Hamilton tells the story of the nation's Founding Fathers, including Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton. Miranda wrote the music and lyrics and starred in the original production, which debuted on Broadway in 2015. The production garnered 11 Tony Awards, a Pulitzer Prize for drama and a Grammy for its original cast recording.
"When you write a musical that brushes against sort of the origins of this country, it's always going to be relevant," he says. "The fights we had at the [country's] origin are the fights we're still having. ... I've always said that slavery is the original sin of this country."
A film of the original Broadway production of Hamilton, taped in 2016, will begin streaming on Disney+ on Friday. Miranda, who stars in the title role, calls the film a "a love letter and thank you" to the company.
"It's probably the best rehearsed movie cast of all time, because we'd been doing our roles for a year," Miranda says. "It's not a definitive production of a live Hamilton, but it is a snapshot of what it felt like with that company at the end of June of 2016."
Listen, I'm a musical theater composer because I couldn't be just a musical theater actor. If I'd settled for being a musical theater actor I'd be hopefully auditioning for a bus-and-truck [production] of West Side Story somewhere. ... The realization landed on me early, like there's no life for you in musical theater because there are no parts. And In the Heights [Miranda's first Broadway production] really came out of a result of seeing [and] writing what I saw as missing in the musical theater canon for Latinos, and really as simple as: Can we not be holding knives in a gang in the '50s? Because that exists. And like, what do we have to show for it nearly 50 years later?
And so every time I write a piece of theater, I'm trying to get us on the board. And that continued with Hamilton, of, how can we write the parts that I didn't see existing? Really, the only thing I saw that really gave me permission to write musicals was Rent, which was an incredibly diverse cast. And I went from being a fan of musicals to writing musicals when I saw that show, because it was the thing that gave me permission. It was contemporary, and it had Latino actors and Black actors, and it told me you're allowed to write what you know into a show. No other musical had told me that. ... It's been gratifying to see how these shows Heights and Hamilton in particular, not only provide employment, but also provide like permission and amplification of a lot of other voices.
I never bought into the illusion that the Obamas being in the White House ended racial issues in our country. Just the same way I used to get the question all the time in that first year of, "Now that Hamilton's here, do you feel like Broadway will be more diverse?" And I was like, no, because shows take years to develop. And I know what's in the pipeline, and it's not [diverse]. Next year is going to be even whiter than this year was. ... I gird myself for the whiplash in both the country and the particular corner of the world that is theater.
I went to a school with not a lot of other Latino kids. I think [there was] one other Puerto Rican kid in my grade. And so for me, it was this fantastic secret. And my parents were so proudly Puerto Rican and so pro-learning [of our] heritage that I was proud that I got extra Three Kings Day on top of Christmas. ...
I also would spend my summers on [Puerto Rico], this beautiful island where my grandparents both worked. My grandmother ran a travel agency, and my grandfather was a bank manager. And I bounced between their businesses eating candy and left to my own devices, exploring town, and was sort of spoiled rotten in this incredible landscape. ...
So it to me, it felt additive. But it also wasn't something I brought to school much. And I think a lot of In the Heights was me learning to bring all of myself in the room. I let most folks call me Lin. My parents and my wife call me Lin-Manuel, and a lot of what In the Heights was about was bringing Lin-Manuel into the same room where Lin was writing musicals and sort of using all of myself to write.
I have to give [director] Jon [M. Chu] a lot of credit, because he had a big vision for it, and it was bigger than even my vision of it. I always sort of pictured it as this little indie musical and hopefully we could film it in our neighborhood, because I just don't think any other neighborhood looks like [New York City's] Washington Heights. Demographics aside, the hills and the bridge and the literal heights of it, I find it breathtaking every day. I breathe easier when I'm in it.
But Jon also was coming off the success of Crazy Rich Asians. And what he learned on that was, we don't get a lot of opportunities like this, so we have to swing big. And he really lobbied for a big movie that is also set in this neighborhood. And so filming last summer was one of those joyous experiences of my life because, again, I was writing songs about this neighborhood I loved to be performed onstage. But then to see those songs reinterpreted on the streets where I was writing them was breathtaking.
[I] feed so much on the energy of the city, and I miss that. One of my favorite writing spots is actually taking the train, because you kind of choose your level of engagement. I can sit in a corner of the A train. I can absorb the energy from the folks around me, whatever mariachi or break-dancing group might be happening, wherever folks are getting on and whatever lives are coming on and off the train. And I still have my headphones on and still be in my bubble and write. It's like all of the energy of interaction without necessarily being drawn out of the writing trance. So I think I miss that the most. ...
The world is being remade in a fundamentally different way because of this pandemic, and just because of where we are. And artists have to give themselves the latitude to acknowledge that. So give yourself a break if you're not writing right now.
I'd love to be able to tell you that I am writing King Lear or the sonnets now that the plagues have closed all the playhouses. I'm afraid I can't, because I'm as worried about the world as anyone else. I think I wake up with stomachaches more often than I don't, because I worry about what's going on. I worry about my city reopening too soon and having a second spike. I worry about the protesters and hoping they're OK. I worry about all the things everyone is worried about.
And I find that because I'm home, it is harder to ... distance myself from those thoughts. ... And I think that's OK. Like, the world is being remade in a fundamentally different way because of this pandemic, and just because of where we are. And artists have to give themselves the latitude to acknowledge that. So give yourself a break if you're not writing right now.
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit are Bluewater Music Services, a Nashville-based publisher and music catalog administrator, and Bob Gaudio, a publisher and primary songwriter for the band Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons.
Among the songs Bluewater says Spotify did not license properly are Miranda Lambert's "Gunpowder & Lead" and "White Liar"; Willie Nelson's "Living in the Promiseland"; Kenny Chesney's "Better As a Memory" and "Anything But Mine"; and Guns 'N Roses' "Yesterdays."
Bluewater and Gaudio are represented by entertainment law heavyweight Richard Busch, who is based in Nashville. The new lawsuits are also the first to be filed in Nashville, whereas the previous suits were out of New York federal court.
Busch argued in the recent lawsuits that those settlements were unfairly low. He noted that the largest members of the NMPA are the major publishing companies Universal, Sony and Warner, whose parent companies also own a combined 18 percent of Spotify, according to the lawsuit.
Bluewater claims Spotify has illegally posted 2,339 songs from its catalog. Gaudio claims 106 songs from his catalog were posted illegally. The hit song "December, 1963 (Oh What a Night)," which Gaudio co-wrote, is among the Franki Valli and the Four Seasons hits listed as not being properly licensed in an exhibit attached to the lawsuit. That song has over 57 million streams on Spotify.
In the previous lawsuits, Spotify spelled out the difficulty of identifying and contacting each publisher associated with the approximately 30 million songs available on its streaming service. The company, which is the worldwide leader in subscription streaming, boasts more than 140 million active users and more than 50 million subscribers.
As part of its settlement agreement in the class action lawsuit brought by Lowery, Spotify agreed that it will work collaboratively to improve the gathering and collecting of information about composition owners to help ensure those owners are paid their royalties in the future."
Preliminary estimates show that the Disney+ app was installed for the first time by 1 million Apple App Store and Google Play users July 3-5, the San Francisco-based firm said Monday. That number represented an increase of about 79% from the prior weekend, Sensor Tower said.
A Disney+ spokeswoman said the company does not comment on third-party data and has no plans to immediately release its own figures. (App downloads are not the same as subscriptions, which is what really matters to the company.)
The service was already in a strong position. Disney last released subscriber numbers in May, saying the streaming service had hit 54.5 million paying subscribers worldwide since its November launch. The company is expected to give another subscriber update Aug. 4 when it reports third-quarter earnings.
Disney paid $75 million for the rights to distribute the filmed version of the Tony-winning production, which was shot in New York with its original cast in 2016. The movie was directed by Thomas Kail and stars Miranda as one of the Founding Fathers, Alexander Hamilton. The cast also includes Leslie Odom Jr., Daveed Diggs and Phillipa Soo.
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