BROADWAY


Meaning of BROADWAY in English

Broadway is the name of a street in New York that is closely associated with the theatre and is often used to mean US theatre in general. The street runs the whole length of Manhattan , but its 36 theatres are in the Theater District between West 41st Street and West 57th Street. The most famous are between 44th and 45th Streets, near Times Square . This part is called the Great White Way because of its many bright lights. The first theatres were built there in 1894 and New York’s subway system was extended north shortly afterwards to help audiences get to them. Other theatres in New York, usually smaller, are said to be off-Broadway , and there are even off-off-Broadway theatres, which are less commercial.

Before the rise of the film industry, Broadway was the place where actors could become famous. Broadway’s best years were in the 1920s when there were about 80 theatres. Most of the longest running plays on Broadway have been musicals such as South Pacific , Guys and Dolls , My Fair Lady and A Chorus Line . Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats , which closed in 2000, had the longest run with 7 485 performances. Serious plays that have won Tony awards include Death of a Salesman , Long Day’s Journey into Night and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Famous actors who have appeared on Broadway include Dustin Hoffman , Robert Redford , Elizabeth Taylor , Liza Minnelli and, from Britain, Vanessa Redgrave , Jeremy Irons , Maggie Smith and Ralph Fiennes .

Since the early 1970s the high cost of producing plays has forced many theatres to close or to become cinemas/movie theaters, and Broadway is not as important as it once was. It has had fewer successful new plays and has tried to attract audiences with revivals or with successful British productions. A bad review by the drama critic of the New York Times can close a play. Paul Simon’s $11-million musical, The Capeman , for instance, ran for only two months after bad reviews. Broadway has attracted larger audiences with musicals such as Chicago , but most new avant-garde (= experimental) works are produced off-Broadway, or off-off-Broadway in the lofts (= old warehouses) of SoHo .

Oxford guide to British and American culture English vocabulary.      Руководство по британской и американской культуре, Оксфордский английский словарь.