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The Great Society review – Brian Cox is an electrifying LBJ on Broadway

Early in The Great Society, the sequel to the Tony-winning All The Way, President Lyndon B Johnson (Brian Cox) recalls the women of his youth in the Texas Hill Country, mothers and aunts with bent backs and hands crabbed by a “dog’s life”. When a younger Johnson finally made it to Washington, he did whatever it took to bring them electricity – kissed up, begged, told “a lie or two”. The ends justified the means, he was sure. “When that first electric pump brought water into the house at the turn of a tap,” he asks, “do you think any of those women thought, ‘Oh no, I can’t use this, Lyndon lied.’” To read more, click here.

‘I looked to Shakespeare when I wrote my Lyndon Johnson plays’

When seeking inspiration for his two plays on the rise and fall of US president Lyndon B Johnson, playwright Robert Schenkkan turned to Shakespeare.

All the Way – his Tony-winning play about Johnson’s efforts to pass the landmark 1965 civil rights law – could be viewed as a victorious history play, akin to Henry V. In contrast, The Great Society – the second part of Schenkkan’s Johnson diptych – which opened on Broadway earlier this month, plays out as decline and fall.

“I look at All the Way as a drama and it does have a triumphant finish with a dark undertone,” says Schenkkan. “The Great Society is absolutely and inescapably a tragedy. To read more click here.

A president comes to Broadway with ‘The Great Society’

NEW YORK — “The Great Society” is a sequel to the Tony Award-winning play “All the Way,” starring Bryan Cranston as Lyndon B. Johnson. This time around, theater legend Brian Cox portrays our 36th president in an unforgettable performance. The 73-year-old actor was just 17 when LBJ first took office. Johnson’s presidency coincided with the beginning of his acting career in the United Kingdom. “I’m old enough to have grown up during that period,” Cox said. “He’s a tragic figure,” the actor added, “What he was trying to do was great, wonderful, but his Achilles’ heel was Vietnam.” To read more, click here.

The Great Society, Sequel to Tony-Winning All the Way, Opens on Broadway

The Great Society, the sequel to Robert Schenkkan’s 2014 Tony-winning epic All the Way, officially opens at Broadway’s Vivian Beaumont Theater on October 1. Bill Rauch, who helmed All the Way, also directs the new work, which began previews on September 6. Brian Cox stars in the production as President Lyndon Baines Johnson.Capturing Johnson’s passionate and aggressive attempts to build a great society for all, the new play follows his epic triumph in a landslide election to the agonizing decision not to run for re-election just three years later. It was an era that would define history forever: the rise of the Civil Rights Movement, the deaths of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, the destruction of Vietnam and the creation of some of the greatest social programs America has ever known—with one man at the center of it all: LBJ. To read more, click here.

How Succession’s Brian Cox Found His Voice for LBJ in Broadway’s The Great Society

One of the things that fascinates Brian Cox about President Lyndon Baines Johnson is that the 36th President of the United States was a different person in every room he was in. “He’s such a brilliant operator,” Cox says of the man he now inhabits eight shows a week in The Great Society at Broadway’s Vivian Beaumont Theatre. “He really cajoles, seduces, bonds, blackmails; he does the whole bit.”

In creating a character who nearly switches personalities according to his goals and environment, the actor set out to find the voice to match—a voice previously brought to the stage by Jack Willis (a Kansan with a Midwestern bent) at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Bryan Cranston (to Tony-winning effect) in Robert Schenkkan’s first LBJ play All The Way on Broadway and for HBO. “Each bring a different, very personal way in on the musicality of Robert’s language—not unlike LBJ himself,” says director Bill Rauch. “LBJ would lean into the Texan twang more when he was trying to charm someone or when he was pulling out a folksy anecdote in order to disarm or make a point.” To read more, click here. 

“It’s an American political Game of Thrones, alright?”

When Broadway audiences last saw President Lyndon B. Johnson, he was wheeling and dealing to pass the Civil Rights Act in Robert Schenkkan’s Tony Award–winning Best Play All The Way, starring Bryan Cranston as the controversial President. Come September 6, audiences will get the next chapter in LBJ history, this time with Emmy winner Brian Cox in the Oval Office.

But director Bill Rauch says not to worry if you missed All The Way. “The Great Society is its own play,” he says. “I think there’s a little extra pleasure for people who saw All The Way, but this play stands on its own. To read more, click here.

FIRST LOOK: THE GREAT SOCIETY

From the creative team behind the Tony-winning Best Play, All The Way, comes a thrilling new play about the LBJ legacy: The Great Society.

17 actors. Over 50 characters. One epic political drama. Capturing Johnson’s passionate and aggressive attempts to build a just society for all, The Great Society follows his epic triumph in a landslide election to the agonizing decision not to run for re-election just three years later. It was an era that would define history forever: the rise of the Civil Rights Movement, the deaths of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, the escalation of the Vietnam War, and the creation of some of the greatest social programs America has ever known—and one man was at the center of it all: LBJ. to read more, click here.

Bill Rauch Directs “The Great Society” On Broadway

“The Great Society,” the sequel to Robert Schenkkan’s 2014 Tony-winning epic “All the Way,” began its Broadway run at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on September 6. Bill Rauch, who helmed “All the Way,” also directs the new work which officially opens on October 1 for a limited run through November 30. Brian Cox stars in the production as President Lyndon Baines Johnson.

Capturing Lyndon B. Johnson’s passionate and aggressive attempts to build a great society for all, the new play follows his epic triumph in a landslide election to the agonizing decision not to run for re-election just three years later.

Director Bill Rauch’s work has been seen across the nation, including on Broadway in the Tony Award-winning production “All the Way.” To read more and listen to Bill’s interview, click here.

Broadway Glossary: Meet The Presidents, Politicians, & Activists of THE GREAT SOCIETY

Tony Award & Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Robert Schenkkan‘s The Great Society, is currently in previews at Broadway’s Vivian Beaumont Theatre!

Continuing the journey begun by All the Way, this new play celebrates the political legacy of President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Capturing Johnson’s attempts to build a just society for all, The Great Society follows his triumph in a landslide election to the agonizing decision not to run for re-election just three years later. To read more, click here.

Broadway’s The Great Society to Launch Voter Registration Drives

Broadway’s The Great Society will launch voter registration drives at the Vivian Beaumont Theater throughout September and October. Drives will take place September 18 (4-4:30pm; 7-8pm); September 21 (5-5:30pm; 7-8pm); September 25 (4-4:30pm; 7-8pm); October 9 (4-4:30pm; 6-7pm); and October 16 (4-4:30pm; 6-7pm). Events will be sponsored by NYC Votes, FairVote, and Young Invincibles. To read more, click here.