New Songs in Movie Musicals

I’m in a very musical theatre mood, so I’ve been watching movie musicals and listening to countless cast recordings, including multiple recordings of the same show. It’s incredibly entertaining to watch and/or listen to multiple versions of the same show for the sake of comparison. It’s amazing how much the enjoyment of a show can fluctuate from something as small as a directorial change or cast swap. However, as I’ve been listening, I’ve been reminded of a larger change, one that seems odd but is actually very common in movie musicals: an added song. In most cases, movie musicals are shorter than their onstage counterparts, and more often than not at least one song from the stage gets cut. It seems odd, then, that there are often new songs in the movies. As a general rule, I’m skeptical of this. I understand additions if there are gaps in the existing material, but it’s harder to justify cutting a popular song for one that is untested (and particularly if the song was added purely as awards bait). It’s certainly true that some of these song swaps are unjustifiable mistakes but, to my surprise, I actually found a few that are not only welcome but actually wonderful.

Without further ado, here are ten movie musicals that, for better or for worse, tried something new.

“What Ifs” from Mean Girls

  • Notable songs cut (or drastically shortened): “Where Do You Belong?”, “Meet the Plastics,” “Fearless,” “Stop,” “Whose House is This?,” “More is Better,” and “Do This Thing”
  • Song swapped: “It Roars”
  • Original songs written by Nell Benjamin and Jeff Richmond
  • New songs written by Nell Benjamin, Jeff Richmond, Michael Pollack, and Reneé Rapp

Left: Movie Cady during “What Ifs.” Right: Onstage Cady and Damien during “Stop.”

For the record: I saw the show onstage long before I saw the movie, and went into the film knowing the original songs very well.

I was hyped when I heard about this movie. I like the original movie, but I LOVE the musical adaptation; I followed the production of Mean Girls closely and was excited by most of what I heard. In particular, the casting of Renée Rapp and Jaquel Spivey had me particularly enthusiastic: movie musicals don’t always hire bona fide Broadway vocal talents, and it struck me as a very good sign that this one had. Despite my interest, I didn’t make it to the theatre and therefore had time to read a bunch of online reviews (and get one from my sister) before I saw the show myself. I was warned that the songs have a different feel in the movie than onstage, so I was prepared for it. While Janis and Damien still get to have very theatrical sung moments, most of the other characters have their songs shifted subtly for a less overtly Broadway sound. Their songs are a little more pop-y, more tiktoky. This might be a controversial opinion but I was kind of into it. I absolutely missed the songs that were cut—Spivey is SO GOOD as Damien that cutting anything he would have sung feels like a mistake, and “More is Better” is thematically an important song, not to mention beautiful) but on the whole I really liked the movie. I had a great time with it and will happily watch it again.

With this new direction, “It Roars” doesn’t exactly fit Cady’s vibe… or her voice. It has been said before and often that actor Angourie Rice doesn’t have the vocal dynamism (or, in any case, wasn’t directed to showcase the vocal dynamism) for Cady’s more powerful songs. I’d argue that Janis and Regina are more the protagonists of Mean Girls the musical than Cady is (they have all the best songs! And Janis sings “I’d Rather Be Me,” which is arguably the big solo of the show, the type that would normally be reserved for the hero), but onstage Cady still has some big vocal moments. The movie removes them. Her verses of “Apex Predator” are given to Damien (it’s not the best thematic choice, but it sounds amazing so I’ve forgiven it), “More is Better” hit the wastebasket, both “Stupid with Love” and “Stars” are sung much smaller (except a verse that is sung by a different character), and “It Roars” is swapped for the much meeker “What Ifs.” It’s a cute enough song. It’s pretty, and it has a less theatrical, more popish sound that fits in with what the movie seems to be doing with Cady. The energy after “A Cautionary Tale” drops quickly being followed with “What Ifs,” in a way that I don’t like, but I don’t hate it. I can see movie!Janis singing “It Roars,” but movie!Cady doesn’t have that energy, and that song wouldn’t work with the soft, flat sound she maintains throughout the movie. If you asked me which song I prefer I would take “It Roars” every time, but I get what was intended with “What Ifs” and I wouldn’t call it a failure.

Verdict: A qualified miss


“Still Holding My Hand” from Matilda

  • Notable songs cut: “Pathetic,” “This Little Girl,” “Loud,” “Telly”
  • Song swapped: none directly
  • Original songs written by Tim Minchin
  • New song written by Tim Minchin

Left: The movie’s Miss Honey and Matilda during “Still Holding My Hand.” Right: Mr. Wormwood performing “Telly” onstage.

For full transparency: While I had listened to the original cast recording many times before seeing the movie adaptation, I have never seen the stage version of Matilda.

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March 2024 Wrap-Up

After an easy month in February spent off work, sleeping, and watching my sister’s amazing community theatre production of Sister Act, March was a lot harder. Work was relentless and would have felt so even if I hadn’t gotten used to getting enough rest. Still, I found time to read and to watch a bunch of musicals both old and new. This blog is called “A Blog of Books and Musicals,” after all. I don’t always recap what I watched because that’s a lot of effort, but since I had such a great time bopping to show tunes this month I figured I’d make the effort to actually write about some of the new ones that I was finally able to get to this month. I’ve been looking forward to Mean Girls for so long, you guys!

Here’s what I read…

Good Material by Dolly Alderton

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Good Material surprised me. As a person who generally dislikes romance books and is largely uninterested in romance in real life, I suspected that it would be difficult for me to relate to or care much about a novel deeply concerned with the ins and outs of a romantic relationship. To my surprise, though, the book is far more than just a novel about a couple who didn’t make it. With insight and humor, it dives deeply into the societal norms that can make modern life—particularly modern life for an almost-middle-aged millennial—particularly difficult. While telling an entertaining, character-driven story, Good Material dives into the rift between men and women’s emotional support structures, the loneliness of atypical life choices, and the pressures to have it all put together (in a particular way) by a particular age. The voice is confident and funny, and it is emotionally very refreshing and compelling. This is far from my usual fare, but I highly enjoyed it and would enthusiastically recommend it. 

Full review here


Okay, Cupid by Mason Deaver

Rating: 3 out of 5.

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Everything About You is So Musical

Welcome back to Musical Monday! To the best of my ability, I’m going to try to theme these more. When I first started writing about musicals I did it totally randomly. I’d pick five random shows with nothing in common and slap them onto a post together. Last time I did a Musical Monday I wrote about three shows that were loosely based on historical events, and I like the idea of having them sorted.

This time, the theme is even tighter. These three musicals are all about unpopular high-schoolers making their way up the social ladder in, let’s say, less than ideal ways. Furthermore, none of them are original musicals: two were based on movies, and one on a YA novel.

Mean Girls (musical) | Mean Girls Wiki | FandomMean Girls

Which cast recordings have I heard, and which is my favorite? I think there’s only one… the OBC recording. Update: as of 2024, there’s a movie! I’ve not seen it yet and heard mixed reviews, but still. 

Are there any good YouTube-available clips? Actually, yeah! Mean Girls is pretty good about putting clips on YouTube. There are actual performances of “Sexy” and “Stop” as well as music videos for “World Burn” and “I’d Rather Be Me.” “Apex Predator” has a music video in addition to a live performance on the Today Show. Plus, the cast performed “Where Do You Belong/Meet the Plastics” at the Tony Awards.

What’s it about? It follows the same plot as Tina Fey’s 2004 classic movie. Basically, a new girl who has been homeschooled her whole life goes to a public high school and falls in with the popular clique, realizes how terrible they are, and then brings them down from the inside with the help of a few outsider pals.

See the 2017–2018 Broadway Season in GIFS | Playbill

What’s so good about it? It’s cute and silly, just like the movie. Mean Girls is not the kind of musical that’s going to change lives or be remembered as a classic, but it’s still fun. The songs are catchy and expand the characters from the original movie, so it’s unsurprising that it is popular with young adults, especially those of us who grew up with the movie.

Update: Having seen the show live (in 2023) it’s now a favorite. The songs are universally catchy and it’s a laugh a minute. I like the original movie a lot, and the musical does a fabulous job of updating it enough that it stands alone as its own thing while still feeling very much like a faithful reinterpretation/love letter to the original. The movie musical is pretty fun, too.

My favorite songs: “World Burn,” “’More is Better,” and “I’d Rather be Me”


Be More Chill

Which cast recordings have I heard, and which is my favorite? There are two main ones, one Broadway and one Off-Broadway. I heard the Off-Broadway version first and vastly prefer it. Broadway added a few songs, none of which are worth it, and the characterizations are different from version-to-version (even the ones played by the same actor). I liked all characters better in the Off-Broadway version, but the biggest reason to skip the newer version is that the Squip leans waaay too far into the Keanu Reeves impression. Still, if you’re a Dear Evan Hansen fan you’d probably be interested to hear the Broadway cast, because the insanely cool Jared Kleinman (aka Will Roland) plays Jeremy.

Are there any good YouTube-available clips? A few. That is, there are some good ones but if you know this musical at all you have to cringe a little at a few of the censored lines. It’s not, like, Spring Awakening at the Tonys censorship, but it’s still enough to warrant a shaking of the head. Still, we’ve got “Pitiful Children,” “Two-Player Game,” “More than Survive,” and “Michael in the Bathroom.”

What’s it about? Based on the novel by Ned Vizzini, Be More Chill is about a tragically unpopular high schooler who downloads a supercomputer called a Squip into his brain. The Squip is intended to help him navigate the world in a cooler, chiller way… but it goes about as well as you’d expect.

Broadway Theatre GIF by Be More Chill Musical - Find & Share on GIPHY

What’s so good about it? It’s silly fun. This is the rare adaptation that improves its source material 100%. I didn’t care for the book—there’s some sexist, racist, and homophobic stuff in it, which the musical thankfully eliminates and/or outright criticizes—but the musical improves on it drastically, making the characters more sympathetic and the social commentary stronger. The songs are very catchy, and have a kind of electronic sound you don’t often hear in musicals. Seriously, like half of them are major earworms. Be More Chill only made it to Broadway because it went viral with teens and young adults, which actually makes a lot of sense. This is a musical for people for whom technology plays a large role, which means that it probably has a pretty steep generational divide (I have a hard time picturing my grandparents enjoying it, even though they love theatre) that I happen to be on the right side of.

My favorite songs: “Michael in the Bathroom,” “Pitiful Children,” and “The Squip Song”


Heathers: The MusicalHeathers

Which cast recordings have I heard, and which is my favorite? I think there’s just the one with Barrett Wilbert Weed. I mean, there’s also the soundtrack from that Riverdale episode, but, like, lol.

Update: There’s a professionally filmed version now! It’s on Roku, I think. I have a full review here.

Are there any good YouTube-available clips? Not very many. I found two montages, plus a studio recording of “Candy Store” and a low-key performance of “Seventeen” at Barnes & Noble.

What’s it about? Mean Girls but with more murder. A girl falls in with a group of popular mean girls, which is bad enough, but then her unpopular boyfriend turns out to be a murderous psychopath.

What’s so good about it? This is the weird show that I like but also I don’t. It has some very good songs, but I actually hated watching it because it’s too dark. Like, really dark. There are a couple of shows that have compelling music but are too graphically violent for me to enjoy actually watching (Sweeney Todd and Little Shop of Horrors are also in this very specific category) and Heathers is one of them. So, yeah. Great songs. I loved to listen to this one and then I read the Wikipedia synopsis and went yikes. I’ll watch any musical proshot I can, even if the wiki made me say yikes, and I have to say… my opinion has not changed. This is absolutely a ‘music only’ one for me.

My favorite songs: “Candy Store,” “Freeze Your Brain,” and “Dead Girl Walking”


gif credits here, here, and here