Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Music
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts112/v4/14/17/0d/14170d79-0bc8-120a-6aa9-ad28ec4b1518/mza_7635465573558977229.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Smash'ed
Broadway Podcast Network
34 episodes
3 weeks ago
Welcome to Smash'ed, a tongue-in-cheek recap of what is television’s most detailed depiction of the theatre industry. And yes, we’re still talking about Smash, the NBC series that chronicled the creation of a Broadway musical and all of the drama that ensued along the way. Hosted by Aaron J. Albano (Newsies, Hamilton) and Mo Brady (The Ensemblist) Smash'ed goes back episode by episode to see how this supposed love letter to Broadway has held up over the past decade. In each episode, we’re looking to find the answers to these three questions:Did it represent Broadway then? Does it represent Broadway now? Is it any good?
Show more...
Performing Arts
Arts,
TV & Film,
Visual Arts,
TV Reviews
RSS
All content for Smash'ed is the property of Broadway Podcast Network and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Welcome to Smash'ed, a tongue-in-cheek recap of what is television’s most detailed depiction of the theatre industry. And yes, we’re still talking about Smash, the NBC series that chronicled the creation of a Broadway musical and all of the drama that ensued along the way. Hosted by Aaron J. Albano (Newsies, Hamilton) and Mo Brady (The Ensemblist) Smash'ed goes back episode by episode to see how this supposed love letter to Broadway has held up over the past decade. In each episode, we’re looking to find the answers to these three questions:Did it represent Broadway then? Does it represent Broadway now? Is it any good?
Show more...
Performing Arts
Arts,
TV & Film,
Visual Arts,
TV Reviews
https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/c398bfde-d692-11ea-a21e-7b33fc09888a/image/uploads_2F1593966768422-o46y5ubr6tf-3795b782ada34e5e1c1d08bceddee16b_2FSmashed-6.jpg?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&max-w=3000&max-h=3000&fit=crop&auto=format,compress
#340 - Smash’ed (Season 2, Episode 13)
Smash'ed
25 minutes
5 years ago
#340 - Smash’ed (Season 2, Episode 13)
“The Producers” premiered on April 27, 2013. It was written by Becky Mode, whose last episode of Smash was season 2 episode 7, Musical Chairs, and was directed by Tricia Brock, whose last episode was season 2 episode 9, The Parents. The viewership dropped again by 20,000 viewers, to a total of 1.89 million. We had a lot of music this episode, mainly from Hit List! Our one song from Bombshell was an excerpt of Shaiman and Whitman’s “20th Century Fox Mambo” performed by Megan Hilty (and Kathie Lee Gifford?), and our one cover was Jeff Buckley’s “The Last Goodbye,” sung by Andy Mientus. The remainder of our songs come from Hit List: we hear excerpts from Pasek and Paul’s “Rewrite this Story,” and Joe Iconis’ “Broadway Here I Come.” Two new songs were another by Joe Iconis called “The Goodbye Song,” and “Don’t Let Me Know,” written by Lucie Silvas and Jamie Alexander Hartman. Without much competition for new musicals on Broadway this season, Bombshell is poised to make a splash at the Tony Awards in June. But with slow ticket sales, Eileen is going to have to pray for a miracle to keep Bombshell open til June. So she is whoring out Ivy for press events right and left, anything from the Today show to an appearance at the Brighton Beach Senior Center.  Adding insult to injury, producers Daryl Roth and Kevin McCollum are duking it out with ten other producers ready to write a check to move Hit List to Broadway this season. But there may not be a show to move if Jimmy shows up late and high for photo calls. Derek attempts to solve the Jimmy problem by hiring former Bombshell ensemblist Sam Strickland to understudy him.  Things are looking up for Julia, with the announcement her new non-musical version of Gatsby going to Manhattan Theatre Workshop next season. Now that Tom isn’t in line to direct the City of Angels revival, he wants Julia to create the show with him. The conflict comes to a head at one of Ivy’s many press events: Julia feels Tom told her under no uncertain terms he only wants to direct, while Tom believes Julia is only interested in being a writing partner when she gets her way. With tonight seeming to become the most important night in Hit List’s life, Derek gives Jimmy an ultimatum: shape up or ship out. But Jimmy doesn’t take the threat seriously, showing up late onstage, making up choreography and causing an onstage accident that leaves Karen with a bleeding gash. The performance is the last straw for Derek, firing Jimmy on the spot. But the journey for Hit List may be dead in the water anyway, as every potential investor is scared off because the show isn’t financially viable enough to make it on Broadway. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Smash'ed
Welcome to Smash'ed, a tongue-in-cheek recap of what is television’s most detailed depiction of the theatre industry. And yes, we’re still talking about Smash, the NBC series that chronicled the creation of a Broadway musical and all of the drama that ensued along the way. Hosted by Aaron J. Albano (Newsies, Hamilton) and Mo Brady (The Ensemblist) Smash'ed goes back episode by episode to see how this supposed love letter to Broadway has held up over the past decade. In each episode, we’re looking to find the answers to these three questions:Did it represent Broadway then? Does it represent Broadway now? Is it any good?