The Musical That Changed Broadway from the Inside
Why Does Company Still Feel So Modern?
Some Broadway musicals are remembered for spectacular sets.
Others are remembered for unforgettable songs.
But Company changed Broadway in a very different way.
When it premiered in 1970, audiences didn’t meet a prince, a hero, or a fairy tale.
Instead, they met Bobby—a successful 35-year-old New Yorker surrounded by married friends but uncertain about his own future.
It was a surprisingly ordinary story.
Yet that ordinary story would become one of the most influential musicals ever written.
More than fifty years later, Company continues to inspire directors, actors, composers, and audiences around the world.

A Broadway Musical That Broke Every Rule
Before Company, Broadway musicals usually followed a familiar structure.
A clear beginning.
A central romance.
A dramatic conflict.
And a satisfying ending.
Stephen Sondheim and George Furth challenged that formula.
Rather than telling one continuous story, Company presents a collection of moments, conversations, celebrations, and memories.
Each scene explores a different perspective on love, marriage, loneliness, and friendship.
Instead of asking the audience to follow a plot,
the musical invites them to understand a person.
That idea transformed what a Broadway musical could become.

The Story Isn’t About Marriage.
It’s About Life.
At first glance, Company appears to be about marriage.
But the deeper question is much larger.
What does it really mean to share your life with another person?
Through Bobby’s encounters with his married friends, the audience sees happiness, frustration, compromise, affection, fear, and hope.
Nobody has the perfect relationship.
Nobody has all the answers.
That honesty makes Company remarkably timeless.
Whether you’re twenty-five or sixty-five,
its questions still feel personal today.

Stephen Sondheim’s Most Human Musical
Stephen Sondheim never wrote songs simply to entertain.
Every lyric reveals character.
Every melody exposes emotion.
In Company, music becomes conversation.
Songs like “Company,” “Another Hundred People,” and especially “Being Alive” aren’t interruptions to the story.
They are the story.
Few Broadway composers have explored human psychology with such intelligence and emotional depth.
That is one reason why Company remains essential viewing for anyone interested in musical theatre.
The Musical That Changed Broadway from the Inside

The Song That Defines an Entire Generation
Every great Broadway musical has one unforgettable song.
For Company, that song is undoubtedly “Being Alive.”
It arrives at the end of Bobby’s emotional journey—not as a triumphant finale, but as a quiet realization.
Throughout the musical, Bobby watches the lives of his married friends from the outside. Some relationships appear joyful, while others are filled with compromise, frustration, and uncertainty.
None of them are perfect.
By the final scene, Bobby understands something profound.
Life isn’t about finding the perfect relationship.
It’s about accepting the vulnerability that comes with loving another person.
“Being Alive” captures that moment with extraordinary honesty, making it one of Stephen Sondheim’s greatest compositions and one of Broadway’s most celebrated closing numbers.

Reinventing a Classic for a New Generation
More than fifty years after its original premiere, Company returned to Broadway in 2021 with a bold new interpretation.
For the first time, Bobby became Bobbie, a 35-year-old woman navigating the same questions about love, commitment, independence, and adulthood.
The gender swap didn’t change the heart of the musical.
Instead, it revealed how timeless its themes truly are.
Modern audiences discovered that the questions asked in 1970 remain just as relevant today.
How do we balance independence with intimacy?
What does commitment really mean?
Can we ever be completely ready to share our lives with someone else?
The revival was met with widespread critical acclaim, proving that great theatre evolves without losing its identity.
A Tony Award-Winning Revival
The 2021 Broadway revival quickly became one of the season’s biggest successes.
At the 75th Tony Awards (2022), Company won several major honors, including:
- 🏆 Best Revival of a Musical
- 🏆 Best Direction of a Musical
- 🏆 Best Scenic Design of a Musical
- 🏆 Best Costume Design of a Musical
- 🏆 Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical (Patti LuPone)
These awards weren’t simply recognition of an excellent revival.
They confirmed that Company continues to influence Broadway more than half a century after its debut.
Why Company Still Matters Today
Many Broadway musicals entertain audiences.
Only a handful redefine the art form.
Company belongs to that rare group.
Its influence can be seen in countless contemporary musicals that prioritize character, emotion, and psychological realism over traditional storytelling.
Without Company, modern works exploring complex adult relationships might look very different today.
Its impact extends far beyond Broadway.
Around the world, directors continue to reinterpret the musical, while audiences continue to discover new meanings within its songs and conversations.
Great theatre doesn’t simply reflect its own era.
It speaks to every generation.
That is why Company remains one of Broadway’s essential masterpieces.
Broadway Collection Rating
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5.0 / 5
| Category | Rating |
|---|---|
| Story | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Music | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Innovation | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Legacy | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Rewatch Value | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
Final Thoughts
Some musicals become classics because of their spectacle.
Others because of unforgettable melodies.
Company became a classic because it changed the language of Broadway itself.
Instead of telling audiences what love should look like, it asked them to reflect on their own lives.
That simple but courageous idea transformed musical theatre forever.
More than fifty years later, Company continues to remind us that the most powerful stories are often the most human.
Image Credit
Promotional images and official posters featured in this article remain the property of their respective production companies and copyright holders. They are used solely for editorial, educational, and informational purposes.
EP21 Company
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