PHOTO CALL: Bernadette Peters, Will Chase, Michael Mayer and Cast Members Celebrate "Smash" Premiere | Playbill

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News PHOTO CALL: Bernadette Peters, Will Chase, Michael Mayer and Cast Members Celebrate "Smash" Premiere Bernadette Peters, Will Chase, Michael Mayer and more joined the stars of the new hourlong drama-with-music "Smash" for a world premiere event held Jan. 26 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Bernadette Peters, Will Chase, Michael Mayer and Cast Members Celebrate "Smash" Premiere


As previously reported, "Smash," which will make its network debut at 10 PM (ET) Feb. 6 on NBC-TV, was launched Jan. 16 through digital services. Read the first Playbill "SMASH" REPORT, a recap of (and comments about) the show's pilot.

"Smash" is available on multiple platforms including Apple iTunes, Amazon Video on Demand, Xbox/Zune, Playstation, Samsung MediaHub and Vudu. As of Jan. 23, the pilot became available for online streaming via NBC.com and Hulu.

Click here to download via iTunes. Click here to download "Smash" on Amazon. "Smash" was seen in public "consumer screenings" in ten major markets on Jan. 9 in Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland and San Francisco. In Chicago, NBC had some of the cast and creative team on hand for a Q & A after the screening followed by a reception. On Jan. 11, there was a focus on the LGBT community at the Outfest Screening in Los Angeles.

From Jan. 15-30, selected American Airlines flights will show in-flight screenings of the pilot.

Read the Playbill feature that introduces you to the characters of "Smash."

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The scripted drama about the subculture of musical theatre people is the brainchild of Steven Spielberg. Pulitzer Prize finalist Theresa Rebeck (Mauritius, "NYPD Blue") penned the pilot episode and is the series creator. The pilot is directed by Tony Award winner Michael Mayer (Spring Awakening, American Idiot).

NBC bills it this way: "'Smash' is a musical drama that celebrates the beauty and heartbreak of the Broadway theatre as it follows a cross-section of dreamers and schemers who all have one common desire — to be a 'Smash.' The series centers on a desire to create a Broadway musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe — written by the successful songwriting duo of Tom (Tony Award nominee Christian Borle of Legally Blonde: The Musical) and Julia (Emmy Award winner Debra Messing of 'Will & Grace'). Julia recently began the process of adopting a child with her husband of many years, but her focus is torn when she has the opportunity to write another Broadway hit. A rivalry soon forms for the lead role between a youthful, inexperienced Midwestern beauty (Katharine McPhee, 'American Idol') — who is trying to find fame in the big city against all odds — and stage veteran (Megan Hilty of 9 to 5: The Musical), who's determined to leave the chorus line and finally get her big break. A tenacious producer Eileen (Oscar winner Anjelica Huston, 'Prizzi's Honor') discovers the Marilyn project and jumps on board with a brilliant director (Jack Davenport, 'Pirates of the Caribbean' films) — whose talent is matched by his cunning and egocentric amorality."

Executive producer is multiple Emmy and Oscar winner Steven Spielberg ("ER," "Schindler's List"). Craig Zadan and Neil Meron (Oscar-winning "Chicago," "Hairspray") and Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey ("United States of Tara," "The Borgias") also serve as executive producers. Original songs are written by Tony and Grammy Award winners Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman (Hairspray, Catch Me If You Can), who also serve as executive producers.

"Smash" is a production of Universal Media Studios in association with DreamWorks.

Don't expect characters to burst into songs, movie-musical style (or as they do on the TV hit "Glee"). All singing in "Smash" is expected to be in the context of performance/rehearsal/audition/recording situations. Said songs might be sweetened, however: A clip, apparently from the pilot, has surfaced, featuring Katharine McPhee's character in a piano-and-voice audition that morphs into a fantastically lit performance sweetened with orchestra, apparently to reflect what the industry folk in the room are seeing in their imaginations (musical fantasy elements like in the film "Chicago" will surface from time to time).

 
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