Get the picture that there is a marketing budget behind this one? Trust me, there are more banner ads for this one than Weight Watchers on January 1.
Using the classic show within a show format, Smash will showcase the Great White Way through a group of characters preparing a musical about the life of Marilyn Monroe (an exceptional piece of timing in light of Michelle Williams’ Golden Globe-winning performance as the iconic movie star thrusting her back in to the mainstream dialogue).
And the question on Broadway devotees’ lips is whether the hopeful success of Smash will translate in to higher grosses and greater audience attendances for the real-life shows on which these storylines are based. That the soaring voices, breathtaking dance routines and show-mances will fuel a passion for the real-life version. And even more so, make Broadway a family talking point and eventual excursion for more and more people.
It certainly won’t hurt the show – although its greenlighting from NBC was perhaps his biggest gift – to have Spielberg on board as an Executive Producer. Sweetly, its come to light that before Spielberg captivated the world with E.T., he was learning the ropes of his industry the old-fashioned way as a stage manager. It is allegedly these experiences, witnessing those unable-to-be-described live theatre moments that he wanted to reignite in Smash.
The buzz is this will be the “real” story of the Broadway life, with serious fans who’ve previewed the show saying it will contrast strongly with Glee (filmed in Los Angeles, more about the importance of Smash‘s New York home lately), which is now too fantastical and young for true Broadway fans and that it will showcase the industry in a way they have been craving.
The score and lyrics is the work of the beloved Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, the also-real-life couple who have become Broadway Royalty from their hit Hairspray as well as their collaborations with the indomitable Bette Midler.
For those in the U.S., the first episode can be watched right now online at their Facebook page amongst other websites. On free-to-air TV, it will debut the day after the SuperBowl which in television terms, is just one step behind being shown at halftime. For Australian fans, the show is expected to start on February 27th.
The build-up to the premiere has been epic – previews and mumblings about storylines, cast and songs starting last May – almost a year before what will be its eventual debut. It’s all part of a brand new “thang” called “brand-defining television” – networks desperate to build their audience well in advance to ensure success. And part of the convenience of experiencing epic moments from the comfort of your own home.
These huge investments have been a boom for those in advertising circles – Smash is a constant player on its home network, NBC, not to mention a brilliant billboard in Times Square and as previously mentioned, good luck logging on to a theatre website without catching a banner glimpse of a character, a scene or the blinding lights that have become its trademark.
But will the success of Smash equal the success of the real-life musicals the TV show strives to emulate? Very few Broadway shows, if any, have the extent of a marketing budget as this prime-time piece of work. Television execs claim that viewers now have the same expectations of television that they do of movies. Will that mean that the multi-million dollar ad campaigns and production budgets of a Smash raise the expectations of theatregoers who dream of live shows looking as crisp and clean and perfectly edited as what they have seen on TV?
There is also something innately glamorous and aspirational about scenes filmed on the streets of New York City. Sex and the City might have started it but so many of the shows filmed in this concrete jungle lead to the city becoming their silent character, an intangible that is innately relatable and yet so foreign to so many. Shows that create a heartland in their home city of New York often have success as well, as winning over the jaded New Yorker is a good sign that the rest of the world will return suit. Whether New Yorkers feel a bond to a Broadway story will be interesting, it remains to be seen whether they feel it is real enough to reflect their gritty yet glitzy lives.
To be honest, if I see one more ad for the NBC show, or the projection of its hit status, I might boycott it but maybe the saturation marketing tactic will be everyone’s gain from Broadway to NBC to New York City.
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