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Place for Us: Essay on the Broadway Musical Paperback – September 1, 2000
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D. A. Miller
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D. A. Miller
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Print length160 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherHarvard University Press
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Publication dateSeptember 1, 2000
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Dimensions5 x 0.33 x 8 inches
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ISBN-100674003888
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ISBN-13978-0674003880
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Place for Us takes the protective colorations of the Broadway musical--its happy-as-the-day-is-long heterosexuality, its promise that wouldn't-it-be-loverly? cravings for happiness will always be satisfied--and strips them away to reveal the gay world that lies beneath, rife with fascinating sublimations and subtexts. The shape of D.A. Miller's argument and the passions that impel it are in perfect accord, which is just what we ask of the best kinds of musical numbers. This book is like a musical score that the genre has yet to catch up with.”―Margo Jefferson, New York Times
“Place For Us...explores the ways that [the Broadway musical] medium managed to provide a secret language of emotion for a growing underground of gay men.”―New Yorker
“Could it be that since the Broadway musical is now safely dead--record ticket sales and Disney extravaganzas notwithstanding--it's finally safe to cast a historical and critical eye on this peculiar American art form? Miller rises to the task with an awe-inspiring exuberance--let's just say that by the time one reaches the end of this 143-page tour de force, one feels as audience must have back when they were first steamrolled by Ethel Merman as Rose in 1959's Gypsy (an epochal performance that Miller here dissects at length). At the heart of this extended essay is the complex relationship between gay men and the Broadway show, which began in many an American basement during the 1950s and 60s, where solitary boys would perform along with their cast albums, and ends with a chorus of aging show queens singing along in a piano bar. Miller explores the creative tension that allowed the musical to both acknowledge and deny its gay audience and shows how the performance of show tunes by a generation of homosexuals became a ritual reenactment of the central dilemmas of gay identity...[This is an] entirely fascinating read.”―Tom Beer, Out Magazine
“[This book] anatomizes a sentimental and cliche-ridden mass-cultural form that Miller frankly admits no politically savvy individual would willingly embrace. Instead, he argues, the classic Broadway musical chooses its audience, selecting,as a tigress does the slowest antelope in the herd, gay men as the easiest prey...Miller has a knack for making good points with good jokes...But Miller's humor here shouldn't surprise us. Given the compromises required of a professor writing about such an abasing medium as Broadway, he carries the show with a bravura worthy of Merman herself. And like La Merm, he compels us at the same time to take his song and dance in earnest.”―Michael Trask, Lingua Franca
“Like Kleist on marionettes, like Rilke on dolls, like Baudelaire on toys, Miller on the Broadway musical takes a beloved object in danger of being left on the playroom floor and turns it into a ravishing treatise on aesthetics.”―Elaine Scarry, author of The Body in Pain
“D. A. Miller has looked long and hard into the glorious, dangerous, and falsely flattering mirror that is the Broadway musical. This self-portrait of a man who measures out his life in show tunes is obsessively well-informed, thrillingly provocative, and deeply felt; this is one queen who sure knows how to deliver her tune. Magnificent.”―Neil Bartlett, author of the musical Night after Night and Artistic Director of the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith
“Through this autobiographical-analytical meditation on what is specifically 'gay' about the Broadway musical and the pleasures of not explicitly knowing it, D. A. Miller has written the words to an exquisite Proustian musical sung by post-Stonewall man to his own juvenile self. Miller doesn't just 'know the words': in this brilliant and moving evocation of 'the unconsoled relations to want,' it could be said that the words know him.”―Barbara Johnson, author of The Feminist Difference
“Place for Us shows that a gay male investment in musicals, whether closeted or disclosed in a piano bar, is solicited and phobically concealed by musicals themselves. The analysis, exceptional for its sensitivity to both the form of the musical and the culture of its reception, culminates in a reading of Gypsy that is a tour de force if ever there was one. But there's more: the essay's own form and style are endlessly surprising, combining rigor with personal reflection in a way reminiscent of Barthes by Barthes or Minima Moralia. Miller has written a book that is movingly personal without ever being merely so. It is a model of cultural analysis, a witty and beautiful masterpiece of queer criticism.”―Michael Warner, author of Letters of the Republic
“D. A. Miller's essay is a poetic, personal, idiosyncratic, erotic, and political reverie on gay men's relationship to the Broadway musical...Place for Us, with wit and not a little pain, teases out the contradictions of late twentieth-century gay male identity in relation to this 'frankly interruptive,' 'vulgar' form. Miller is entirely of his text, yet also anthropologically curious about the rituals of gay male culture.”―Stacy Wolf, Theatre Journal
“Place For Us...explores the ways that [the Broadway musical] medium managed to provide a secret language of emotion for a growing underground of gay men.”―New Yorker
“Could it be that since the Broadway musical is now safely dead--record ticket sales and Disney extravaganzas notwithstanding--it's finally safe to cast a historical and critical eye on this peculiar American art form? Miller rises to the task with an awe-inspiring exuberance--let's just say that by the time one reaches the end of this 143-page tour de force, one feels as audience must have back when they were first steamrolled by Ethel Merman as Rose in 1959's Gypsy (an epochal performance that Miller here dissects at length). At the heart of this extended essay is the complex relationship between gay men and the Broadway show, which began in many an American basement during the 1950s and 60s, where solitary boys would perform along with their cast albums, and ends with a chorus of aging show queens singing along in a piano bar. Miller explores the creative tension that allowed the musical to both acknowledge and deny its gay audience and shows how the performance of show tunes by a generation of homosexuals became a ritual reenactment of the central dilemmas of gay identity...[This is an] entirely fascinating read.”―Tom Beer, Out Magazine
“[This book] anatomizes a sentimental and cliche-ridden mass-cultural form that Miller frankly admits no politically savvy individual would willingly embrace. Instead, he argues, the classic Broadway musical chooses its audience, selecting,as a tigress does the slowest antelope in the herd, gay men as the easiest prey...Miller has a knack for making good points with good jokes...But Miller's humor here shouldn't surprise us. Given the compromises required of a professor writing about such an abasing medium as Broadway, he carries the show with a bravura worthy of Merman herself. And like La Merm, he compels us at the same time to take his song and dance in earnest.”―Michael Trask, Lingua Franca
“Like Kleist on marionettes, like Rilke on dolls, like Baudelaire on toys, Miller on the Broadway musical takes a beloved object in danger of being left on the playroom floor and turns it into a ravishing treatise on aesthetics.”―Elaine Scarry, author of The Body in Pain
“D. A. Miller has looked long and hard into the glorious, dangerous, and falsely flattering mirror that is the Broadway musical. This self-portrait of a man who measures out his life in show tunes is obsessively well-informed, thrillingly provocative, and deeply felt; this is one queen who sure knows how to deliver her tune. Magnificent.”―Neil Bartlett, author of the musical Night after Night and Artistic Director of the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith
“Through this autobiographical-analytical meditation on what is specifically 'gay' about the Broadway musical and the pleasures of not explicitly knowing it, D. A. Miller has written the words to an exquisite Proustian musical sung by post-Stonewall man to his own juvenile self. Miller doesn't just 'know the words': in this brilliant and moving evocation of 'the unconsoled relations to want,' it could be said that the words know him.”―Barbara Johnson, author of The Feminist Difference
“Place for Us shows that a gay male investment in musicals, whether closeted or disclosed in a piano bar, is solicited and phobically concealed by musicals themselves. The analysis, exceptional for its sensitivity to both the form of the musical and the culture of its reception, culminates in a reading of Gypsy that is a tour de force if ever there was one. But there's more: the essay's own form and style are endlessly surprising, combining rigor with personal reflection in a way reminiscent of Barthes by Barthes or Minima Moralia. Miller has written a book that is movingly personal without ever being merely so. It is a model of cultural analysis, a witty and beautiful masterpiece of queer criticism.”―Michael Warner, author of Letters of the Republic
“D. A. Miller's essay is a poetic, personal, idiosyncratic, erotic, and political reverie on gay men's relationship to the Broadway musical...Place for Us, with wit and not a little pain, teases out the contradictions of late twentieth-century gay male identity in relation to this 'frankly interruptive,' 'vulgar' form. Miller is entirely of his text, yet also anthropologically curious about the rituals of gay male culture.”―Stacy Wolf, Theatre Journal
From the Back Cover
It used to be a secret that, in its postwar heyday, the Broadway musical recruited a massive underground following of gay men. But though this once silent social fact currently spawns jokes that every sitcom viewer is presumed to be in on, it has not necessarily become better understood.
In Place for Us, D. A. Miller probes what all the jokes laugh off: the embarrassingly mutual affinity between a "general" cultural form and the despised "minority" that was in fact that form's implicit audience. If the postwar musical may be called a "gay" genre, Miller demonstrates, this is because its regular but unpublicized work has been to indulge men in the spectacular thrills of a femininity become their own.
About the Author
D. A. Miller is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.
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Product details
- Publisher : Harvard University Press (September 1, 2000)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 160 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0674003888
- ISBN-13 : 978-0674003880
- Item Weight : 7.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.33 x 8 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#824,776 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #396 in Broadway & Musicals (Books)
- #408 in Musicals (Books)
- #443 in Performing Arts History & Criticism
- Customer Reviews:
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9 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 1999
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If you want to read the work of someone who's more in love with his own prose than concerned with making any point or sense, this is the book for you. His writing is thick and messy, his conclusions highly insulting to this gay man, and his analyses of shows ridiculous and ignorant. It seems he knows even less about his topic than he does about writing clearly. If this guy's an English professor, I pity his students...
7 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2000
This book is short but densely compacted with original and genuinely imaginative arguments as D.A. Miller proceeds to demystify the attraction and allure of Broadway musicals. Previously, books about this subject too often descended into nostalgic reminiscences of their authors' favourite shows and their most beloved divas; it was as though their love of musicals disarmed their ability to develop sustained critical interpretations of them. But Miller ingeniously builds his own nostalgia into a successful attempt to theorize contemporary attitudes to musical theatre. He takes the old cliche that the biggest fans of Broadway shows tend to be gay, and turns it on its head. He argues that gay men, like him, have not only responded enthusasistically to musical theatre but have also shaped and influenced its trends, diversions, and vagaries. He demonstrates this argument by recounting his personal history, from childhood (when he would sneak downstairs to a secluded part of his family home to listen to the latest cast recordings of shows such as 'Damn, Yankees!') to adulthood (when his relocation to New York City enabled him to frequent gay piano bars, where he joined other men in rousing renditions of showtunes). This autobiographical argumentation is strange enough; but rather than alienate his readers, Miller engages them by presenting his personal details as evidence of a wider cultural phenomenon - a phenomenon in which his own love of theatre is intimately bound up with his sexuality, his maturation, and his gradual coming-out of the closet. All this crescendos into a soaring, extended critical analysis of Miller's favourite musical, 'Gypsy', enveloping his interpretation with poetic, self-deprecatory, incisive prose while he simultaneously dissects his own responses - including his inclination towards not merely praising the originary divas such as Ethel Merman, but wishing to be them. Along the way, readers learn why Miller dislikes 'new' musicals such as 'La Cage Aux Folles' and 'Les Miserables'; how musicals are examples of 'pop culture' even though they are no longer 'popular' in mainstream society; and why Miller agrees with Ethel Merman's famous pronouncement that the big finale in 'Gypsy' - 'Rose's Turn' - is no less than a 'goddamn aria!'. Just as that showstopper is an 'aria', this book is an aromatic bouquet thrown in earnest praise of a much maligned art form.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 1999
In this volume D.A. Miller, as he did in its brilliant predecessor BRINGING OUT ROLAND BARTHES, does what few other academic writers, born with the moon in Barthes and Foucault rising, have been able to accomplish: he takes the work of these celebrated theorists further both in the name of and toward the understanding of pleasure. Hence his style gets the bad rap that all great gay displays receive, since it is willfully ostentatious, proud of its own capacity to desire, and as complicated in its elaboration as we imagine all of our individual desiring lives (real and fantasized) to be. Moreover, it refuses to testify to the so-called straightforward mode of criticism that blunt populists and people who can't stand gay men (imagine Paglia in both categories) moralistically rant about so tiresomely; instead, it uses language like a scalpel or, better yet, as the integrated musical uses song-and-dance: in only the most highly specificed, uniquely articulated manner required by the task at hand. This work is strange, difficult, tremendously thoughtful and, once a reader has taken the time to savor each of its gorgeous sentences, as satisyfing as a great night at the theater. Let me add that PLACE FOR US doubles as a powerful manifesto in the somewhat uneven tradition of post-Stonewall gay male writers, taking us to a place, for no one else but us, that had been impossible to imagine before we read it.
16 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2000
Part manifesto, part post-hoc diary of a current and former musical theater queen, this wordy and often rambling manuscript will be enjoyed by those who, like the author, can relate to a coming-of-age/coming out story set to the tune(s) of the Broadway musical. Those in academia will likely de-bunk the literary integrety of the author in much the same way that the people of River City kaboshed the "Think System" espoused by Professor Harold Hill. Indeed, the reader of A PLACE FOR US finds himself humming the "Minuet in G" as he makes his way through this clever and tune-full read. "La dee da dee da dee da dee da, la de da, la de da..."
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2003
A reviewer below -- though not as below as he deserves to be -- writes: "DA Miller is an old professor of mine, and this book is as insufferably pretentious as is the man himself...The only person stupid enough to say about this book that it's "Barthesian" is Professor Miller himself (who I actually suspect to be the author of the review below...)"
The bad faith inscribed in this "review" is evident enough, even if its history is obscure; my guess is that Miller gave this guy a B+ instead of the A he thought he deserved. But for the record: Miller did NOT write the review that called his approach Barthesian. I did. And, by the way, I'm another former student of Miller's (back in his Harvard days, where he was one of the very best teachers I've ever had). PLACE FOR US is difficult, sure -- I think everyone can agree on that. But it more than rewards those who make the effort to meet its challenges. It's a dazzling critical and literary performance.
The bad faith inscribed in this "review" is evident enough, even if its history is obscure; my guess is that Miller gave this guy a B+ instead of the A he thought he deserved. But for the record: Miller did NOT write the review that called his approach Barthesian. I did. And, by the way, I'm another former student of Miller's (back in his Harvard days, where he was one of the very best teachers I've ever had). PLACE FOR US is difficult, sure -- I think everyone can agree on that. But it more than rewards those who make the effort to meet its challenges. It's a dazzling critical and literary performance.
9 people found this helpful
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