How to Stage a Revolution
And why all the presidential
candidates ought to see ‘Hamilton.’
By Peggy Noonan in the Wall Street Journal
I saw “Hamilton” the other day. It
is a masterpiece.
It’s good news for America, too.
There is nothing like it on the New
York stage, and never has been. I got choked up so often I started counting how
many times I tried not to weep. The man in his 20s who accompanied me also got
misty, and at our show, the Easter Sunday matinee, the cast, which has been
performing the musical since January, came out for their bows, and three of the
major players had tears glistening in their eyes. One was the writer, composer
and star, Lin-Manuel Miranda, who urged the audience to contribute to Broadway
Cares and noted that he was seeing a lot of moist eyes.
Why did they weep? Why was everyone
so moved?
Because it hits your heart hard when
you witness human excellence. Because the true tale of how an illegitimate,
lowborn orphan from the West Indies went on to become an inventor of America is
a heck of a story. And because it is surprising yet perfect that that story is
told in a hip-hop/rap/rhythm-and-blues/jazz/ballad musical whose sound is pure
2015 yet utterly appropriate to the tale.
Imagine this. Small theater, lights
down, and suddenly elegant, beautiful young artists in 18th-century garb come
out and create a world. Alexander Hamilton is there and he is telling you his
story. “Another immigrant, comin’ up from the bottom / His enemies
destroyed his rep, America forgot him.” Young Hamilton was alone in the world,
an orphan with no connections, a self-tutored genius who had read everything
and read deeply. He is ambitious, full of hunger for life, but he needs a
stage. He gets himself to New York, then as now the city of ambition, and hears
in the taverns of the rising American revolutionary spirit. This is his moment,
his chance—“I’m not throwing away my shot”—at the richness of life, at status,
meaning and acceptance. He wanted to be great. Barely arrived and Alexander
Hamilton was already an American.
From that rough beginning he became
George Washington’s right-hand man during the Revolutionary War, a major voice
in the creation of the Constitution, the first Treasury secretary and inventor
of the nation’s financial foundations. (You haven’t lived until you’ve heard a
rap face-off over which fiscal and banking policy is best for a rising
18th-century nation.) And there is Hamilton’s private story: He is in love with
two sisters, marries one, becomes enmeshed in the first American sex scandal,
is blackmailed, goes public, loses his son in a duel to defend his name. In the
end he too is killed in a duel by a man, Vice President Aaron Burr, whose
anguish was that he was not great and would never be central to the Age of
Greatness.
In a telephone interview Mr. Miranda
says: “There are so many highs and lows in Hamilton’s life—tragic
circumstances. Then he pulls himself up to incredible early American heights.
Then he pulls himself down!” Mr. Miranda recalls that by the end of the second chapter
of Ron Chernow’s biography, “Alexander Hamilton,” on which the show is based,
“I fell in love. I know this guy. I know about improbability. He’s like Pip in
‘Great Expectations’—the genius, the frustrated genius, I know who this guy
is.”
I asked about the tears. Those
involved in the show say they are a common occurrence. “I get to live a whole
life every night for two hours and 40 minutes, and the last section in
particular, that [Hamilton’s] wife lives for another 50 years.” Elizabeth
Hamilton tells the audience, in a closing soliloquy, how she spent it: doing
good, founding charities to help the children in the nation her husband helped
invent.
I want to get to how the show comes
as a profound refreshment, as something new and startling. It isn’t only the
wonderful production—the music, acting, sets, costumes, choreography,
direction.
“Hamilton” is loving. It spoofs
Jefferson and takes a cool-eyed look at Burr, but it shows a reverence not only
for the founding of America but also for the founders themselves. You’re not
supposed to do that in 2015, but in Mr. Miranda’s vision they are human beings
embarked upon a great enterprise. “I wanted to present their political
arguments clearly, surely, and give voice to what they were trying to do politically.
But they were people. The Constitution is not the result of something written
on a stone and handed down, it was the result of compromise and hard work and
fights! They were all human, fundamentally flawed, and their relationships were
fraught and complicated.”
“Hamilton” is modern in some new
way. The women aren’t forced to adopt the usual modern scattershot bitterness
at their plight. They know exactly their position in their world. They live
successful, limited lives, not in an old-fashioned way but in the way that all
successful persons live limited lives, because life is limited.
The personal nature of ambition is
given full play. Not everything is ideology or outward exigencies. You don’t
want to be great for no reason, you want to make your mark for reasons that
have to do with your interior world and with the meanings you divine
from life outside of and apart from it.
The show is not politically correct,
but not in a way that feels forced. It seems effortless and natural, as if Mr.
Miranda never heard of political correctness.
And there’s some kind of new racial
alchemy in the show. Mr. Miranda is Puerto Rican, his cast is black, white and
brown, and the actors get to play the parts that suit their talents, not their
racial circumstance. “Hamilton” marks multicolored America seizing U.S. history
and making it its own, and producing in the process a work not of all colors
but of a universal American color. By respecting the American Dream and
presenting it in this way, “Hamilton” says the dream is alive, everyone owns
it, and if you look close you can see it playing out every day, all around you.
It is a big thing to say a play is
worthy of Alexander Hamilton, but it is.
And in some way I can’t explain, it
feels important that every Republican candidate for president see it, absorb
it. I don’t know that Hillary Clinton
absorbs much beyond strategy and tactics these days, but the young Republicans
running now need to see this show. It is going to make them hopeful, and in
some new way it’s going to make them grateful.
“If there’s a political takeaway,”
says Mr. Miranda, “it is that it’s always been like this. The Eden in which we
had no political parties lasted about six months or a year. Divisions were
inevitable. We fight, we’re people, it’s messy.”
The one person in the show Mr.
Miranda presents as a contemporary political character, he tells me, is Burr.
“He’s the only one who leaves no paper trail, who always preserves the ability
to not commit. . . . The Burr character—we know this guy.”
Another takeaway. “History is long,”
says Mr. Miranda, and it matters who tells your story. “That lands with them.”
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