So when I met him at the Charing Cross Theatre – scene of his latest hit Pippin, I asked what exactly does a producer do? “ You’re the Chairman of the Board and CEO – a show is a company. The producer will set up that company and manage it :the finance, the investment, building a team, finding a script, finding a director, being involved in the casting”.
That passion for theatre started in Canada when he was 7. “I was at my aunt’s house in the country outside Montreal – there was a double cassette recording of Phantom. I found the artwork interesting. I was told the story of the show.I listened to it over and over again, and at age 9 I was taken to New York and saw the show with its first replacement cast”.
At an all-boys school where the emphasis was on academic and athletic achievements, he admits he didn’t make popular choices – preferring to sing along with the Phantom’s Christine ! “It fuelled my imagination. I had a difficult time at school and musical theatre was a release, a fantasy world in my head”.
Adam started a theatre club at McGill, and found himself constantly in rehearsal so was always late with his course assignments. You can guess that Adam feels his academic qualifications don’t match his practical knowledge of the theatre – one reason he says he’s about “to go back to school”, starting an Executive Business Management Course .”Producing is a business, and I’ve still got a lot to learn. I feel I need that discipline now”. But he’ll carry on producing while he studies.
After McGill Adam went to New York – where else? – but the first show he worked on – A Woman Of Will – shut after a week. It was, he says, a wake-up call.He started an internship with a producer and stayed 5 years – it’s here he learned the trade and its melange of artistic and business skills.
There are 3 more episodes in preparation – the next concentrating on Stephen Schwartz, with an interview where Schwartz takes us on a journey through his career – Pippin, Wicked, Prince of Egypt – quite a journey.
But Adam is clear : streaming is not a substitute for real-life theatre with a physically present audience. “It was an unprecedented opportunity, using the tools we had. It has a life of its own in the future as an educational series”. One thing is certain, if it can be made to work Adam will do it.
Asked what advice he would give to his 15-year-old self, he says: “ dreams do come true, but reflect on the consequences of a dream that is realised. My passion has metamorphosed into a profession. I struggled as a kid, but what a dream to come true”.
Episodes of the Theatre Channel can be viewed at stream.theatre
More on Adam’s productions at adamblanshay.com