
Episode 1
A look at how British musicals reclaimed the West End from American domination after WWII, with contributions from Andrew Lloyd Webber, Cameron Mackintosh and Tim Rice.
Three-part series which tells how the British musical became a driving force behind musical theatre around the world - a tale of titanic shows, phenomenal daring, epic rivalries, prodigious talent and gargantuan fortunes, all set in just a single square mile.
The first episode looks at how, from unpromising beginnings in the period after the Second World War, British musicals went on to reclaim the West End from American domination. Highlights include the quintessentially British show The Boyfriend and its failure to conquer Broadway, the riches-to-rags story of Lionel Bart and his masterpiece Oliver, and the extraordinary partnership of Sir Tim Rice and Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber, from the moment they burst onto the scene with Jesus Christ Superstar until their final collaboration of the 1970s, Evita.
Featuring first-hand accounts from the great and the good of musical theatre including Andrew Lloyd Webber, Sir Cameron Mackintosh, Sir Tim Rice, Elaine Paige, Ron Moody, Bill Kenwright, Sheila Hancock, Harold Prince, Robert Stigwood, Tommy Steele, Paul Nicholas and Willy Russell.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
You are at the first episode
Next
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Producer | Stephen Franklin |
| Director | Stephen Franklin |
| Executive Producer | Juliet Rice |
| Participant | Andrew Lloyd Webber |
| Participant | Cameron Mackintosh |
| Participant | Tim Rice |
| Participant | Elaine Paige |
| Participant | Ron Moody |
| Participant | Bill Kenwright |
| Participant | Sheila Hancock |
| Participant | Harold Prince |
| Participant | Robert Stigwood |
| Participant | Tommy Steele |
| Participant | Paul Nicholas |
| Participant | Willy Russell |
Broadcasts
- Tue 3 Jan 201221:00
- Wed 4 Jan 201200:30
- Wed 4 Jan 201203:00
- Thu 5 Jan 201223:00
- Sun 8 Jan 201219:15
- Sun 8 Jan 201223:00
- Sat 25 Feb 201220:20
- Thu 26 Jul 201221:30
- Fri 27 Jul 201201:00
- Fri 11 Sep 201522:00
- Sun 13 Sep 201500:25
- Sat 3 Sep 201622:30