
36.3K
Downloads
142
Episodes
Hosted by writer Shoshana Greenberg, Scene to Song brings on a guest to talk about a musical, musical theater writer, or a topic or trend in musical theater. Theme music by Julia Meinwald.
Hosted by writer Shoshana Greenberg, Scene to Song brings on a guest to talk about a musical, musical theater writer, or a topic or trend in musical theater. Theme music by Julia Meinwald.
Episodes

7 days ago
7 days ago
What’s your favorite musical that no one else has heard of?
In this episode of Scene to Song, we talk all about those musicals. The Indie Musicals. The Cult Favorites.
Composer and lyricist Will Larche talks about indie musicals and the release of his new album, Bumps in the Bathroom: and other lost shows, which preserves songs from obscure, cult-favorite indie musicals that premiered in the East Village.
Music played in this episode:
“Clarity” from Lesbian Love Octagon
“Bumps in the Bathroom” from Bumps in the Bathroom
“Apple Pie” from BAIL OUT THE MUSICAL
Mentioned:

Monday Mar 16, 2026
Glinda’s Journey in Wicked with Jennafer Newberry (Ep. 133)
Monday Mar 16, 2026
Monday Mar 16, 2026
Is Glinda’s side of Wicked memory-based? And why is she so darn optimistic?
This episode, Shoshana is joined by actor and singer Jennafer Newberry, best known for serving as the Glinda standby in the Broadway production of Wicked after previously playing Glinda on the national tour. In addition to her performing career, Newberry is also a musical theatre faculty member at the New York Film Academy.
The main conversation dives into Glinda’s character arc in Wicked, exploring the idea that the story may be Glinda’s memory-based retelling of Elphaba’s life. Shoshana and Newberry unpack Glinda’s privileged optimism at Shiz University, the comic brilliance of “Popular,” and how songs like “Dancing Through Life,” “One Short Day,” and “Thank Goodness” reveal her gradual transformation. They also discuss the emotional weight of “For Good” and the leadership role Glinda ultimately steps into by the end of the story.
In the “Why Is This So Good?” segment, they analyze “Agony” from Into the Woods, exploring how Stephen Sondheim uses humor, structure, and character to elevate the song into one of musical theater’s great comedic duets.
Music featured:
-
“Popular” from Wicked
-
“Dancing Through Life” from Wicked
-
“One Short Day” from Wicked
-
“Thank Goodness” from Wicked
-
“For Good” from Wicked
-
“Agony” from Into the Woods
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong
Be sure to sign up for the monthly e-newsletter at http://scenetosong.substack.com and consider supporting the show on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/scenetosong . The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.

Thursday Feb 26, 2026
Musicals Within Films: Waiting for Guffman with John Verderber Ep. 132
Thursday Feb 26, 2026
Thursday Feb 26, 2026
Shoshana is joined by writer and theater aficionado John Verderber, author of Harry Reams Goes to Hollywood and American Father, longtime Little Red Light Theater associate, and contributor to Time Out New York, New York Magazine, and Everything Sondheim. We deep dive into Christopher Guest's beloved mockumentary Waiting for Guffman and the musical within it Red, White, and Blaine. In honor of Catherine O’Hara we thought diving into Waiting for Guffman was timely.
We explore what makes the film endure: its uncanny authenticity to the world of community theater, the emotional stakes bound up in the hope of Broadway recognition via the elusive Mort Guffman, and the genuine earnestness at the heart of its musical numbers. They also trace its influence on the wave of mockumentary-style comedies that followed.
In the Why Is This So Good? segment, Verderber makes the case for "The Dream" from Fiddler on the Roof.
Music featured:
A Penny for Your Thoughts from Waiting for Guffman.
Stool Boom from Waiting for Guffman
The Dream from Fiddler on the Roof.
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.

Thursday Jan 29, 2026
Thursday Jan 29, 2026
"We watch a Holocaust play and we know that all of these people are gonna die. We watch an AIDS play and we know how badly it's gonna turn out." So what does it mean for a musical to be a period piece marked by tragedy?
In this Season 9 premiere of Scene to Song, host Shoshana Greenberg sits down with dramaturg Deborah Blumenthal to explore how musicals like Rent and Falsettos have transformed from contemporary stories into historical texts. They examine these iconic Broadway shows through the lens of the AIDS crisis, discussing how audiences experience them differently now than when they first premiered.
The conversation also features an analysis of "New York" from the 2024 West End musical Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York).
In this episode, you'll hear about:
- How Rent and Falsettos function as AIDS-era period pieces
- The evolving audience relationship with tragic historical musicals
- Deborah's dramaturgical approach to reviving classic shows
- Her upcoming production of Heartbreak Hotel
- What makes a musical become a "period piece"
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.

Monday Dec 29, 2025
Season 8 Finale (Ep. 130)
Monday Dec 29, 2025
Monday Dec 29, 2025
Five of this season's guests--William Forrest (Episode 118: The Sherman Brothers' Movie Musicals for Disney), Rick Rhobajt Widen (Episode 121: Bible Musicals), Tara Krieger (Episode 123: Tim Rice, Benny Andersson, and Björn Ulvaeus's Chess), Nathan Platte (Episode 126: Meet Me in St. Louis), and BethAnn Cohen (Parody in Musical Theater (Ep. 127))--return to discuss topics from the season and answer listener questions and comments. We also discuss the song "Chim Chim Cher-ee" from the 1964 film Mary Poppins.
This discussion was held live on Monday, December 22nd on Scene to Song’s YouTube channel, and was recorded for this podcast almost in its entirety. Scene to Song will return in January 2026. In the meantime, you can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow us on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music you are hearing is by Julia Meinwald.
Music played in this episode:
"Chim Chim Cher-ee" from Mary Poppins

Thursday Dec 18, 2025
Zora Neale Hurston's Anthropological Musical with Jordan Ealey (Ep. 129)
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
Thursday Dec 18, 2025
Did you know writer and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston wrote a musical? Now you do!
Multidisciplinary Black feminist scholar-artist Jordan Ealey discusses Hurston’s 1944 musical Polk County and what this anthropological musical was like, as well as its past and future in the musical theater canon. We also discuss “Sweet Chitty Chatty” from Kirsten Childs’s 2000 musical The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin.
Join us for the annual Scene to Song Live Show on December 22nd at 8PM EST- streaming on Scene to Song's YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/@SceneToSong
Music played in this episode:
“Sweet Chitty Chatty” from The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin

Thursday Nov 20, 2025
Thursday Nov 20, 2025
How did William Finn and Jonathan Larson revolutionize musical theater in the 1980s and 90s? Assistant Professor of Music Alex Bádue joins host Shoshana Greenberg to explore the parallel journeys and creative intersections of these two groundbreaking composers.
From their early work in the 80s to their hits Falsettos and Rent in the 1990s and more. We also talk about the song “Four Jews in a Room Bitching” from William Finn’s 1981 musical March of the Falsettos and then William Finn and James Lapine’s 1992 musical Falsettos.
Music played in this episode:
”Rent” from Rent
”Republicans” by William Finn
”All Fall Down” from Romance in Hard Times
“Rap Mitzvah” by Jonathan Larson, Jeff Kahn, and Ben Stiller
“Four Jews in a Room Bitching” from March of the Falsettos/Falsettos
💌 Write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest.
🫶 Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.”
✅ sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com.
❤️ Support the independently produced show on the Patreon.
The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.

Tuesday Oct 21, 2025
Parody in Musical Theater (Ep. 127)
Tuesday Oct 21, 2025
Tuesday Oct 21, 2025
BethAnn Freed Cohen joins Scene to Song to discuss parody in musical theater. We discuss “what exactly is a parody?” and what it means in musicals. We dig into what elements make a good parody, using examples such as Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance and the episode “Original Cast Album: Co-op” from the show Documentary Now! As BethAnn notes, ” there are musicals that are funny but are not parodies and there are musicals that copy styles but are not funny.” We also talk about the Stephen Sondheim and Mary Rodgers song “The Boy From…” from 1966 revue The Mad Show.
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.
Music played in this episode:
”With Cat-Like Tread, Upon Our Prey We Steal” from The Pirates of Penzance
”I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General” from The Pirates of Penzance
”The Element Song” by Tom Lehrer
”My Home Court” from “Original Cast Album: Co-Op”
”I gotta go” from “Original Cast Album: Co-Op”
”Holiday Party (I Did a Little Cocaine Tonight)” from “Original Cast Album: Co-Op”
”The Boy from…” from The Mad Show

Thursday Sep 25, 2025
Episode 126: Meet Me in St. Louis
Thursday Sep 25, 2025
Thursday Sep 25, 2025
Associate Professor of Musicology Nathan Platte discusses the 1944 movie musical Meet Me in St. Louis and 1989 Broadway musical adaptation, looking at how songs are used and how the story and songs changed from author Sally Benson's treatment to the big screen and beyond. We also talk about the Sherman Brothers' song "Feed the Birds (Tuppence a Bag)" from the 1964 movie musical Mary Poppins.
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.
Music played in this episode:
"Over the Bannister" from Meet Me in St. Louis
"Under the Bamboo Tree" from Meet Me in St. Louis
"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" from Meet Me in St. Louis
"Feed the Birds (Tuppence a Bag)" from Marry Poppins

Tuesday Aug 12, 2025
Scene to Song Episode 125: Greek Mythology Musical Theater
Tuesday Aug 12, 2025
Tuesday Aug 12, 2025
In this episode, singer, actress, writer, lyricist, and voiceover artist Amanda Fischler discusses Greek mythology in musical theater from Hadestown to The Golden Apple and all the aspects that go into writing these stories. We also talk about the song "In My Own Little Corner" from Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II's 1957 TV musical Cinderella, specifically the 1997 TV version with Brandy.
You can write to scenetosong@gmail.com with a comment or question about an episode or about musical theater, or if you’d like to be a podcast guest. Follow on Instagram at @ScenetoSong and on Facebook at “Scene to Song with Shoshana Greenberg Podcast.” And be sure to sign up for the new monthly e-newsletter at scenetosong.substack.com. Contribute to the Patreon. The theme music is by Julia Meinwald.
Music played in this episode:
"Why We Build the Wall" from Hadestown
"The Tirade" from The Golden Apple
"In My Own Little Corner" from Cinderella
