
Hamilton: An American Musical stands as the defining theatrical phenomenon of the 2010s—a work that transcended its medium to become a genuine cultural watershed. Lin-Manuel Miranda's sung-and-rapped-through musical transforms Ron Chernow's biography into a contemporary narrative of ambition and legacy, casting the Founding Fathers as figures of hip-hop urgency rather than marble statuary. The fusion of hip-hop, R&B, and classical Broadway traditions proved not merely novelty but genuine artistic synthesis, allowing the work to speak simultaneously to historians and to audiences who had never attended a Broadway musical. Since its 2015 premiere at The Public Theater and subsequent transfer to the Richard Rodgers Theatre, Hamilton has achieved a rare cultural penetration—it is simultaneously a critical darling, a commercial juggernaut, and a work that has fundamentally altered expectations for what musical theatre can accomplish. The 2020 filmed capture, released on Disney+, extended its reach beyond the theatre itself, cementing its status as a work that will define a generation's understanding of both American history and contemporary musical form.
The story of Alexander Hamilton told through hip-hop, R&B, and Broadway traditions.