), Thomas devotes quite a lot of time to films and their stage adaptations and contributes to the growing body of scholarship on musical revivals. The interplay between the stage and screen is another primary concern, occasionally at the expense of a deeper analysis of Thomas’s perceptive points about LGBTQ politics. In fact, a longer elucidation and historicization of LGBTQ politics would have been especially useful for students in the book’s introduction.
The explosion of LGBTQ representation in musicals since 2000 means that Thomas had ample opportunity to select case studies from dozens of options; that he chose “five in which no characters explicitly identify as L, G, B, T, or Q” (23) announces that this book proposes to do something different than much contemporary scholarship on identity and identification. This choice echoes earlier musical theatre studies scholarship, particularly Stacy Wolf’s foundational A Problem Like Maria: Gender and Sexuality in the American Musical (2002). In this light, Thomas could be said to take up Wolf’s call that “the challenge is to determine how lesbians appear where none officially exist” (Wolf, 4). He explains that he is “working with . . . the idea that queer audiences and queer performers–what they say about the shows and what they do with the shows–are more important or more interesting than any of a show’s own ideas about queerness” (23). Much space in the book is, however, spent on Thomas’s queer readings of the shows in question rather than on audiences, a notoriously hard subject to tackle—much like queerness itself, spectators resist generalization. Throughout the book’s five chapters, Thomas’s nuanced, salient readings of identity and identification invite readers “to move away from the consideration of identity positions as essential” (123). And, since the musicals in question feature no characters who explicitly identify as LGBTQ (some readers will likely quibble with the inclusion of Hedwig and the Angry Inch and The Color Purple in this book), they too invite readers to conceptualize the process of identification queerly. As numerous musicals with LGBTQ characters were produced in the 2010s, Thomas’s daring choice not to include them subverts usual conversations around queer representation; yet it also raises questions of how and why queer spectators might undertake the process of “projecting our own subject positions onto these characters and interpreting their (fictional) sexualities as a method for making sense of our own” (23) when this strategy of identification is no longer the necessity it once was.
Indeed, several musicals pose conundrums for spectators precisely because their writers purposefully avoided having the characters identify themselves. Thomas capitalizes on this fact, arguing that the lack of a clearly defined identity “does not prevent them from being available for the powerful [End Page 377] work of audience identification” (123). Instead, Thomas proposes that a musical like Hedwig and the Angry Inch, for instance, has much to say about gender, sexuality, and...
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 爱就是爱:百老汇音乐剧与 LGBTQ 政治,2010-2020 年》作者:Aaron C. Thomas Ryan Donovan LOVE IS LOVE IS LOVE:2010-2020 年百老汇音乐剧与 LGBTQ 政治》。作者:Aaron C. Thomas。伦敦:Routledge, 2023; pp.百老汇音乐剧对美国的政治讨论重要吗?如果重要,如何重要,为什么重要?这些都是亚伦-C-托马斯在他的新书中提出的核心问题,他在书中认为:"百老汇音乐剧的政治[......]对美国美国文化的重要性远远超出了它们可能看起来的意义,而百老汇音乐剧对围绕性、性别和性行为的主流政治尤其重要"(10)。爱就是爱:爱就是爱:百老汇音乐剧与 LGBTQ 政治,2010-2020 年》按时间顺序,用五个章节描绘了百老汇和电影音乐剧与 LGBTQ 政治时而直接、时而微妙的关系。虽然该书主要讲述的是舞台音乐剧,但托马斯对身份和认同的复杂性所提出的令人信服的见解将引起戏剧研究和电影研究学者的兴趣,并适用于音乐剧以外的一系列戏剧形式。托马斯的研究聚焦于五部音乐剧,它们都 "重新演绎了一部电影和一部以前的音乐剧"(25)。作为一本表面上与舞台有关的书(如果副标题能说明问题的话),托马斯用大量篇幅论述了电影及其舞台改编,为日益增多的关于音乐剧复兴的学术研究做出了贡献。舞台与银幕之间的相互作用是本书的另一个主要关注点,但有时却忽略了对托马斯关于 LGBTQ 政治的敏锐观点的深入分析。事实上,在本书的引言中对 LGBTQ 政治进行更长篇幅的阐释和历史梳理,对学生来说尤其有用。自 2000 年以来,LGBTQ 在音乐剧中的表现呈现爆炸式增长,这意味着托马斯有充分的机会从数十个选项中选择案例研究;而他选择了 "五个没有角色明确标识为 L、G、B、T 或 Q 的案例"(23),这表明本书提出要做的事情与当代许多关于身份和标识的学术研究不同。这一选择呼应了早期音乐剧研究的学术成果,尤其是斯泰西-沃尔夫(Stacy Wolf)的奠基之作《像玛丽亚一样的问题:美国音乐剧中的性别与性》(A Problem Like Maria: Gender and Sexuality in the American Musical,2002 年)。有鉴于此,托马斯可以说是响应了沃尔夫的号召,"挑战在于确定女同性恋者如何出现在没有正式存在的地方"(Wolf, 4)。他解释说,他 "在工作中......认为同性恋观众和同性恋表演者--他们对演出的评价以及他们在演出中的表现--比演出本身对同性恋的看法更重要或更有趣"(23)。然而,本书的大部分篇幅都花在了托马斯对相关节目的同性恋解读上,而不是观众,观众是一个出了名的难以解决的问题--就像同性恋本身一样,观众也是难以一概而论的。在全书的五个章节中,托马斯对身份和认同进行了细致入微的解读,并邀请读者 "摆脱将身份定位视为本质的考虑"(123)。而且,由于这些音乐剧中的角色都没有明确表明自己是 LGBTQ(有些读者可能会对本书中包含《海德薇格与愤怒的英寸》和《紫色》提出异议),因此它们也邀请读者以同性恋的方式来构思身份认同的过程。2010 年代,众多音乐剧中都出现了 LGBTQ 角色,托马斯大胆地选择不收录这些角色,这颠覆了有关同性恋代表性的常规对话;然而,这也提出了一个问题:当这种认同策略不再像以前那样必要时,同性恋观众如何以及为什么要 "将我们自己的主体地位投射到这些角色身上,并解释他们(虚构的)性特征,以此来理解我们自己的性特征"(23)。事实上,有几部音乐剧之所以会给观众带来困惑,正是因为编剧有意避免让剧中人物表明自己的身份。托马斯利用了这一事实,认为缺乏明确的身份 "并不妨碍他们获得观众认同的强大 [尾页 377]效果"(123)。相反,托马斯认为,以《海德薇与愤怒的英寸》为例,这部音乐剧对性别、性和......
期刊介绍:
For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.