While books have seemingly taken a backseat to everything from YouTube videos to audiobooks, they are still an invaluable resource to supplement your musical theatre education, especially regarding the history of the stage and the biggest names behind the biggest works.
6 Musical Theatre Books for Every Aspiring Performer
Here are some must-read books for musical theatre performers (both informative and a great way to pass the time when you’re resting your voice.)
Broadway Babies: The People Who Made the American Musical
by Ethan Mordden
Recounting the development of the American musical comedy genre, this history is as entertaining as the song-and-dance productions it describes. The book features musical legends, including Florenz Ziegfeld, Harold Prince, Bert Lahr, Gwen Verdon, Angela Lansbury, Victor Herbert, Liza Minnelli, and Stephen Sondheim, and explores shows with staying power like Anything Goes, Show Boat, Oklahoma!, Follies, and Chicago, to offer a rich account of a beloved but often overlooked American staple.
Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops
by Ken Mandelbaum
This book explores the hows and whys that led to dozens of Broadway musicals that seemed like surefire hits to flop hard at the box office. Mandelbaum is objective and generous, though, finding the positives where he can in shows whose failures could have simply been a product of bad luck and timing. Published in 1992, the book doesn’t describe the infamous Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark, but after reading it, you may know why even Marvel failed on Broadway.
The Vocal Athlete
by Wendy D. Leborgne and Marci Rosenberg
Musical theatre can push the human voice to its limits. The Vocal Athlete is written specifically to help performers meet the high demands for a sustainable career on stage, providing ideal tools and exercises to help preserve vocal wellness. When it comes to taking care of your most important asset, you’ll want all the help you can.
How Sondheim Found His Sound
by Steve Swayne
This highly-praised book is a biography of one of Broadway’s biggest icons–Stephen Sondheim, the composer and lyricist behind works like Into the Woods, Sweeney Todd, Follies, and Sunday in the Park with George. Knowing Sondheim’s work and what makes the artist tick is key to understanding the very nature of Broadway, and Swayne’s book is a perfect way into his world and understanding how one of the greats came to be.
The Complete Phantom of the Opera
by George Perry
The Phantom of the Opera has cemented its place in Broadway history as an iconic musical, but its roots go much farther than Andrew Lloyd Webber’s 1986 masterpiece. This definitive account of The Phantom of the Opera recounts the history of the work from its historical origins to Gaston Leroux’s classic novel that inspired Webber’s version, as well as the story’s other incarnations in between. All of this is supplemented with beautiful photography that includes images from the production itself.
Up in the Cheap Seats: A Historical Memoir of Broadway
by Ron Fassler
Up in the Cheap Seats is a truly original take on Broadway, looking at it as a fan from the ground up, or rather, in Fassler’s case, from the cheap seats down. By imbuing the history of Broadway and hundreds of its productions from the personal point-of-view of an actor in his youth, along with the dozens of people he met along the way backstage, the book gives a memorable but relatable and unique take on the musical theatre scene from a heartfelt place of true love.
Get Hands-on Training at NYFA
The Musical Theatre School at NYFA provides a range of programs for aspiring performers looking to refine their voice, movement, and acting abilities. Under the mentorship of experienced faculty, students engage in rigorous programs, undertaking projects and exercises specifically crafted to elevate their skills in musical theatre performance.
NYFA presently offers both full-time, in-person, and online programs. Learn more today!