Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Of thee I sing …

- — Carol Cling

Other musicals based on U.S. history and politics

Pop quiz time: Name the first Pulitzer Prize-winning musical to focus on American history and/or politics.

Guess again, because it’s not “Hamilton.” It’s “Of Thee I Sing,” a 1931 musical distinguis­hed by its political satire — about a candidate running for president on a “love” platform — along with its George and Ira Gershwin score and its Pulitzer Prize for drama, the first for any musical.

Between “Of Thee I Sing” and “Hamilton,” multiple musicals have given U.S. history and politics the songand-dance treatment. A few notable production­s: “I’d Rather Be Right” (1937) —

Rodgers and Hart’s Broadway musical about Franklin D. Roosevelt, as embodied by the legendary (and legendaril­y FDR-hating) composer and performer, George M. Cohan. “Mr. President” (1962) — Irving Berlin’s final musical, about a fictional president facing problems political (the Soviet Union) and personal (his kids). “1776” (1969) — In this Tonywinnin­g

musical, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson lead the great debate in the Continenta­l Congress, urging passage of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. ■ “1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue”

(1976) — Leonard Bernstein and Alan Jay Lerner explore White House history, from George Washington through Teddy Roosevelt, with Ken Howard (“1776’s” Jefferson) playing all the presidenti­al residents.

■ “Assassins” (1990) — Stephen Sondheim’s ahead-of-its-time cavalcade of presidenti­al assassins, from John Wilkes Booth to Lee Harvey Oswald and beyond, overcame an underwhelm­ing off-Broadway debut in a Tony-winning 2004 Broadway revival. ■ “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson”

(2008) — America’s seventh president gets the emo rock star treatment as he leads the chorus in such numbers as “Populism Yea Yea,” promising “we’re gonna take this country back for people like us, who don’t just think about things.”

 ?? Karl Hugh Utah Shakespear­e Festival ?? John Adams (Kurt Ziskie) recruits Continenta­l Congress allies Benjamin Franklin (Peter Sham), Thomas Jefferson (Jason Heil), Roger Sherman (Kern McFadden) and Robert Livingston (Justin Leath) to write the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in “1776.”
Karl Hugh Utah Shakespear­e Festival John Adams (Kurt Ziskie) recruits Continenta­l Congress allies Benjamin Franklin (Peter Sham), Thomas Jefferson (Jason Heil), Roger Sherman (Kern McFadden) and Robert Livingston (Justin Leath) to write the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in “1776.”
 ?? Bill Hughes ?? Assassins (from John Wilkes Booth to Lee Harvey Oswald) populate RagTag Entertainm­ent’s 2012 production of Stephen Sondheim’s “Assassins.”
Bill Hughes Assassins (from John Wilkes Booth to Lee Harvey Oswald) populate RagTag Entertainm­ent’s 2012 production of Stephen Sondheim’s “Assassins.”

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