“Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen

Charles Dickens’s work has been taken and adapted for many different ends. Quite a lot of attention has been given to film and television versions of the novels, many of which are very distinguished. The stage and screen musical based on his work, essentially a product of the last fifty years, has b...

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Main Author: Anthony Barker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2017-10-01
Series:Text Matters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/2241
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spelling doaj-529231523a0746198b5d29be1be1ae862020-11-25T03:16:37ZengLodz University PressText Matters2083-29312084-574X2017-10-01724125710.1515/texmat-2017-00132241“Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and ScreenAnthony Barker0University of AveiroCharles Dickens’s work has been taken and adapted for many different ends. Quite a lot of attention has been given to film and television versions of the novels, many of which are very distinguished. The stage and screen musical based on his work, essentially a product of the last fifty years, has been neither as studied nor as respected. This paper looks at the con­nection between Dickens’s novels, the celebration of “London-ness” and its articulation in popular forms of working-class music and song. It will argue that potentially unpromising texts were taken and used to articulate pride and a sense of community for groups representing the disadvantaged of the East End and, more specifically, for first-generation Jewish settlers in London. This is all the more surprising as it was in the first instance through depictions of Oliver Twist and the problematic figure of Fagin that an Anglo-Jewish sensibility was able to express itself. Other texts by Dickens, notably Pickwick Papers, A Christmas Carol and The Old Curiosity Shop, were also adapted to musical forms with varying results, but the period of their heyday was relatively short, as their use of traditional and communitarian forms gave place in the people’s affection to manufactured pop/rock and operetta forms. I will argue that this decline was partly the product of changing London demographics and shifts in theatre economics and partly of the appropriation of Dickens by the academy.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/2241dickensmusicalstagescreenoliver!
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony Barker
spellingShingle Anthony Barker
“Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
Text Matters
dickens
musical
stage
screen
oliver!
author_facet Anthony Barker
author_sort Anthony Barker
title “Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
title_short “Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
title_full “Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
title_fullStr “Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
title_full_unstemmed “Consider Yourself One of Us”: The Dickens Musical on Stage and Screen
title_sort “consider yourself one of us”: the dickens musical on stage and screen
publisher Lodz University Press
series Text Matters
issn 2083-2931
2084-574X
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Charles Dickens’s work has been taken and adapted for many different ends. Quite a lot of attention has been given to film and television versions of the novels, many of which are very distinguished. The stage and screen musical based on his work, essentially a product of the last fifty years, has been neither as studied nor as respected. This paper looks at the con­nection between Dickens’s novels, the celebration of “London-ness” and its articulation in popular forms of working-class music and song. It will argue that potentially unpromising texts were taken and used to articulate pride and a sense of community for groups representing the disadvantaged of the East End and, more specifically, for first-generation Jewish settlers in London. This is all the more surprising as it was in the first instance through depictions of Oliver Twist and the problematic figure of Fagin that an Anglo-Jewish sensibility was able to express itself. Other texts by Dickens, notably Pickwick Papers, A Christmas Carol and The Old Curiosity Shop, were also adapted to musical forms with varying results, but the period of their heyday was relatively short, as their use of traditional and communitarian forms gave place in the people’s affection to manufactured pop/rock and operetta forms. I will argue that this decline was partly the product of changing London demographics and shifts in theatre economics and partly of the appropriation of Dickens by the academy.
topic dickens
musical
stage
screen
oliver!
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/article/view/2241
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