Posted on 01/07/2013 9:34:05 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Here is a thing it is difficult to remember in the midst of its box office tidal wave: Les Misérables owes its birth to a debate over public arts funding. We think of blockbusters as antithetical to the high arts that public funding might typically support, but in Les Mizs case at least, the relationship was symbiotic. Some might say parasitic, of course, but the story reveals that we dont quite know who was leeching off of who.
Les Misérables was originally staged, in 1985, under the auspices of the Royal Shakespeare Company, a large portion of whose budget was provided by the English Arts Council. It wasnt the RSCs idea to develop it, mind you. Cameron Mackintosh, a private producer coming off a wave of success with 1981s Cats, had been looking to put on an English version of the musical, which was developed and staged in Paris in French. And he wanted a good director for it, and found himself knocking on Trevor Nunns door, then the RSCs co-artistic director.
Nunn and his co-director, John Caird (then an RSC Associate Director), substantially overhauled the plot and the script. They also gave the production what was, until the emaciated cheekbones of Anne Hathaway entered our collective consciousness, the musicals signature image: the revolving stage. In other words, the look and content of the show was developed not just with public money, but by people who had made their careers in a publicly-supported arts environment.
Blockbusters, onstage and onscreen, are typically seen as ego projects. Production notes present a narrative of the great director who wants to implement his vision. Nunn, however, clearly had his eye on another prize altogether.
(Excerpt) Read more at thenation.com ...
Never seen it and don’t care.
Happily my congressmen is enemy number 1 of the endowment for the arts because he managed to cut $20 million from their budget. (He sought a $50 mil cut)
Don't get me wrong; I'm no Philistine. I just think that arts should be supported by those who care about the arts, and not the nation as a whole.
Gee.....and here dumb ass old me thought Victor Hugo wrote Les Miserables in 1862. Who’d a thunk they actually had public funding then?
Note: They are talking about the play not the book. To which I say, So? If entertainment can’t pay for itself then it’s not needed.
BFD.
Never realized that Great Britain had Arts Endowments that allowed Dickens to write the story in the first place.
They must have had it for a very long time as Willie Shakespeare surely would not have been as successful in his writing and theatre (a little British lingo there) productions.
Nor would we have "Piss Christ" or "Whale Dung Mary."
Well that’d be a real tragedy. I guess the good ‘ol Sheriff of Nottingham was right. Who knew?
SnakeDoc
We had to read it in 9th grade English, around 1966 and I hated it - Louis L’Amour was more to my liking at the time.
exactly! we may not have had the musical, but we would still have the book... and even access to several audio books... while i like the musical, our family first read the book... and my kids have listened to different audio versions of the book because they like the story that much... by the time they saw the movie last week, they knew the story inside out...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTMkOYAMFPM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTMkOYAMFPM
Apologies for the slight error.
Nor would we have "Piss Christ" or "Whale Dung Mary."
Or any of those other one-person-rants-on-stage "plays" where someone seems to think that her personal issues (it's almost always a chick) are bigger than ours and that somehow, giving her a check from the government and a stage from which to spew filth in front of a dozen or so people (who for some reason are into that kind of thing) is more worthwhile than for her to suck it up like the rest of it and get a productive job.
Actually, if she could be force to make her rant in front of an audience of psychiatrists, they could get into a bidding war to take her as a patient.
Somehow I think I could live without it.
Les Mis is a profitable movie.
They need to pay back the taxpayers.
You could also argue that we wouldn’t have the Aeneid, as Virgil was paid in advance on a public commission. Maybe we should go back to having Caesars, or is it too late?
That fact, alone is enough reason to get rid of public funding.
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