I heard the most delightful phrase yesterday and wanted to make note of it before I forget it again:
Anticipatory plagiarism
The phrase was used during the talkback for the New York City Center's five-day production of "Love Life," a play first produced in 1948 on Broadway and mostly forgotten about ever since. Back in 1948 the strike by the musician's union resulted in "Love Life" never making an original cast recording to then be played on the radio. There was no social media or people carrying cameras in their pockets. Still, they managed to have 252 audiences.
The play grew into a cult favorite. People such as Bob Fosse, Stephen Sondheim, Hal Prince, Fred Ebb (of Kander and Ebb), and other theater legends saw the original production and were inspired by it. Shows such as "Cabaret" and "Company" may not have existed without this concept show. Audiences today see songs and scenes that were lifted from "Love Life" and are now feel Kurt Weill and Alan Jay Lerner stole them from the shows made after them, rather than (obvious) other way because we saw the newer shows first.
The song "I remember it well" was repurposed by Lerner and appears more famously in "Gigi." It is something we reference --You wore a red dress, it was blue. Or some other paraphrase meant to evoke the spirit of the "Gigi" song, even though I've never seen "Gigi."
When a member of the audience asked how it happened that these moments familiar to anyone who has seen "Cabaret," or "Follies," or "Gigi" appear in "Love Letters," after being momentarily silenced, the best answer the person could come up with was anticipatory plagiarism because if after explaining to the entire audience that "Love Letters" first appeared in 1948 and these other productions were years and decades later, clearly Sondheim, Ebb, and Prince were inspired by Weill and Lerner and not the other way around.
Kudos to the interviewee for coining a clever term on the spur of the moment.
As for "Love Letters," if I see it making the rounds again I might see it because I gained an appreciation for it after the talk back, but I could only recommend it to the most die hard theater fans who would be able to appreciate its anticipatory plagiarism and see the roots of American musical theater.
One more tidbit about "Love Letters"...it was originally slated for March 2020. They did hold an invited dress rehearsal before the world shut down for COVID. Then the director, Victoria Clark, went on to become a Tony winner for playing the lead in "Kimberly Akimbo" and life got in the way. Brian Stokes Mitchell was originally asked to play Sam Cooper, but had another commitment for March 2025. At the last minute the person hired to be Sam had to back out, and Brian was able to shift his schedule to play the male lead. During the talk back Victoria said those five years gave everyone a chance to get deeper with their characters. Most of those hired in 2020 were able to make it, which made the experience that much sweeter.