Lin-Manuel Miranda launches initiative to improve diversity on Broadway

8 June 2023, 18:24

Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator of the award-winning Broadway musical Hamilton, receives a standing ovation at the ending of the play’s premiere held at the Santurce Fine Arts Centre in San Juan, Puerto R
Philanthropy Lin Manuel Miranda. Picture: PA

The Hamilton creator wants to make it easier for those hiring for offstage jobs to find diverse applicants.

Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda hopes to increase diversity on Broadway and in theatres across the US with a new initiative.

The Representation, Inclusion and Support for Employment Theatre Network (Rise Network) is launching a directory of diverse offstage theatre professionals to make it easier for them to get hired for jobs ranging from stagehands to producers and general managers.

“There has been a lot of talk since 2020 about diversity and change,” Miranda told The Associated Press, adding that the directory is coming at a “really wonderful time because theatre, as a system, has learned to say the right things”.

“Now,” Miranda said, “it’s about backing that up.”

According to a 2021 report from the Asian American Performers Action Coalition, which studied Broadway shows in the 2018-2019 season, 100% of general managers and 94% of producers were white.

White actors were cast in 80% of the lead roles in musicals and 90% of the lead roles in plays.

Steps have been taken to improve diversity in the theatre since then – most notably A New Deal for Broadway in 2021, negotiated between Black Theatre United and Broadway shows and their touring productions.

With Rise Network, Miranda wants to make it easier for those hiring for offstage jobs to find diverse applicants.

“Rise is really about making sure that the beautiful mosaic of people you see – if you see a production of Hamilton or you see a production of MJ (The Musical) or Fat Ham on Broadway – is also reflected backstage, that it’s not just the folks in front of the footlights,” Miranda said.

“Because there are incredibly talented practitioners and carpenters and make-up designers and wardrobe folks who also deserve that shot.”

Wilson Chin, the New York-based set and production designer behind Broadway shows Cost Of Living and Pass Over, said he hopes Rise becomes widely used by those hiring in the theatre.

“People keep saying, ‘We can’t find anyone’, but we’re out there,” said Chin, who is currently working on several projects, including Turandot for the Washington National Opera and the new Hunter S Thompson musical for La Jolla Playhouse.

“We just have to be found. Having us all in one place is great for us to be seen.”

Miranda said he got the idea for Rise Network from director Ava DuVernay’s Array initiative, which features a database of women and people of colour working in the film and television industries in offscreen jobs.

He began working with his friend, composer Georgia Stitt, who developed Maestra, a directory for female composers, conductors, arrangers and other musical jobs.

The Miranda Family Fund provided the seed money to build Rise Theatre Network and will help support the directory, which is free for those looking to work and looking to hire.

Adam Hyndman, Rise Network’s project director, said it will launch on Thursday with nearly 1,000 theatre professionals in the directory and will look to expand after its launch.

“Theatre-making exists everywhere,” Hyndman said.

“There is diversity in all corners of the United States and in stories that can be told. We see the sky as the limit for the user base.”

Robb Nanus, executive director of the Broadway Advocacy Coalition, a non-profit that fights racism through storytelling, said his group supports Rise Network’s efforts because it provides the connections needed to create change in theatre hiring practices.

“They understand the complexities of pipeline issues, that it’s not just about putting names in a database,” Nanus said.

“It’s about understanding how to support people holistically and how to make connections between people who want to work and people looking for team members.”

Charlotte St Martin, president of The Broadway League, the trade association representing commercial theatre, said she loved the idea for Rise Network as soon as she heard it.

“There’s a sincere interest by the theatre community all over the United States to ensure that we diversify not only on stage, but backstage and in the audience,” she said.

“So this will help us do that.”

St Martin said increasing diversity in the theatre not only creates more vibrant productions, but also more robust interest from audiences.

“This is good for business and the right thing to do,” she said.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Biden

US to give one billion dollars in arms deal to Israel, congressional aides say

Indonesia Flash Floods

Indonesia seeds clouds to block rainfall after floods killed at least 58 people

Russia has amassed over 500,000 troops on its front line with Ukraine

Russia 'amasses more than half a million troops on front line,' with outlook 'bleak' for Ukraine

Philippines China Disputed Shoal

Filipino activists, fishermen sail to disputed shoal in South China Sea

Boeing-Sales

Justice Department: Boeing violated deal that avoided prosecution after crashes

Solar Storm

Sun shoots out biggest solar flare in nearly a decade

Armed men hijack a prison van in Normandy

‘Justice will be done’, Macron vows, after two guards killed in ambush on prison van with gang boss ‘The Fly’ on the run

Michael Cohen leaves his apartment building on his way to Manhattan Criminal Court in New York

Michael Cohen gives more evidence in Donald Trump hush money trial

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky greets US secretary of state Antony Blinken in Kyiv, Ukraine

Blinken visits Kyiv and tries to rally Ukrainian spirits as Russia makes gains

NaKeya Haywood holding six-month-old Nyla Brooke Haywood at Silver Cross Hospital in New Lenox, Illinois

‘Micropreemie’ baby who weighed 1lb and 1oz at birth goes home from hospital

Two watches belonging to Michael Schumacher on display

Eight watches owned by Michael Schumacher fetch £3.5m at auction in Geneva

Messi the dog poses for photographers upon arrival at the awards ceremony and the premiere of the film The Second Act during the 77th international film festival in Cannes, southern France

Messi the dog comes to Cannes for an encore

Meryl Streep poses for photographers upon arrival at the awards ceremony and the premiere of the film The Second Act during the 77th international film festival, Cannes, southern France

Cannes opens with Greta Gerwig’s jury and honorary Palme d’Or for Meryl Streep

Canadian author Alice Munro in 2013

Alice Munro, Nobel literature winner revered as short story master, dies aged 92

Armed men hijack a prison van in Normandy. Inset: Mohammed Amra, nicknamed 'La Mouche' (The Fly)

Hundreds of French police officers join manhunt for gang boss ‘The Fly’ after two guards killed in ambush on prison van

Argentina's Diego Maradona, left, and West German goalkeeper Harald Schumacher holding their awards during the Soccer Golden Shoe Award ceremony in Paris, France, in November 1986

Maradona heirs say Golden Ball trophy was stolen and want to stop its auction