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Published: Monday, 14 October 2024 at 15:01 PM


Read on to discover the operatic origins of today’s stage musicals…

Is there really that much difference between opera and musicals?

Immediately after the end of World War II, US Army forces marched into Bayreuth, shrine of Wagner’s operas and a beloved hang-out of Adolf Hitler. The famous Festspielhaus was repurposed and given over to various populist entertainments including musical revues – a calculated poke in the eye for Hitler’s ideal of the master artform for the master race. Yet, ignoring for a moment the Nazis’ twisted artistic logic, is there really such a vast gap between the world of opera and the world of what revues evolved into – namely, musical theatre? With English National Opera performing My Fair Lady in 2022, to say nothing of John Wilson’s recording of Oklahoma! scooping BBC Music Magazine’s 2024 Opera Award, it’s a question worth asking. 

In fact, if opera is ‘high art’ (not always) and musicals are ‘low art’ (not at all), the road that connects them is virtually flat, and well travelled. After all, what makes Mozart’s The Magic Flute, a piece of 18th-century Viennese music-hall populism, combining speech, music and movement, not a musical of its day? It happens to be a sublime masterpiece, but then so is My Fair Lady. Bizet’s Carmen was judged to be so close to a musical that it was rejigged by orchestrator Robert Russell Bennett and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II to become one in 1943, Carmen Jones.