camp is a lifestyle choice. Cock or mimsy is a hardwired sexual preference.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:39, archived)
I get very camp when drunk. I'm usually all straight-acting and that. But I do love a good musical theatre show.
I don't like musicals though.
See, I know the difference between the two. Great, eh?
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:40, archived)
I take it you'd say that Les Mis is musical theatre, but, say, Annie Hall is a musical, right?
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:45, archived)
Music Theatre is when the story continues in the songs (like big decisions, changes, etc). Les Mis, Wicked and Ha'Penny Opera is full of "decision songs".
Musicals is basically when dialogue happens, then a song confirming the dialogue. If you took the songs out of musicals and just keeps the dialogue in the middle, the story would still make sense. Grease, Joseph, The Sound of Musicfor example. The other type of musical is where it is essentially a list of songs which don't really tell a story. Cats is a good example of this.
However, some musicals have both. Sondheim loves writing musicals where the first act is a Musical and the second act is Music Theatre. A great example of this is Into the Woods.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:51, archived)
The DVD I have doesn't seem to have much of it.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:52, archived)
"Skimbleshanks, the railway cat, the cat of the railway train". What?
Pretty women in tight furry outfits, though.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:58, archived)
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 10:01, archived)
The nearest you get are the racial slurs with the Pekinese dogs and things.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 10:06, archived)
the Child-Stealing Feline Yid Bolshevik.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 10:32, archived)
so I'm taking your word for it, however you realise that sounds awfully like "stroppy highly-strung camp buggers splitting the tiniest hair possible in an attempt to make themselves sound more high-brow" ?
A bit like the whole "it's not Opera unless it's sung in Italian" argument.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:54, archived)
When I say "I prefer Music Theatre over Musicals" just means "I prefer to pay £35 for a ticket and see a story, rather than just see a camp pantomime which is essentially glorified karaoke". I wanna see acting. Not just your typical "teeth and tits" diva who wants the big musical number to herself at the end.
(, Fri 3 Jul 2009, 9:55, archived)