DR WEL raises an important point. From time to time I rage at the regionals, since they seem so cowardly in their show choices, so reticent to go beyond the tried and true. But, if that's what their audiences are demanding, well, I can't fault artistic directors for listening to their audiences.
I have this fantasy that audiences (subscribers and the like) will one day rise up and say "Enough. We're tired of seeing the same dozen musicals again and again. Give us something new to see or you'll never see our butts in your seats again!"
It's sobering to read the truth (in WEL's post) that audiences are doing just the opposite, saying "DON'T you dare give us anything new or interesting. More of the same please, and lots of it!"
I share this frustration with you, DR Noel. I spent the last six seasons with a summer stock company that does nothing but those Golden Age shows year after year. If it was written after 1964, it's as if they've never heard of it (with the strange exception of
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, which they are doing for the second time this summer). Due to being based in a Bavarian theme town, they do
Sound of Music every year (this is year #10), along with two other shows per summer. Year after year, we get busloads of blue-hairs who just LOVE to see SOM and the other standards time and time again. A couple years back, our artistic director decided to take a chance on
Man of La Mancha, and even that did relatively poorly at the box office. Ah well, the tried and true have kept the company in business, and seeing as they started with a $10,000 budget in 1995 and now operate on a $750,000 budget, you can't really fault the choices.