Тёмный

Alexander Hamilton: The Man and the Play 

Center for Brooklyn History
Подписаться 4 тыс.
Просмотров 41 тыс.
50% 1

Historian Ron Chernow, author of the biography "Alexander Hamilton," and Oskar Eustis, Artistic Director at the Public Theater, the theater that first launched Lin-Manuel Miranda's hit musical "Hamilton," chat with "The New Yorker's" Rebecca Mead about the complexities of staging history.
This public program took place on Monday, October 26, 2015, at Brooklyn Historical Society, 128 Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn, NY. Visit our website to learn more: brooklynhistory.org/.

Опубликовано:

 

7 мар 2016

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 20   
@SylviaWongLewis
@SylviaWongLewis 8 лет назад
Great interview on how Artistic director, Oskar Eustis happened to work on 'Hamilton' the Broadway masterpiece. It all started in Brooklyn!
@KayBeeGee
@KayBeeGee 6 лет назад
I learned a lot by watching this. I haven't ever listened to the Hamilton music before. I am putting in a lot of time listening to the background and watching Interviews before I listen to the music, so I know what to listen for and pay attention to when I listed to the soundtrack/recording. Thank you for sharing this.
@spartanlukas
@spartanlukas 7 лет назад
Without Chernow, Lin would have never of had the material for Hamilton.
@Happy2BUp
@Happy2BUp 7 лет назад
What a wonderful evening with Ron and Oskar. Wow! Thank you, Rebecca, for your willingness to prompt yet not dominate the evening. How exciting to hear the grass root decision making on Hamilton, the musical. This is the second time I have watched this interview and I am hearing new details that I missed and so enjoying the entire hour.
@thinkhector
@thinkhector 8 лет назад
"You punched the bursar?" "Hello, Burr, sir." Ah! Very good pun. I never caught that before. That was a nice bit of insight.
@debrabyrd2544
@debrabyrd2544 3 года назад
I never got that either. how cool.
@leahkogut
@leahkogut 8 лет назад
So informative and wonderful
@TheGirlonfire25
@TheGirlonfire25 8 лет назад
31:40 - Actually, I don't know that Ron is correct there. Lin says in the Hamiltome during his "Take a Break" annotations, and on twitter, that the comma idea comes from actual correspondence between Angelica and Hamilton- in French, no less! "'Adieu ma chere, soeur'-Hamilton, in a letter to sister-in-law Angelica 12/6/1787 See how he puts the comma after MA CHERE? #COMMASEXTING" -Lin's twitter, 8:46 AM - 15 Apr 2015
@slux33
@slux33 7 лет назад
TheGirlonfire25 woah thats really precise:)
@TheGirlonfire25
@TheGirlonfire25 7 лет назад
Jesse I live to share pointless knowledge. ;)
@MissYinna
@MissYinna 3 года назад
And earlier in that letter he calls her out for doing that same thing in her previous letter ('Indeed my dear, Sir', see founders.archives.gov/documents/Hamilton/01-04-02-0144). So his sign off is a joke, and SHE started it.
@miaclarke6489
@miaclarke6489 5 лет назад
Lin is the best
@duanewaihi4453
@duanewaihi4453 8 лет назад
12:30 Great point!
@GlauciaFR1986
@GlauciaFR1986 4 года назад
Bacana
@ginacotrone6741
@ginacotrone6741 2 года назад
A pack of lies is more like it.
Далее
Ron Chernow - Hamilton: From History to Drama
1:08:10
Просмотров 104 тыс.
Ron Chernow: Hamilton and Washington (Full Length)
59:38
Занимайся йогой со мной 🫶🏻
00:13
Inside the Actors Studio
9:40
Просмотров 140 тыс.
Behind the revolution of Broadway hit "Hamilton"
8:50
Просмотров 149 тыс.
Wheel of Freestyle with Lin-Manuel Miranda
4:54
Просмотров 13 млн
Extra: Al Pacino on acting and the Actors Studio
31:08
Просмотров 136 тыс.
Ron Chernow Interview: Hamilton on Broadway
11:13
Просмотров 27 тыс.