By Robert Simonson
29 Jul 2008
![]() |
|
| Bailey Hanks in Legally Blonde. |
|
| Photo by Andrew Walker |
*
One of the tasks of nearly every reality television series is keeping the end result of the program a secret from the public before the final show airs. Kristin Caskey, an executive at Fox Theatricals, which is one of the lead producers of the Broadway musical Legally Blonde, knew this would be part of the bargain when she and her fellow producers entered into a partnership with MTV to create "Legally Blonde The Musical: The Search for Elle Woods." But she didn't know how long she'd have to keep the winner under wraps.
"Whenever you shoot a television show, you're never quite sure when it's going to air," said Caskey on July 21, the day Bailey Hanks was revealed to the world as the unknown who would fill Laura Bell Bundy's shoes in the lead role of unlikely Ivy Leaguer, Elle. "We had always assumed that the winner would be announced prior to when she would be required to begin rehearsal. As with every network, things changed in their schedule and they had to move things around. All of a sudden we realized we were in this position of having to start rehearsals, and we thought 'How are we going to do that?' Because a lot of people are involved. How do you keep it a secret?"
"The Search for Elle Woods" was actually the second joint venture between the Legally Blonde musical and MTV. The first was just as unorthodox: a fall 2007 broadcast of the musical, while the Broadway run was still going on. George McTeague, an executive at MTV, got the idea after seeing the show at the Palace Theatre. He called up the producers and told them he wanted to film the production.
"We were responsive," said Caskey, "but we had to go through that thought process that any producer goes through. 'OK, if I show this musical on the network, will I cannibalize the audience?'" There have been examples in the history of Broadway — Joseph Papp's decision to televise his 1972 Broadway staging of Much Ado About Nothing being one — where a televised performance, meant to spur a rush at the box office, has actually led to the quick evaporation of future audiences. Why pay money for a show you just saw on television for free?
In the end, the producers decided to green-light MTV's proposal, mainly due to the special character of Legally Blonde's core audience. "The more they can get of the show, the better," Caskey said of the musical's fans. "They want to interact with the show, they want to see it multiple times. We knew this telecast would reach a national audience and put Legally Blonde on the radar for a young audience that, if they saw it on television, it would actually increase their interest in the show."
MTV filmed the show over a couple performances. They employed eight to ten cameras, and the director of the film worked closely with the musical's director-choreographer Jerry Mitchell. Lead producer Hal Luftig was impressed with the MTV crew's professionalism, and relieved that the hierarchy he had experienced in early meetings with the network was not in evidence during filming.
|
|
![]() |
|
| Bailey Hanks after winning. | ||
| photo by Todd Pitt/courtesy of MTV |
"We in theatre, God love us, don't really deal with corporations for the most part," said Luftig. "I've never had a producing partner that's a corporation. They [MTV] have a chain of command. They have to run something up the ladder to make a decision. In my world, usually the director or the producer is making the decision." The shoot, however, eliminated the middlemen and went smoothly.
Legally Blonde first aired on Oct. 13, 2007, and then was shown five more times. The first airing was on a Saturday afternoon, an odd time that made Luftig and Caskey a bit nervous. "MTV said, 'Trust us on this,'" recalled Caskey. The program ended up winning its time slot. By the final two airings, the network was putting the lyrics to the show's songs at the bottom of the screen so viewers could sing along.
The success of the broadcasts led, in part, to the reality series. Amanda Lipitz, one of the Broadway show's producers, had a relationship with Reveille, an L.A.-based producer of reality shows. Conversations began between the various parties, and MTV expressed a keenness for the project.
Continued...




