The great Broadway director-producer Hal Prince died in 2019. The last show he directed for Broadway was a retrospective of his work called Prince of Broadway featuring scenes from previous shows of his including Fiddler on the Roof, Company, Phantom of the Opera, Sweeney Todd and many others.
Despite a terrific cast and (of course) terrific material, Prince of Broadway only ran for 76 performances. It was a show that had great trouble being properly funded and it looked…well, cheap. That was the main problem with it. But my lovely friend Amber and I saw one of those performances and we both liked it a lot.
One thing I liked a lot but didn't mention in the above-linked diary entry was a song that was not from one of Mr. Prince's past successes but was written for Prince of Broadway by the fine Broadway composer Jason Robert Brown. It was called "Do the Work" and it was made up of directives from Hal Prince…advice he'd given over the years to (mostly) writers. I liked it as a song and I liked its message. It's somewhat inspirational to people who do what I do for a living. If you're a writer and you find yourself losing the urge to write, give it a listen.
Below are not one but two videos of it, neither from the cast of Prince of Broadway. If you'd like to hear how it sounded in that show, you can hear the number from the cast album here. I'm giving you three versions of it because if you're a writer or you want to be a writer, it's something you ought to hear many times. It's something I sometimes hear in my head when I'm sitting down to tackle or even re-tackle a script…