Hamilton (musical)


















Hamilton
An American Musical

Hamilton-poster.jpg
Broadway promotional poster

MusicLin-Manuel Miranda
LyricsLin-Manuel Miranda
BookLin-Manuel Miranda
Basis
Alexander Hamilton
by Ron Chernow
PremiereJanuary 20, 2015: The Public Theater, New York City
Productions2013 Vassar College
2015 Off-Broadway
2015 Broadway
2016 Chicago
2017 First U.S. Tour
2017 West End
2018 Second U.S. Tour
2019 Third U.S. Tour
Awards

List of awards


 • Tony Award for Best Musical
 • Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical
 • Tony Award for Best Original Score
 • Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album
 • Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical
 • Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Music
 • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical
 • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music
 • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical
 • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics
 • New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Musical
 • Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Off-Broadway Musical
 • Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Score
 • Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical
 • Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Musical
 • Obie Award for Best New American Theatre Work
 • Pulitzer Prize for Drama
 • Drama League Award for Distinguished Production of a Musical
 • Broadway.com Audience Award for Favorite Musical



Cast members perform musical selections at the White House, 2016. L-R: Lin-Manuel Miranda, Phillipa Soo, Leslie Odom Jr., and Christopher Jackson


Hamilton: An American Musical is a sung-and-rapped through musical about the life of American Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, with music, lyrics and book by Lin-Manuel Miranda,[1][2] inspired by the 2004 biography Alexander Hamilton by historian Ron Chernow. Incorporating hip hop, R&B, pop, soul, traditional-style show tunes, and color-conscious casting of non-white actors as the Founding Fathers and other historical figures,[3][4][5] the musical achieved both critical acclaim and box office success.


The musical made its Off-Broadway debut at The Public Theater in February 2015, where its engagement was sold out.[6] The show transferred to Broadway in August 2015 at the Richard Rodgers Theatre. On Broadway, it received enthusiastic critical reception and unprecedented advance box office sales.[7] In 2016, Hamilton received a record-setting 16 Tony nominations, winning 11, including Best Musical, and was also the recipient of the 2016 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album and the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The prior Off-Broadway production of Hamilton won the 2015 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical as well as seven other Drama Desk Awards out of 14 total nominated categories.


The Chicago production of Hamilton began preview performances at the CIBC Theatre in September 2016 and officially opened the following month.[8] The West End production of Hamilton opened at the Victoria Palace Theatre in London in December 2017, winning seven Olivier Awards in 2018, including Best New Musical.[9] The first U.S. national tour of the show began performances in March 2017.[10] A second U.S. tour opened in February 2018.[11]Hamilton's third U.S. tour began January 11, 2019, with a 3-week engagement in Puerto Rico featuring Miranda in the lead role.[12][13]




Contents





  • 1 Synopsis

    • 1.1 Act I


    • 1.2 Act II



  • 2 Roles and principal casts

    • 2.1 Original production casts


    • 2.2 Notable cast replacements



  • 3 Musical numbers

    • 3.1 Recordings

      • 3.1.1 Original Broadway cast album (2015)


      • 3.1.2 The Hamilton Mixtape (2016)


      • 3.1.3 The Hamilton Instrumentals (2017) and Hamiltunes


      • 3.1.4 Hamildrops (2017–2018)




  • 4 Background


  • 5 Productions

    • 5.1 Off-Broadway (2015)


    • 5.2 Broadway (2015–present)


    • 5.3 Chicago (2016–present)


    • 5.4 U.S. touring productions (2017–present)


    • 5.5 West End (2017–present)


    • 5.6 Puerto Rico (2019)


    • 5.7 Hamburg (2020)



  • 6 Box office and business

    • 6.1 Opening and box office records


    • 6.2 Ticket lottery and Ham4Ham



  • 7 Critical response


  • 8 Honors and awards

    • 8.1 Original Off-Broadway production


    • 8.2 Original Broadway production


    • 8.3 Original West End production


    • 8.4 Accolades



  • 9 Concept

    • 9.1 Casting diversity


    • 9.2 Historical accuracy

      • 9.2.1 Chronology and events


      • 9.2.2 Critical analysis and scholarship



    • 9.3 Use in education



  • 10 Legacy and impact

    • 10.1 $10 bill


    • 10.2 Hamilton: The Revolution


    • 10.3 Hamilton's America


    • 10.4 Hamilton: The Exhibition


    • 10.5 2016 Vice President–elect Pence controversy


    • 10.6 Parodies



  • 11 Live stage filming


  • 12 Film adaptation


  • 13 See also


  • 14 References


  • 15 Further reading


  • 16 External links




Synopsis


The play has two acts, telling Hamilton's story through major events in his life and American history. It tells Hamilton's life from beginning to end along with various other characters such as Marquis De Lafayette, Aaron Burr, John Laurens, Hercules Mulligan, Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, Angelica Schuyler, Phillip Hamilton and former presidents George Washington, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson.[14]



Act I


The musical begins with the company summarizing Alexander Hamilton's early life as an orphan on the island of Nevis ("Alexander Hamilton"). After arriving in New York in 1776, Hamilton meets Aaron Burr, John Laurens, Marquis de Lafayette, and Hercules Mulligan ("Aaron Burr, Sir"), and impresses them with his rhetorical skills ("My Shot"). They affirm their revolutionary goals to each other ("The Story of Tonight"). Angelica, Eliza, and Peggy are then introduced ("The Schuyler Sisters"). King George then insists on his authority ("You'll Be Back"). During the New York and New Jersey campaign, Hamilton accepts a position as George Washington's aide-de-camp ("Right Hand Man"), instead of field command.


Hamilton meets, falls in love with, and marries Eliza Schuyler ("Helpless"), as her sister Angelica suppresses her feelings for the sake of their happiness ("Satisfied"). After the wedding, Hamilton, Laurens, Lafayette and Mulligan drink together, while the three poke fun at Hamilton for getting married. Burr walks in on the group, unexpected by Hamilton to be attending. Burr congratulates Hamilton on his position as aide to camp of Washington; Hamilton confesses that he would much rather have Burr's position on the battlefield ("The Story of Tonight (reprise)"). Burr reflects on Hamilton's swift rise while considering his own career as more cautious ("Wait For It").


Conditions are worsening for the continental army, and Hamilton's constant pleading to Washington for a command continue to be shot down. Washington grants a command to General Charles Lee, who is clearly unfit to be leading one. After being fired by Washington, Lee goes on a tirade against Washington, claiming him to be unfit to lead. Though Hamilton wishes to challenge Lee, he is commanded not to by Washington. Since Hamilton is unable to challenge Lee, Laurens does ("Stay Alive") and thus duels Lee, with Hamilton and Burr as their seconds. Laurens injures Lee, who in turn yields ("Ten Duel Commandments"). Hamilton is temporarily suspended by Washington ("Meet Me Inside") over the duel, and is sent home. There, Eliza reveals that she is pregnant with her first child, and asks Hamilton to simply slow down to take in what has happened in their lives ("That Would be Enough"). After Lafayette convinces France to get involved on the colonists' side ("Guns and Ships"), he urges Washington to call Hamilton back to help plan the final Siege of Yorktown. Washington agrees, but explains to Hamilton - who is convinced he should die a martyr and a hero in war - that he should be careful with his actions, because whatever he does will be known for ages to come ("History Has its Eyes on You"). Hamilton agrees to join, and reflects that he now has something to live for (a wife and a child on the way), and will give up on his efforts to die in war. At the Siege of Yorktown, Hamilton meets up with Lafayette to take down the British, revealing that Mulligan was recruited as a spy, helping them figure out what to do to trap the British and win the war ("Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)").


Soon after the victory at Yorktown, Hamilton's son, Philip is born, while Burr has a daughter, Theodosia ("Dear Theodosia"). Hamilton receives word that his friend Laurens has been killed in a seemingly pointless battle, and throws himself into his work ("Tomorrow There'll Be More of Us"). He co-authors The Federalist Papers and is selected as Secretary of the Treasury by newly elected President Washington. Angelica moves to London with her new husband ("Non-Stop").



Act II


At the beginning, Thomas Jefferson returns to America from being the U.S. ambassador to France ("What'd I Miss"). In 1789, Jefferson and Hamilton debate the latter's financial proposals at a Cabinet meeting. Washington pulls Hamilton aside, and tells him to figure out a compromise to win over Congress ("Cabinet Battle #1").


Eliza and her family - along with Angelica, back from London - travel upstate during the summer, while Hamilton stays home to work on the compromise ("Take a Break"). Hamilton begins an affair with Maria Reynolds, making him vulnerable to her husband's blackmail ("Say No To This"). Hamilton, Jefferson and James Madison create the Compromise of 1790 over a private dinner, exchanging Hamilton's financial plan for placing the country's permanent capital on the Potomac River. Burr is envious of Hamilton's sway in the government and wishes he had similar power ("The Room Where It Happens").


In another Cabinet meeting, Jefferson and Hamilton argue over whether the United States should assist France in its conflict with Britain. This decision is not subject to congressional approval, and Washington ultimately agrees with Hamilton's argument for remaining neutral ("Cabinet Battle #2"). In the wake of this, Jefferson, Madison, and Burr decide to join forces to find a way to discredit Hamilton in Washington's eyes ("Washington on your Side"). Washington decides to retire from the presidency, and Hamilton assists in writing a farewell address ("One Last Time").


John Adams becomes the second President and fires Hamilton, who publishes an inflammatory critique of the new president as a response ("The Adams Administration"). In the face of accusations of speculation of government funds by Jefferson, Madison, and Burr - and out of fear of his affair being used against him in his political career ("We Know") - Hamilton chooses to publicize his affair ("Hurricane") in the Reynolds Pamphlet ("The Reynolds Pamphlet"), damaging his relationship with Eliza ("Burn"). Their son Philip dies at the age of 19 in a duel with George Eacker due to a critical speech given by Eacker about Alexander ("Blow Us All Away"/"Stay Alive (Reprise)"), causing a reconciliation between Alexander and Eliza ("It's Quiet Uptown").


Hamilton's endorsement of Jefferson in the presidential election of 1800 ("The Election of 1800") results in further animosity between Hamilton and Burr, who challenges Hamilton to a duel via an exchange of letters ("Your Obedient Servant"). During the duel, both Burr and Hamilton fire at each other after ten paces, with Hamilton intentionally missing his shot. Hamilton dies as a result, with Eliza and Angelica at his side. Burr laments that even though he survived, he is cursed to be the villain who killed Hamilton ("The World Was Wide Enough"). The close of the musical is a reflection on historical memory and "Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story".



Roles and principal casts



Original production casts
























































































Character
Vassar Workshop[15]Off-Broadway[16]Broadway[17]Chicago[8]First U.S. Tour[18]West End[19]Second U.S. Tour[20]Puerto Rico / Third U.S. Tour[21][22]

Alexander Hamilton

Lin-Manuel Miranda

Miguel Cervantes

Michael Luwoye
Jamael Westman
Joseph Morales
Lin-Manuel Miranda / Julius Thomas III [a]

Eliza Hamilton

Ana Nogueira

Phillipa Soo

Arianna Afsar
Solea Pfeiffer

Rachelle Ann Go
Shoba Narayan
Julia K. Harriman

Aaron Burr

Utkarsh Ambudkar

Leslie Odom Jr.

Joshua Henry

Giles Terera
Nik Walker
Donald Webber, Jr.

Angelica Schuyler

Anika Noni Rose

Renée Elise Goldsberry

Karen Olivo

Emmy Raver-Lampman

Rachel John
Ta'Rea Campbell

Sabrina Sloan

George Washington

Christopher Jackson
Jonathan Kirkland
Isaiah Johnson
Obioma Ugoala
Marcus Choi
Isaiah Johnson

Marquis de Lafayette / Thomas Jefferson

Daveed Diggs
Chris De'Sean Lee
Jordan Donica

Jason Pennycooke

Kyle Scatliffe
Simon Longnight

Hercules Mulligan / James Madison

Joshua Henry

Okieriete Onaodowan
Wallace Smith
Mathenee Treco
Tarinn Callender
Fergie L. Philippe
Brandon Armstrong

John Laurens / Philip Hamilton

Javier Muñoz

Anthony Ramos
José Ramos

Rubén J. Carbajal
Cleve September
Elijah Malcomb
Rubén J. Carbajal

Peggy Schuyler / Maria Reynolds
Presilah Nunez

Jasmine Cephas Jones
Samantha Marie Ware
Amber Iman
Christine Allado
Danielle Sostre
Darilyn Castillo

King George III
Joshua Henry

Brian d'Arcy James

Jonathan Groff

Alexander Gemignani

Rory O'Malley

Michael Jibson
Jon Patrick Walker
Rick Negron


Notable cast replacements


Off-Broadway

  • King George III – Jonathan Groff (March 3, 2015 – May 3, 2015)[23]
Broadway cast replacements


Lin-Manuel Miranda as Hamilton



  • Alexander Hamilton – Javier Muñoz (July 11, 2016 – January 14, 2018);[24]Michael Luwoye (January 16, 2018 – February 16, 2019)[25][26][27]Austin Scott (February 18, 2019 – present)


  • Eliza Hamilton – Lexi Lawson (July 12, 2016 – October 28, 2018);[28][27]Denée Benton (October 30, 2018 – present)[29]


  • Aaron Burr – Brandon Victor Dixon (August 23, 2016 – August 13, 2017);[28]Daniel Breaker (August 29, 2017 – present)[30][27]


  • Angelica Schuyler – Mandy Gonzalez (September 6, 2016 – present)[31][27]


  • Marquis de Lafayette / Thomas Jefferson – Seth Stewart (August 15, 2016 – April 16, 2017);[32]James Monroe Iglehart (April 18, 2017 – present)[33]


  • King George III – Andrew Rannells (October 27, 2015 – November 29, 2015);[34]Rory O'Malley (April 11, 2016 – January 15, 2017);[35]Taran Killam (January 17, 2017 – April 16, 2017);[36]Brian d'Arcy James (April 18, 2017 – July 16, 2017);[37]Euan Morton (July 28, 2017 – present)[38]


  • John Laurens / Philip Hamilton – Jordan Fisher (November 22, 2016 – March 5, 2017)[39]

Chicago

  • Aaron Burr – Wayne Brady;[40]Daniel Breaker[41]


  • Angelica Schuyler – Montego Glover[42]

West End

  • Angelica Schuyler - Allyson Ava-Brown[43]


  • King George - Jon Robyns[44]

First National Tour

  • Angelica Schuyler - Sabrina Sloan,[45]Stephanie Umoh


Musical numbers








Notes




  1. ^ Miranda reprised the role of Alexander Hamilton exclusively for the limited 3-week Puerto Rico engagement, January 11–27, 2019; Thomas took over the role for the rest of the tour beginning in San Francisco


  2. ^ abcde Credited to full company on the original Broadway cast recording.


  3. ^ "Tomorrow There'll Be More of Us", a second reprise to "The Story of Tonight", does not appear on the original Broadway cast recording. Miranda explained that it was "more of a scene than a song, the only scene in the [sung-through] show", and he wanted to reserve the impact of "at least one revelation" that could be experienced more fully onstage.[46]


  4. ^ Previously titled "One Last Ride" in the Off-Broadway production.[47]




Recordings



Original Broadway cast album (2015)



The original Broadway cast recording for Hamilton was made available to listeners by NPR on September 21, 2015.[48] It was released by Atlantic Records digitally on September 25, 2015, and physical copies were released on October 16, 2015.[49] The cast album has also been released on vinyl.[50] The album debuted at number 12 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, the highest entrance for a cast recording since 1963.[51] It went on to reach number 3 on the Billboard 200[52] and number 1 on the Billboard Rap albums chart.[53] The original cast recording won a Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album.[54]



The Hamilton Mixtape (2016)



The Hamilton Mixtape, a collection of remixes, covers, and samples of the musical's songs, was released on December 2, 2016. It debuted at number 1 on the Billboard 200.[55]




The Hamilton Instrumentals (2017) and Hamiltunes


The Hamilton Instrumentals, an instrumental edition of the original Broadway cast recording without the cast's vocals, was released on June 30, 2017.[56]


In conjunction with the release, the producers of Hamilton announced that they were officially authorizing free sing-along programs for fans, and offering organizers the Hamiltunes name and logo to promote the events.[56] A series of unauthorized Hamilton sing-alongs under that name, starting with Hamiltunes L.A. in early 2016, had already taken place in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Washington D.C., with spinoff events nationwide.[56][57][58]



Hamildrops (2017–2018)



Miranda announced a new series of 13 Hamilton-related recordings called Hamildrops, releasing once a month from December 2017 to December 2018. The first release, on December 15, 2017, was "Ben Franklin's Song" by The Decemberists, containing lyrics Miranda wrote during development of Hamilton for an unused song that was never set to music. Miranda had long imagined Benjamin Franklin singing in a "Decemberist-y way", and ultimately sent the lyrics to Colin Meloy, who set them to music.[59][60] The second release, on January 25, 2018, was "Wrote My Way Out (Remix)", a remixed version of a song on The Hamilton Mixtape, featuring Royce Da 5'9", Joyner Lucas, Black Thought and Aloe Blacc.[61]


The third release, on March 2, 2018, was "The Hamilton Polka" by "Weird Al" Yankovic, a polka medley of some of the songs from the musical. A fan of Yankovic since childhood, Miranda became friends with him after they tried to develop a musical together. About the origin of the song, Yankovic said, "Lin pitched it to me as a polka medley way more hesitantly than [he] should have. He was like, 'Would you want to do a polka medley?' I was like, 'Of course I do!'" Since Yankovic was busy working on his new tour, he wouldn't be able to release the song in February, so he suggested calling March 2 "February 30th". Miranda said it was "the most perfect 'Weird Al' creative problem solving possible".[62]


The fourth release, on March 19, 2018, was "Found/Tonight" by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Ben Platt. A mash-up of the songs "You Will Be Found" from the stage musical Dear Evan Hansen and "The Story of Tonight", part of the proceeds were destinated to the initiative March for Our Lives, created after the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. Miranda said the song was his way "of helping to raise funds and awareness for [the efforts of the students in Parkland, Florida], and to say Thank You, and that we are with you so let's keep fighting, together". Platt added that he hoped the song could "play some small part in bringing about real change [in gun control laws]".[63]


The fifth release, on April 30, 2018, was "First Burn", featuring five actress who played Eliza Hamilton at productions of the musical: Arianna Afsar (original Chicago company), Julia Harriman (first national tour), Shoba Narayan (original second national tour company), Rachelle Ann Go (original West End company) and Lexi Lawson (Broadway). The song is the first draft written by Miranda of "Burn". Miranda described Eliza's portrayal in the first version of the song as "angrier" and "entirely reactive", while in the final version "she has agency", and explained that "it works as a song but not as a scene".[64]


The sixth release, on May 31, 2018, was a cover of "Helpless" by The Regrettes.[65] Miranda credited Mike Elizondo, a producer who worked with the band, as having suggested the idea, which he immediately accepted.[66] The seventh release, on June 18, 2018, was "Boom Goes the Cannon..." by Mobb Deep. The song, which incorporates a sample of the musical's "Right Hand Man", was one of the last recorded by Havoc and Prodigy, before Prodigy's passing on June 2017. Havoc expressed that the release of the record was "a great way to pay homage to [Prodigy] and continue not only Mobb's legacy, but his as well". Miranda dedicated it to Queensbridge.[67]


The seventh release entitled "A Forgotten Spot (Olvidado)" features Puerto Rican singers Zion & Lennox, De La Ghetto, Ivy Queen, PJ Sin Suela and Lucecita Benítez. It was released on September 20, 2018 by Atlantic Records and Warner Music Group. The song was written by Miranda, along with the rest of the collaborators. The song was released on the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Maria which directly struck Puerto Rico in 2017.[68][69]


The eighth release, a rendition of "Theodosia Reprise" by Sara Bareilles, debuted on the eve of Halloween 2018. It featured show orchestrator Alex Lacamoire on piano and Questlove of The Roots on drums. The song, sharing a moment between Aaron Burr and his daughter, was to appear in Act 2 but was cut from the final production.[70]


On November 20, 2018, "Cheering For Me Now" an original song with music by John Kander and lyrics by Miranda based on the 1788 Federal Procession in New York City. The release features Miranda performing as Alexander Hamilton and an arrangement by Alex Lacamoire.[71]


On December 20, 2018, the last Hamildrop was released. "One Last Time (44 Remix)" features the vocals of original Broadway portrayer of George Washington, Christopher Jackson, American Grammy gospel and RnB singer Bebe Winans, and former US president Barack Obama, reciting the lines from George Washington's farewell address. It is based on "One Last Time" on the OBC version with a revamped gospel type of music. The 44 stands as Obama as the 44th president of the United States. Billboard's Top RnB songs ranked it at No. 22 in January 2019.



Background




File:Lin Manuel Miranda White House Poetry Jam 2009.webmPlay media

Lin-Manuel Miranda performs at the White House Poetry Jam in 2009.[72]



External audio

Lin-Manuel Miranda Talks 'Hamilton': Once A 'Ridiculous' Pitch, Now A Revolution, interview with Scott Simon, NPR, April 9, 2016

While on vacation from performing in his hit Broadway show In the Heights, Lin-Manuel Miranda read a copy of Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow, a biography of Alexander Hamilton. After finishing the first few chapters, Miranda began to envision the life of Hamilton as a musical, and researched whether a stage musical of Hamilton's life had been created. All he found was that a play of Hamilton's story had been done on Broadway in 1917, starring George Arliss as Alexander Hamilton.[73] (Arliss reprised the role in a 1931 feature film adaptation, Alexander Hamilton, but to date there is no record of Miranda having seen it.)


Miranda therefore began a project titled The Hamilton Mixtape. On May 12, 2009, Miranda was invited to perform music from In the Heights at the White House Evening of Poetry, Music and the Spoken Word. Instead, he performed the first song from The Hamilton Mixtape, an early version of what would later become "Alexander Hamilton", Hamilton's opening number. He spent a year after that working on "My Shot", another early number from the show.[74]


Miranda performed in a workshop production of the show, then titled The Hamilton Mixtape, at the Vassar Reading Festival on July 27, 2013.[75] The workshop production was directed by Thomas Kail and musically directed by Alex Lacamoire. The workshop consisted of the entirety of the first act of the show and three songs from the second act. The workshop was accompanied by Lacamoire on the piano.[74]


Of the original workshop cast, only three principal cast members played in the Off-Broadway production: Miranda, Daveed Diggs, and Christopher Jackson. Most of the original Off-Broadway cast moved to Broadway, except Brian d'Arcy James, who was replaced by Jonathan Groff as King George III.



Productions




Off-Broadway promotional poster.



Off-Broadway (2015)



External video

Interview with Ron Chernow (conducted by Harold Holzer) on the adaptation of his book into the play, February 25, 2016, C-SPAN

Directed by Thomas Kail and choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler, the musical received its world premiere Off-Broadway at The Public Theater, under the supervision of the Public's Artistic Director Oskar Eustis, with previews starting on January 20, 2015, and officially opening on February 17.[76][77] The production was extended twice, first to April 5 and then to May 3.[78] Chernow served as historical consultant to the production.[4][79] The show opened to universal acclaim according to review aggregator Did He Like It.[80]



Broadway (2015–present)


Hamilton premiered on Broadway at the Richard Rodgers Theatre (also home to Miranda's 2008 Broadway debut In the Heights) on July 13, 2015, in previews, and opened on August 6, 2015.[1] The production is produced by Jeffrey Seller and features scenic design by David Korins, costumes by Paul Tazewell, lighting by Howell Binkley and sound by Nevin Steinberg, who all reprised their roles from the off-Broadway production.[81]


The production was critically acclaimed by many theater analysts, winning 11 Tony Awards [1][82][83]



Chicago (2016–present)


Hamilton opened at the CIBC Theatre in Chicago on September 27, 2016.[84] Near the beginning of its run, lead producer Jeffrey Seller said the show may be in residence for two years or more.[85] On its opening, attended by author Miranda, the Chicago production received strongly positive reviews.[86][87][88] Miranda praised the Chicago casts' performance during a later television interview.[89]



U.S. touring productions (2017–present)


Plans for a national tour of Hamilton emerged near the end of January 2016. The tour was initially announced with over 20 stops, scheduled from 2017 through at least 2020.[90] Tickets to the tour's run in San Francisco—its debut city—sold out within 24 hours of release; the number of people who entered the online waiting room to purchase tickets surpassed 110,000.[91] The first national touring production began preview performances at San Francisco's SHN Orpheum Theatre on March 10, 2017 and officially opened on March 23. The production ran in San Francisco until August 5, when it transferred to Los Angeles' Hollywood Pantages Theatre for a run from August 11 to December 30, 2017.


Just days after the first U.S. tour began performances in San Francisco, news emerged that a second U.S. tour of Hamilton would begin in Seattle for a six-week limited engagement before touring North America concurrently with the first tour.[11] To distinguish the first and second touring productions, the production team has labeled them, respectively, the "Angelica tour" and the "Philip tour".[90]


The second national tour began preview performances at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle on February 6, 2018 before officially opening on February 15, 2018.[92]


The Angelica tour alone requires 14 truckloads of cargo and a core group of over 60 traveling cast, crew, and musicians.[90] The production team insisted that each tour must be able to duplicate the original Broadway show's choreography, which literally revolves around two concentric turntables on the stage.[90] This led to the construction of four portable sets, two for each tour, so that one set can be assembled well in advance at the next stop while the tour is still playing at the last stop.[90]


It was announced on November 12, 2018, that following the three-week limited engagement in Puerto Rico, in which Lin-Manuel Miranda will reprise his role as Alexander Hamilton, the company would continue on as the third national tour of the show, officially dubbed the "And Peggy tour".[93] Julius Thomas III will take over the role of Alexander Hamilton for the tour after the Puerto Rico run.[94]



West End (2017–present)





Hamilton at the Victoria Palace, London, in December 2017.


Cameron Mackintosh produced a London production that re-opened the Victoria Palace Theatre on December 21, 2017, following previews from December 6.[9] Initial principal casting was announced on January 26, 2017.[19] The London production received strongly positive reviews.[95]



Puerto Rico (2019)


It was announced on November 8, 2017, that Hamilton would play the University of Puerto Rico's Teatro UPR in San Juan, beginning in January 2019, with Lin-Manuel Miranda reprising his performance as Alexander Hamilton.[21] The Teatro UPR stage had suffered damage following Hurricane Maria in September and October 2017, and underwent restorations and repairs prior to Hamilton's 2019 bow. On December 21, 2018, less than a month away from opening night and after months of restoration completed, the three-week engagement, originally slated for January 8–27, 2019, was moved to the Luis A. Ferré Performing Arts Center, shifting the run to January 11–27, 2019 after negotiations between the show's production and the local faculty and staff union. This followed weeks of warnings from the union of possible protests outside the theater over budget cuts that the University of Puerto Rico administration was considering that would affect university staff and employees.[96]


Miranda's performance in the Luis A. Ferré Performing Arts Center marked his return to the venue nine years after he reprised the role of Usnavi for the San Juan stop of the North American touring production of In the Heights. The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon taped segments in Puerto Rico to help tourism, one of them with the "And Peggy Tour" cast performing a version of "The Story of Tonight", where Jimmy Fallon joined in as a second Alexander Hamilton next to Miranda singing about The Tonight Show and ending the performance with a salsa version of Fallon's Tonight Show opening song.


In a review, Chris Jones said Miranda's performance demonstrated "deeper on-stage emotions", as well as improved vocal and dance technique than on Broadway. Jones praised Miranda's "signature warmth" as well as Donald Webber Jr., calling Webber's performance as Aaron Burr, "exceptional". The sold-out three-week engagement raised about $15 million for Miranda's Flamboyán Arts Fund, which benefits arts in Puerto Rico; the first beneficiary having been the restoration of the Teatro UPR, where the three-week engagement would've originally taken place.[97]



Hamburg (2020)


According to a report in Forbes, Stage Entertainment will license a German-language production to open in Hamburg during the fall of 2020.[98]



Box office and business



Opening and box office records


Hamilton's off-Broadway engagement at The Public Theater was sold out,[6] and when the musical opened on Broadway, it had a multimillion-dollar advance in ticket sales, reportedly taking in $30 million before its official opening.[99]


By September 2015, the show was sold out for most of its Broadway engagement.[100][101][102][103] It was the second-highest-grossing show on Broadway for the Labor Day week ending September 6, 2015 (behind only The Lion King).[7]


Hamilton set a Broadway box office record for the most money grossed in a single week in New York City in late November 2016, when it grossed $3.3 million for an eight-performance week, the first show to break $3 million in eight performances.[104]




Ticket lottery and Ham4Ham


Hamilton, like other Broadway musicals, offers a ticket lottery before every show. Initially, 21 front-row seats (and occasional standing room tickets) were offered in each lottery. Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda began preparing and hosting outdoor mini-performances shortly before each daily drawing, allowing lottery participants to experience a part of the show even when they did not win tickets.[105] These were dubbed the "Ham4Ham" shows, because lottery winners were given the opportunity to purchase two tickets at the reduced price of one Hamilton ($10 bill) each.


The online theatrical journal HowlRound characterized Ham4Ham as an expression of Miranda's cultural background:


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Ham4Ham follows a long tradition of Latina/o (or the ancestors of present-day Latina/os) theatremaking that dates back to when the events in Hamilton were happening.... The philosophy behind this is simple. If the people won't come to the theatre, then take the theatre to the people. While El Teatro Campesino's 'taking it to the streets' originated from a place of social protest, Ham4Ham does so to create accessibility, tap into social media, and ultimately generate a free, self-functioning marketing campaign. In this way, Ham4Ham falls into a lineage of accessibility as a Latina/o theatremaking aesthetic.[106]


As a result of the Ham4Ham shows, Hamilton's lottery drew unusually large crowds of people that created congestion on West 46th Street.[107] To avoid increasingly dangerous crowding and traffic conditions, an online ticket lottery began operating in early January 2016.[107] On the first day of the online lottery, more than 50,000 people entered, crashing the website.[108]


After Miranda left the show on July 9, 2016, Rory O'Malley, then playing King George III, took over as the host of Ham4Ham.[109] The Ham4Ham show officially ended on August 31, 2016, after more than a year of performances.[110] The online lottery continued, with an official mobile app released in August 2017 that expanded the lottery by offering tickets for touring productions of Hamilton as well as the Broadway show.[111]



Critical response


Marilyn Stasio, in her review of the Off-Broadway production for Variety, wrote, "The music is exhilarating, but the lyrics are the big surprise. The sense as well as the sound of the sung dialogue has been purposely suited to each character. George Washington, a stately figure in Jackson's dignified performance, sings in polished prose... But in the end, Miranda's impassioned narrative of one man's story becomes the collective narrative of a nation, a nation built by immigrants who occasionally need to be reminded where they came from."[112]




The Hamilton cast and crew greets President Barack Obama on July 18, 2015.


In his review of the Off-Broadway production, Jesse Green in New York wrote, "The conflict between independence and interdependence is not just the show's subject but also its method: It brings the complexity of forming a union from disparate constituencies right to your ears.... Few are the theatergoers who will be familiar with all of Miranda's touchstones. I caught the verbal references to Rodgers and Hammerstein, Gilbert and Sullivan, Sondheim, West Side Story, and 1776, but other people had to point out to me the frequent hat-tips to hip-hop... Whether it's a watershed, a breakthrough, and a game changer, as some have been saying, is another matter. Miranda is too savvy (and loves his antecedents too much) to try to reinvent all the rules at once.... Those duels, by the way—there are three of them—are superbly handled, the highlights of a riveting if at times overbusy staging by the director Thomas Kail and the choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler."[113]


Although giving a positive review, Elisabeth Vincentelli, of the New York Post (which was founded by Hamilton himself), wrote that Hamilton and Burr's love/hate relationship "fails to drive the show—partly because Miranda lacks the charisma and intensity of the man he portrays", and that "too many of the numbers are exposition-heavy lessons, as if this were 'Schoolhouse Rap!' The show is burdened with eye-glazingly dull stretches, especially those involving George Washington."[114]


Reviewing the Broadway production in The New York Times, Ben Brantley wrote, "I am loath to tell people to mortgage their houses and lease their children to acquire tickets to a hit Broadway show. But Hamilton, directed by Thomas Kail and starring Mr. Miranda, might just about be worth it.... Washington, Jefferson, Madison—they're all here, making war and writing constitutions and debating points of economic structure. So are Aaron Burr and the Marquis de Lafayette. They wear the clothes (by Paul Tazewell) you might expect them to wear in a traditional costume drama, and the big stage they inhabit has been done up (by David Korins) to suggest a period-appropriate tavern, where incendiary youth might gather to drink, brawl and plot revolution."[1]


In Time Out New York, David Cote wrote, "I love Hamilton. I love it like I love New York, or Broadway when it gets it right. And this is so right... A sublime conjunction of radio-ready hip-hop (as well as R&B, Britpop and trad showstoppers), under-dramatized American history and Miranda's uniquely personal focus as a first-generation Puerto Rican and inexhaustible wordsmith, Hamilton hits multilevel culture buttons, hard... The work's human drama and novelistic density remain astonishing." Cote chose Hamilton as a Critics' Pick, and gave the production five out of five stars.[3]


In an issue of Journal of the Early Republic, Andrew Schocket wrote that while Hamilton makes bold choices to stray away from what he calls the "American Revolution Rebooted" genre,[115] it remains "forged in the mold of this genre, and despite its casting and hip-hop delivery, is more representative of it than we might think".[116] In the same issue, Marvin McAllister noted that the production's heavy hip-hop influence works so well because "Miranda elevates the form through this marriage with musical theater storytelling, and in the process, ennobles the culture and the creators."[117]


A review in The Economist summed up the response to Hamilton as "near-universal critical acclaim".[118]Barack Obama joked that admiration for the musical is "the only thing Dick Cheney and I agree on".[119]



Honors and awards



Original Off-Broadway production




























































































































Year
Award
Category
Nominee
Result
2015

Lucille Lortel Awards[120]
Outstanding Musical
Won
Outstanding Director

Thomas Kail
Won
Outstanding Choreographer

Andy Blankenbuehler
Won
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical

Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won

Leslie Odom Jr.
Nominated
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical

Phillipa Soo
Won
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical

Daveed Diggs
Won

Brian d'Arcy James
Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical

Renée Elise Goldsberry
Won
Outstanding Costume Design

Paul Tazewell
Won
Outstanding Lighting Design

Howell Binkley
Won
Outstanding Sound Design
Nevin Steinberg
Won

Outer Critics Circle Awards[121]
Outstanding New Off-Broadway Musical
Won
Outstanding Book of a Musical
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won
Outstanding New Score
Won
Outstanding Director of a Musical
Thomas Kail
Nominated
Outstanding Choreographer
Andy Blankenbuehler
Nominated

Drama League Awards[122]
Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical
Nominated
Distinguished Performance
Daveed Diggs
Nominated
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Nominated

Drama Desk Awards[123]

Outstanding Musical
Won

Outstanding Actor in a Musical
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Nominated

Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical
Leslie Odom Jr.
Nominated

Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical
Renée Elise Goldsberry
Won

Outstanding Director of a Musical
Thomas Kail
Won

Outstanding Music
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won

Outstanding Lyrics
Won

Outstanding Book of a Musical
Won

Outstanding Orchestrations

Alex Lacamoire
Nominated

Outstanding Set Design
David Korins
Nominated

Outstanding Costume Design
Paul Tazewell
Nominated

Outstanding Lighting Design
Howell Binkley
Nominated

Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical
Nevin Steinberg
Won

Special Award ‡
Andy Blankenbuehler
Won

New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards[124]
Best Musical
Won
Off Broadway Alliance Awards[125]Best New Musical
Won

Theatre World Awards[126]
Outstanding Debut Performance
Daveed Diggs
Won

Clarence Derwent Awards[127]
Most Promising Female Performer
Phillipa Soo
Won

Obie Awards[128]
Best New American Theatre Work
Lin-Manuel Miranda, Thomas Kail, Andy Blankenbuehler, Alex Lacamoire
Won
Edgerton Foundation New American Play Awards[129]Won

‡ Blankenbuehler received a Special Drama Desk Award for "his inspired and heart-stopping choreography in Hamilton, which is indispensible [sic] to the musical's storytelling. His body of work is versatile, yet a dynamic and fluid style is consistently evident. When it's time to 'take his shot,' Blankenbuehler hits the bull's-eye."[123]



Original Broadway production


The musical currently holds the record for most Tony Award nominations with 16 nominations. However, at only 11 wins, it failed to beat the record for most wins, which is held by The Producers with 12 wins. Hamilton would have needed to win in every category it was nominated in in order to beat the record

































































































Year
Award
Category
Nominee
Result
2016

Tony Awards[130]

Best Musical
Won

Best Book of a Musical

Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won

Best Original Score
Won

Best Actor in a Musical
Nominated

Leslie Odom Jr.
Won

Best Actress in a Musical

Phillipa Soo
Nominated

Best Featured Actor in a Musical

Daveed Diggs
Won

Jonathan Groff
Nominated

Christopher Jackson
Nominated

Best Featured Actress in a Musical

Renée Elise Goldsberry
Won

Best Scenic Design of a Musical
David Korins
Nominated

Best Costume Design of a Musical

Paul Tazewell
Won

Best Lighting Design of a Musical

Howell Binkley
Won

Best Direction of a Musical

Thomas Kail
Won

Best Choreography

Andy Blankenbuehler
Won

Best Orchestrations

Alex Lacamoire
Won

Drama League Awards[131]
Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical
Won
Distinguished Performance

Daveed Diggs
Nominated

Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won

Pulitzer Prize

Drama
Won

Grammy Awards[54]

Best Musical Theater Album

Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Christopher Jackson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, Anthony Ramos & Phillipa Soo (principal soloists); Alex Lacamoire, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Bill Sherman, Ahmir Thompson & Tariq Trotter (producers); Lin-Manuel Miranda (composer & lyricist)
Won

Fred and Adele Astaire Awards[132]
Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show
Nominated
Best Choreographer

Andy Blankenbuehler
Won
Best Male Dancer

Daveed Diggs
Nominated

NAACP Image Awards[133]

Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration
Original Broadway Cast
Nominated
Dramatists Guild of America Awards[134]Frederick Loewe Award for Dramatic Composition

Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won
Edward M. Kennedy Prize[135]Drama Inspired by American History
Won
2017

Kids' Choice Awards
Favorite Soundtrack
Nominated

Billboard Music Award[136]

Top Soundtrack/Cast Album
Won
2018

Kennedy Center Honors[137]
Lin-Manuel Miranda, Andy Blankenbuehler, Alex Lacamoire and Thomas Kail
Won


Original West End production















































Year
Award
Category
Nominee
Result
2018

Critics' Circle Theatre Award[138]

The Peter Hepple Award for Best Musical
Won

Laurence Olivier Awards[139]

Best New Musical
Won

Outstanding Achievement in Music

Alex Lacamoire and Lin-Manuel Miranda
Won

Best Actor in a Musical

Giles Terera
Won
Jamael Westman
Nominated

Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical

Michael Jibson
Won

Jason Pennycooke
Nominated
Cleve September
Nominated

Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical

Rachel John
Nominated

Best Costume Design

Paul Tazewell
Nominated

Best Lighting Design

Howell Binkley
Won

Best Sound Design
Nevin Steinberg
Won

Best Director

Thomas Kail
Nominated

Best Theatre Choreographer

Andy Blankenbuehler
Won


Accolades



External video

Presentation to Lin-Manuel Miranda of the Special Achievement Award from the board of the George Washington Book Prize, December 14, 2015, C-SPAN









Publication
Accolade
Rank

Billboard
25 Best Albums of 2015[140]2

Rolling Stone
50 Best Albums of 2015[141]8


Concept




The names of many main characters, including that of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, are given a unique melodic motif that is repeated throughout the musical Hamilton in various keys, tempos, and timbres depending on the context. This is one example of how Hamilton weaves melodic and lyrical reprises into later songs in the score in order to cue an emotional response.


According to an article in The New Yorker, the show is "an achievement of historical and cultural reimagining". The costumes and set reflect the period, with "velvet frock coats and knee britches. The set ...is a wooden scaffold against exposed brick; the warm lighting suggests candlelight".[4] The musical is mostly sung and rapped all the way through, with little dialogue isolated outside of the musical score.[15][2][142]



Casting diversity


Miranda said that the portrayal of Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, and other white historical figures by black and Hispanic actors should not require any substantial suspension of disbelief by audience members. "Our cast looks like America looks now, and that's certainly intentional", he said. "It's a way of pulling you into the story and allowing you to leave whatever cultural baggage you have about the founding fathers at the door."[143] He noted "We're telling the story of old, dead white men but we're using actors of color, and that makes the story more immediate and more accessible to a contemporary audience."[144]


The pro-immigration message of Hamilton is at the forefront, as the show revolves around the life of one of the Founding Fathers of the United States, Alexander Hamilton, and how he made his mark in American politics as an immigrant. Instead of being characterized as a white person, Alexander Hamilton's immigrant status would be referenced throughout the whole show, alongside with the virtue and prowess of Hamilton ("by working a lot harder, by being a lot smarter, by being a self-starter", described in the show's opening), in order to foster a positive image of immigrants.[145] Alongside this, the casting of Black, Latino, and Asian American leads allowed audiences to literally view America as a nation of immigrants, with the intention of showing how irrelevant the Founding Fathers' whiteness is to their claim on the country.[146]
"Hamilton is a story about America, and the most beautiful thing about it is... it's told by such a diverse cast with a such diverse styles of music", according to Renee Elise Goldsberry, who played Angelica Schuyler. "We have the opportunity to reclaim a history that some of us don't necessarily think is our own."[147] Miranda has stated that he is "totally open" to women playing the Founding Fathers.[148] Casting for the British production is expected to feature predominantly black British artists.[149][150]



Historical accuracy



Chronology and events


Although Hamilton was based on historical events and people, Miranda did use some dramatic license in retelling the story. For example, while Angelica did have a strong relationship with Hamilton, it was exaggerated in the show. During "Satisfied", Angelica explains why Hamilton is not suitable for her despite wanting him. In particular, she states, "I'm a girl in a world in which my only job is to marry rich. My father has no sons so I'm the one who has to social climb for one." In actuality, Angelica had less pressure on her to do this. Philip Schuyler actually had fifteen children, including two sons who survived into adulthood (one of whom was New York State Assemblyman Philip Jeremiah Schuyler), and Angelica had eloped with John Barker Church three years before she met Hamilton at her sister's wedding, when she was already mother of two of her eight children with Church.[151] Miranda stated that he chose to do this because it is stronger dramatically if Angelica is available but cannot marry him.[152][153][154]


In addition, in Act I, Aaron Burr's role in Hamilton's life is overstated, and much of the early interactions between the two men in the show are fictionalized. For example, while Burr was present at the Battle of Monmouth, Burr did not serve as Charles Lee's second in his duel with John Laurens as seen in "Ten Duel Commandments"; Lee's second was Evan Edwards.[155] Hamilton also never approached Burr to help write The Federalist Papers as portrayed in "Non-Stop".[156]


During Act I, the character of Aaron Burr says that "...Martha Washington named her feral tomcat after him! [Hamilton]", to which Alexander Hamilton replies: "That's true!"[157] In fact, it is false. The idea of Hamilton as a serial adulterer has been one of the biggest mischaracterizations of the real Alexander Hamilton for two centuries, with celebrated authors repeating the story over and over again, notwithstanding that the sexual connotation of tomcat as a womanizer did not appear in dictionaries until the first half of the 20th century. The "tomcat" story has been previously discredited by author Stephen Knott,[158] and refuted by historian and author Michael E. Newton at the "Alexander Hamilton Discoveries and Findings" talk held by the Alexander Hamilton Awareness Society at Liberty Hall (Kean University) as part of the 2016 CelebrateHAMILTON events.[159][160]


In Act II, there are multiple inaccuracies throughout Hamilton's decline, probably due to time constraints and narrative arc. While it is true that John Adams and Hamilton did not particularly get along, John Adams did not fire Hamilton as told in the show. Hamilton tendered his resignation from his position as Secretary of the Treasury on December 1, 1794,[161] two years before Adams became president. However, Hamilton remained close friends with Washington and highly influential in the political sphere.[162] Additionally, Jefferson, Madison and Burr did not approach Hamilton about his affair; it was actually James Monroe, Frederick Muhlenberg and Abraham Venable in December 1792.[163] Monroe was a close friend of Jefferson's and shared the information of Hamilton's affair with him. In the Summer of 1797, journalist James T. Callender broke the story of Hamilton's infidelity. Hamilton blamed Monroe, and the altercation nearly ended in a duel.[164] With nothing left to do, Hamilton then published The Reynolds Pamphlet.[165] The impact of the pamphlet’s publication is exaggerated, as it was actually the later publication of a pamphlet criticizing Adams during the election of 1800 (referenced in “The Adams Administration”) that effectively ended Hamilton’s political career.


In "Take a Break", Philip Hamilton, at age 9, claims, "I have a sister, but I want a little brother". Philip already had two younger brothers at the time: Alexander Hamilton Jr. and James Alexander Hamilton. On the same song, Angelica sends a letter to Hamilton, revealing she would come back to America from Europe for the summer. She didn't send such a letter, and remained in her home.


In "Blow Us All Away", George Eacker and Philip engage in a duel, before the events of the 1800 presidential election. The duel actually occurred in 1801, with Philip Hamilton dying on November 24. In the song, Eacker fires on Philip at the count of seven, while what happened in real-life was quite the opposite; both men refused to fire for over a minute before Eacker shot Philip in the hips.[166]


Lastly, it was not the presidential election of 1800 that led to Burr and Hamilton's duel. Burr did become Jefferson's vice-president, but when Jefferson decided to not run with Burr for reelection in 1804, Burr opted to run for Governor of New York instead. Burr lost to Morgan Lewis in a landslide. Afterwards, a letter was published in The Albany Register from Charles D. Cooper to Philip Schuyler, claiming that Hamilton called Burr "a dangerous man, and one who ought not be trusted with the reins of government", and that he knew of "a still more despicable opinion which General Hamilton has expressed of Mr. Burr".[167] This led to the letters between Burr and Hamilton as seen in the show in "Your Obedient Servant".



Critical analysis and scholarship


The show has been critiqued for a simplistic depiction of Hamilton and vilification of Jefferson. Joanne B. Freeman, a history professor at Yale,[168] contrasted the show's Hamilton to the "real Hamilton [who] was a mass of contradictions: an immigrant who sometimes distrusted immigrants, a revolutionary who placed a supreme value on law and order, a man who distrusted the rumblings of the masses yet preached his politics to them more frequently and passionately than many of his more democracy-friendly fellows".[169]


Australian historian Shane White found the framing of the show's story "troubling", stating that he and many historian colleagues "would like to imagine that Hamilton is a last convulsion of the founding father mythology".[170] According to White, Miranda's depiction of the founding of the United States "infuses new life into an older view of American history" that centered on the Founding Fathers, instead of joining the many historians who were "attempting to get away from the Great Men story" by incorporating "ordinary people, African-Americans, Native Americans and women" into a "more inclusive and nuanced" historical narrative in which Hamilton has a "cameo rather than leading role".[170]


Rutgers University professor Lyra Monteiro criticized the show's multi-ethnic casting as obscuring a complete lack of identifiable enslaved or free persons of color as characters in the show.[171] Monteiro identified other commentators, such as Ishmael Reed, who criticized the show for making Hamilton and other historical personages appear more progressive on racial injustice than they really were.[171] According to Reed, "[Hamilton's] reputation has been shored up as an abolitionist and someone who was opposed to slavery," which Reed stated was untrue.[172]


In The Baffler, policy analyst Matt Stoller criticized the musical's portrayal of Hamilton as an idealist committed to democratic principles, in contrast to what he characterized as the historical record of Hamilton's reactionary, anti-democratic politics and legacy.[173] For example, Stoller cited Hamilton as a leader involved in the Newburgh conspiracy (a military coup plot against the Continental Congress in 1783); his development of a national financial system which, in Stoller's view, empowered the plutocratic elite; and his use of military force, indefinite detention, and mass arrests against dissenters during the Whiskey Rebellion of 1791.[173] In 2007, history writer William Hogeland criticized Chernow's biography of Hamilton on similar grounds in the Boston Review.[174]


In 2018, Historians on Hamilton: How a Blockbuster Musical Is Restaging America's Past was published. Fifteen historians of early America authored essays on ways the musical both engages with, and sometimes misinterprets history.[175]



Use in education


KQED News wrote of a "growing number of intrepid U.S. history teachers...who are harnessing the Hamilton phenomenon to inspire their students".[176] The Cabinet rap battles provide a way to engage students with topics that have traditionally been considered uninteresting.[176] An elective course for 11th and 12th graders on the musical Hamilton was held at the Ethical Culture Fieldston School in New York.[176] KQED News added that "Hamilton is especially galvanizing for the student who believes that stories about 18th century America are distant and irrelevant" as it shows the Founding Fathers were real humans with real feeling and real flaws, rather than "bloodless, two-dimensional cutouts who devoted their lives to abstract principles".[176] A high school teacher from the Bronx noted his students were "singing these songs the way they might sing the latest release from Drake or Adele".[177] One teacher focused on Hamilton's ability to write his way out of trouble and toward a higher plane of existence: "skilled writing is the clearest sign of scholarship—and the best way to rise up and alter your circumstance."[178]


Hamilton's producers have made a pledge to allow 20,000 New York City public high school students from low-income families to get subsidized tickets to see Hamilton on Broadway by reducing their tickets to $70 for students, and the Rockefeller Foundation provided $1.5 million to further lower ticket prices to $10 per student.[179][180] The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History created a study guide to accompany the student-ticket program.[179][180]


Through a private grant, over the course of the 2017 school year nearly 20,000 Chicago Public School students got to see a special performance of the show, and some got to perform original songs on stage prior to the show.[181]


The website EducationWorld writes that Hamilton is "being praised for its revitalization of interest in civic education".[182]Northwestern University announced plans to offer course work in 2017 inspired by Hamilton, in history, Latino studies, and interdisciplinary studies.[183]


In 2016, Moraine Valley Community College started a Hamilton appreciation movement, Straight Outta Hamilton, hosting panels and events that talk about the musical itself and relate them to current events.[184][185]



Legacy and impact



$10 bill


In 2015, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced a redesign to the $10 bill, with plans to replace Hamilton with a then-undecided woman from American history. Because of Hamilton's surging popularity, almost exclusively due to the musical, United States Treasury Secretary Jack Lew reversed the plans to replace Hamilton's portrait, instead deciding to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.[186]



Hamilton: The Revolution



External video

Presentation by Jeremy McCarter on Hamilton: The Revolution, June 11, 2016, C-SPAN

On April 12, 2016, Miranda and Jeremy McCarter's book, Hamilton: The Revolution, was released, detailing Hamilton's journey from an idea to a successful Broadway musical. It includes an inside look at not only Alexander Hamilton's revolution, but the cultural revolution that permeates the show. It also has footnotes from Miranda and stories from behind the scenes of the show.[187]



Hamilton's America


After premiering on the New York Film Festival on October 1, 2016, PBS' Great Performances exhibited on October 21, 2016 the documentary Hamilton's America. Directed by Alex Horwitz, it "delves even deeper into the creation of the show, revealing Miranda's process of absorbing and then adapting Hamilton's epic story into groundbreaking musical theater. Further fleshing out the story is newly shot footage of the New York production with its original cast, trips to historic locations such as Mt. Vernon and Valley Forge with Miranda and other cast members, and a range of interviews with prominent personalities, experts, politicians, and musicians."[188] The film featured interviews with American historians and Hamilton authorities.[189]



Hamilton: The Exhibition


Hamilton: The Exhibition is a planned traveling interactive museum, which will focus on the history concerning the life of Alexander Hamilton and also the musical.[190] It is to debut in Chicago in April 2019.[191][192]



2016 Vice President–elect Pence controversy


Following a performance on November 18, 2016, with Vice President-elect Mike Pence in the audience, Brandon Victor Dixon addressed Pence from the stage with a statement jointly written by the cast, show creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and producer Jeffrey Seller.[193] Dixon began by quieting the audience, and stated:


Vice President-elect Pence, we welcome you and we truly thank you for joining us here at Hamilton: An American Musical, we really do. We, sir,—we—are the diverse America who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us, our planet, our children, our parents, or defend us and uphold our inalienable rights, sir. But we truly hope that this show has inspired you to uphold our American values and to work on behalf of all of us. All of us. Again, we truly thank you truly for seeing this show, this wonderful American story told by a diverse group of men and women of different colors, creeds and orientations.[193]


Pence listened to the expression of concern about President-elect Donald Trump's upcoming administration and later expressed that he was not offended.[194] However, Trump demanded an apology[195] for what he described, on Twitter, as the cast having "harassed" Pence.[196] This led to an online campaign called "#BoycottHamilton", which became widely mocked as the show was already sold-out months in advance.[197] Trump was criticized by The Washington Post, who noted the division between white and non-white America in the 2016 Presidential election and suggested Trump could have offered "assurances that he would be a president for all Americans—that he would respect everybody regardless of race or gender or creed";[198] instead, as Presidential historian Robert Dallek expressed, Trump's Twitter response was a "striking act of divisiveness by an incoming president struggling to heal the nation after a bitter election",[198] with the Hamilton cast a proxy for those fearful of Trump's policies and rhetoric. Jeffrey Seller, the show's lead producer, said that while Trump has not seen Hamilton or inquired about tickets, he is "welcome to attend".[199]



Parodies


In April 2016, Jeb! The Musical appeared on the Internet with Jeb Bush in the place of Alexander Hamilton,[200][201] with political figures like Donald Trump and Chris Christie holding supporting roles.[202] A staged reading, given "just as much preparation as Jeb's campaign", was staged at Northwestern University in June of that year.[203] The parody was crowdsourced, with contributions coming from a range of writers. A number of writers were drawn from Yale University, Boston University, McGill University and the University of Michigan. These writers met in a Facebook group named "Post Aesthetics".[204]


In 2016, Gerard Alessandrini, creator of Forbidden Broadway, wrote the revue Spamilton, which premiered at the Triad Theater in New York and also played at the Royal George Theatre in Chicago. It parodies Hamilton and other Broadway shows and caricatures various Broadway stars.[205][206]


On October 12, 2016, the American sitcom Modern Family released the episode "Weathering Heights". The episode features a scene where Manny applies for college. To do so he records a parody of "Alexander Hamilton" as part of his application, complete with rewritten lyrics to accompany to his own life. It is revealed that most of the other applications are also Hamilton parodies.[207]



Live stage filming


On July 24, 2018, it was learned that a filmed version of a 2016 stage performance with the original cast was being bid on by major movie studios.[208]



Film adaptation


On February 10, 2017, Miranda revealed that In the Heights book writer Quiara Alegría Hudes wrote a script for a film adaptation of Hamilton, but reassured that, while a film would be made someday, it would not happen for years, as he wanted audiences to watch the stage musical first.[209]



See also






  • 1776, a 1969 musical about the signing of the Declaration of Independence


  • Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, a 2010 historical rock musical about America's seventh President, Andrew Jackson, and the founding of the Democratic Party


References




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Further reading



  • Miranda, Lin-Manuel; McCarter, Jeremy (2016). Hamilton: The Revolution. Hachette. ISBN 978-1-4555-3974-1.


  • Thelwell, Chinua (2016). "Chapter 9: Who tells your story? Hamilton, Future aesthetics and Haiti". In Thelwell, Chinua. Theater and Cultural Politics for a New World: An Anthology. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-39879-0.


External links






  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata


  • Hamilton at the Internet Broadway Database


  • Hamilton at the Internet Off-Broadway Database











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