Smash (TV series)

Smash
Genre Musical
Drama
Created by Theresa Rebeck
Developed by Robert Greenblatt (uncredited)
Starring Debra Messing
Jack Davenport
Katharine McPhee
Christian Borle
Megan Hilty
Anjelica Huston
Leslie Odom Jr.
Jeremy Jordan
Krysta Rodriguez
Andy Mientus
Raza Jaffrey
Brian d'Arcy James
Jaime Cepero
Theme music composer Marc Shaiman
Opening theme "5, 6, 7, 8" (Season 2)
Composer(s) Marc Shaiman
Scott Wittman
Chris Bacon (score, episodes 7–32)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 32 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Craig Zadan
Neil Meron
Darryl Frank
Justin Falvey
Marc Shaiman
Scott Wittman
Steven Spielberg
Theresa Rebeck
David Marshall Grant
Joshua Safran
Producer(s) Jordon Nardino
Jim Chory
Location(s) Brooklyn, New York
Cinematography Shelly Johnson (pilot only)
M. David Mullen
Editor(s) Andy Weisblum (pilot only)
Bill Henry
Camilla Toniolo
Allyson Johnson
Running time 40–45 minutes
Production company(s) Madwoman in the Attic, Inc. (season 1)
DreamWorks Television
Universal Television
Distributor NBCUniversal Television Distribution
Release
Original network NBC
Original release February 6, 2012 (2012-02-06) – May 26, 2013 (2013-05-26)
External links
Official website

Smash is an American musical drama television series created by playwright Theresa Rebeck and developed by Robert Greenblatt for NBC. Steven Spielberg served as one of the executive producers. The series was broadcast in the US by NBC and produced by DreamWorks Television and Universal Television. The series revolves around a fictional New York City theater community and specifically the creation of a new Broadway musical. It features a large ensemble cast, led by Debra Messing, Jack Davenport, Katharine McPhee, Christian Borle, Megan Hilty, and Anjelica Huston.

The show debuted on February 6, 2012, and its first season ended on May 14, 2012. Its second season premiered on February 5, 2013, and ended on May 26, 2013. NBC announced a change in their lineup in March 2013 and moved the show to Saturdays starting April 6, 2013.[1] The series was officially cancelled on May 10, 2013.[2][3] Second-season executive producer-show runner Josh Safran said the final episode of season two worked as a series finale.[4]

The series, particularly the pilot episode, enjoyed some critical success. The first season received the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography among four nominations. The series was also nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy and a Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media ("Let Me Be Your Star").

Synopsis

The show revolves around a group of characters creating new Broadway musicals, where everyone must balance their often chaotic personal life with the all-consuming demands of life in the theater. The series features original music by composers Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman.

Season 1 (2012)

Main article: Smash (season 1)

Julia Houston (Debra Messing) and Tom Levitt (Christian Borle), a Broadway writing team come up with the idea of a new musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe titled Bombshell. Producer Eileen Rand (Anjelica Huston), in the midst of divorce proceedings from her philandering husband, jumps on board and brings with her Derek Wills (Jack Davenport), a difficult but brilliant director. Ivy Lynn (Megan Hilty) is initially cast as Marilyn, but is forced to deal with competition from the talented, yet naive ensemble member Karen Cartwright (Katharine McPhee). Julia's former lover Michael Swift (Will Chase) is initially cast in the role of Joe DiMaggio. However, when Julia and Michael's reunion causes serious trouble in her marriage to Frank (Brian d'Arcy James), the decision is made to fire Michael. The role of Marilyn is recast with film star Rebecca Duvall (Uma Thurman), leaving Ivy devastated. After a somewhat disastrous out-of-town opening in Boston, Rebecca has fallen sick due to a peanut allergy and the actor playing Joe departs the production for a better gig. Derek subsequently casts Karen in the role of Marilyn and Michael is reinstated as Joe. Karen discovers Ivy has slept with her fiancé Dev (Raza Jaffrey), while Eileen finds out that her assistant Ellis (Jaime Cepero) was the one who poisoned Rebecca and fires him. Karen gets through her debut and the season ends with the closing number being applauded by the audience.

Season 2 (2013)

Main article: Smash (season 2)

As Bombshell works to open on Broadway in New York City, the show runs into legal and creative troubles which threaten its future. Meanwhile, the cast and crew (featured in Season 1) attempt to find work. Karen meets two aspiring friends and partners (Kyle, a stage writer played by Andy Mientus, and Jimmy, a composer played by Jeremy Jordan) and tries to get their work noticed, especially by Derek. Derek works with Broadway star Veronica Moore (Jennifer Hudson), who becomes friends with Karen. Ivy gets the lead in Liaisons, a show based on the play Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Bombshell needs work in order to open on Broadway. First, Peter Gillman (Daniel Sunjata), a dramaturg with whom Julia had a rocky relationship is hired in order to help re-write the show. Second, Jerry (Michael Cristofer) replaces Eileen as the show's producer after she had to step down when the federal authorities found out (through Jerry's orchestration) that she had financed Bombshell with illegal money. Jimmy and Kyle's show, called Hit List, eventually goes to the New York Fringe Festival and then they meet a producer for an off-broadway theater called Manhattan Theatre Workshop. Karen quits Bombshell to be in Hit List because she has to choose one of them. Ivy takes Karen's role as Marilyn Monroe in Bombshell. Hit List starts rehearsals. Karen and Jimmy's relationship starts to develop but may cause some disturbance in the work place with Derek's secret feelings for Karen. Hit List goes to Broadway produced by Jerry and Bombshell and Hit List go face to face at the Tony Awards. Hit List wins 7 Tonys, which is more than Bombshell, however Bombshell wins Best Musical and Best Actress (Ivy Lynn) in a Leading Role.

Cast and characters

Main article: Characters of Smash

Development and production

Conception

Development began in 2009 at Showtime by then-Showtime entertainment president Robert Greenblatt and Steven Spielberg, from an idea by Spielberg, who had been working on the concept for years;[14] Greenblatt, described as a "devoted theater geek", had also produced a short-lived musical adaptation of the film 9 to 5 in 2009.[15] The original concept was that each season would follow the production of a new musical; if any of them were "stage-worthy", Spielberg would make them into actual Broadway musicals.[16] The series was inspired by The West Wing and Upstairs, Downstairs as role models for successful TV dramas. Garson Kanin's novel Smash (New York: Viking, 1980) provided the title and setting, although the plots have little in common.[16]

Greenblatt then brought the project with him to NBC when he was made NBC Entertainment president in January 2011. Theresa Rebeck wrote the pilot script and is series creator.[16] Executive producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron suggested Rebeck for the series to Spielberg and Greenblatt.[16] NBC ordered production of a pilot in January 2011 for the 2011–12 television season.[17]

Michael Mayer directed the pilot episode, with Spielberg serving as an executive producer.[18] It has been reported that the pilot cost $7.5 million to produce.[16][19] On May 11, 2011, NBC picked the project up to series. When the network announced its 2011–12 schedule on May 15, 2011, the series was slated to premiere in mid-season.[18] NBC opted to hold the show for mid-season in order to pair it up with the hit reality show The Voice on Monday nights.[20] On August 1, 2011, it was announced by the press that show's series premiere date would be February 6, 2012, the night after Super Bowl XLVI, with heavy promotion through early winter on many of the network's properties before the premiere.[21][22] At the NBC Press Tour, Greenblatt announced that Smash would have 15 episodes produced for the first season to coincide with The Voice.[23]

Crew

The series is a production of Universal Television in association with DreamWorks.[18] Theresa Rebeck is the creator of the series as well as the writer of the pilot episode[18] and five episodes of the first season, including the season finale. The series has a large number of executive producers including Steven Spielberg, Craig Zadan, Neil Meron, David Marshall Grant, Rebeck, Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey.[18] Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman serve as the composers and executive producers.[18] In March 2012, Rebeck stepped down as showrunner of the musical drama.[24] On April 24, 2012, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Gossip Girl executive producer Joshua Safran would take the lead for the second season while Rebeck would remain a writer and an executive producer.[6] However, on May 2, 2012, Rebeck stated in an interview that she would not be returning to the show in any capacity.[25]

Production

Many of those behind Smash began the series with high hopes. Rebeck was a large part of that. As one early hire later described her to BuzzFeed: "She was this kick-ass woman showrunner who wasn't taking shit from the network. Someone who had a very clear vision who was going to stand up to the network. They were all good things in the beginning."[15]

Despite her experience writing and producing in television, Rebeck had never been a showrunner, responsible for the day-to-day operations of a series, before. David Marshall Grant, a playwright and actor who had served in that capacity during Brothers & Sisters' final seasons, was hired as executive producer to help her with it. Rebeck was reportedly resentful, and worried that she was being set up to fail and Grant positioned to replace her. Very quickly she began shutting him out of key decisions.[15]

Rebeck also decided she would not run a writers' room, regularly meeting with the entire writing staff to discuss and perfect episodes and plotlines as many other television series did. "[They] really are not my thing, because I can only stand being in a room with people so many hours a day," she told New York. "And I feel like early drafts should be speedy because everyone changes their mind, so why spend a lot of time up front parsing sentences?"[26] Instead she would follow the example of showrunners like Matthew Weiner and Aaron Sorkin and have writers submit a first draft, which she then revised.[15]

Very quickly, the writers recalled, the show became a "dictatorship." Rebeck's opinion was the only one that mattered. She insisted on writing the second and third episodes herself, and writers said that the drop in quality was evident during pre-air screenings. During this time Rebeck was often fighting with Spielberg, who wanted Hilty, Greenblatt, or Grant replaced. As a result of these distractions, plotlines like Julia's adoption dilemma (mirroring Rebeck's real life) began to assume unusual prominence, and along with them secondary characters like Leo and Ellis became almost main characters—the latter because Spielberg reportedly liked him.[15]

Since the writers never met as a group, they found that finished episodes often repeated the same character moments instead of advancing those characters, and that strange out-of-context moments, usually musical numbers set away from the stage, had been inserted. They were particularly frustrated in trying to write for Julia, whom Rebeck had based on herself and consequently would not allow to have any difficulties. Later in the season, they were hoping that Greenblatt would win some of their fights. "You know it's bad when our last hope was the network," one told BuzzFeed. However, many of them said the show's own problems were not entirely Rebeck's fault, since Greenblatt also intervened in things like costume design and Spielberg was not informed of the conflicts until near the end.[15]

After she left the show, Rebeck, who, citing confidentiality requirements, did not respond to the BuzzFeed story at first other than to say she "was treated quite badly",[15] spoke at some length to The New York Observer about Smash:

One of the points of contention last year was that the network thinks they have the right to say to the writer of the show, "We don't want her to do this. We want her to do this ... And I would sometimes say back to them, "She would never do that." And they'd look at me like I was crazy, and I'd be like, "Nope, it's not crazy, it's just who the character is." You have to respect who the character is. It has its own internal truth and you can't betray that. And if you don't betray that, it will not betray you. There is this sort of sense that if you don't fuck with the muse—if you don't fuck with the muse, the muse will stand by you ... It turns into bigger questions about power and art, power and storytelling. Is power itself bigger than storytelling? And I would say no.[27]

Following the show's cancellation, Kate Aurthur, the writer of the BuzzFeed story, reposted an email exchange she had with Rebeck. Pointing to the show's decline in ratings during its second season, Rebeck asked, "If in fact [I] was the problem with [the show], wouldn't things have gotten better—rather than dramatically worse—once [I] left?" She accused Aurthur of relying on a single unnamed source and asked that the story, which she called "wildly untrue", be taken down.[28]

Music

NBC announced on June 9, 2011 that they had signed a deal with Columbia Records for a soundtrack of the series. The deal gives Columbia worldwide digital and physical rights to the first season, with options to subsequent seasons. The deal includes both original songs written for the series and any covers of songs featured on the show.[29]

The series soundtrack for Season 1, The Music of Smash, was released on May 1, 2012.[29][30] The album debuted on the Billboard 200 at #9 with 40,000 copies sold in its first week.[31]

A Bombshell cast recording, featuring original songs from the first and second season of the show, was released on February 12, 2013, selling 16,000 copies in its first week.[32] It contains all 22 songs written for the fictional Bombshell musical and features lead vocals by Katharine McPhee (Karen Cartwright) and Megan Hilty (Ivy Lynn) as Marilyn Monroe.[33]

In addition to songs by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, the show's second season featured songs by up-and-coming composers Drew Gasparini, Joe Iconis, and writing duo Benji Pasek & Justin Paul.

Several songs were written and performed for the series' season two fictional musical, Hit List. On October 15, 2013, it was announced that Hit List would be staged in concert format at 54 Below on December 9. Smash stars Jeremy Jordan, Andy Mientus and Krysta Rodriguez were scheduled to perform.[34] Because of demand for tickets, an additional performance was scheduled for December 8.[35]

Bombshell musical numbers

Act I
  • "Let Me Be Your Star" – Norma Jeane Mortenson
  • "At Your Feet" – Gladys, young Norma Jeane, Tourists and Hollywood Citizens
  • "Never Give All the Heart" – Norma Jeane
  • "The 20th Century Fox Mambo" – Marilyn Monroe and Twentieth Century Fox Studio Staff
  • "The National Pastime" – Marilyn and New York Yankees
  • "History is Made at Night" – Marilyn, Joe DiMaggio and Lovers
  • "I Never Met a Wolf Who Didn't Love to Howl" – Marilyn and Troops
  • "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" – Marilyn and Joe DiMaggio
  • "Don't Say Yes Until I Finish Talking" – Darryl F. Zanuck and Studio Executives
  • "Smash!" – Aspiring Actresses
  • "On Lexington & 52nd Street" – Joe DiMaggio, Marilyn, Reporter and New York Citizens
  • "Cut, Print...Moving On" – Marilyn and Studio Staff

Act II
  • "Public Relations" – Marilyn and Press
  • "Dig Deep" – Marilyn, Lee Strasberg and Students
  • "Second Hand White Baby Grand" – Marilyn
  • "They Just Keep Moving the Line" – Marilyn
  • "Let's Be Bad" – Marilyn and the cast of Some Like It Hot
  • "The Right Regrets" – Arthur Miller
  • "Our Little Secret" – John F. Kennedy and Marilyn
  • "Hang the Moon" – Gladys and Marilyn
  • "Don't Forget Me" – Marilyn

Hit List musical numbers

Act I
  • "Broadway Here I Come (Pre-reprise)" — The Diva
  • "Rewrite This Story" — Amanda and Jesse
  • "Good For You" — Amanda
  • "Broadway Here I Come — Amanda
  • "The Love I Meant To Say" — Jesse
  • "Reach For Me" — The Diva
  • "Original" — Amanda
  • "The Love I Meant To Say (Reprise)" — Amanda (as "Nina")
  • "I Heard Your Voice In a Dream" — Jesse
  • "Don't Let Me Know" — Amanda (as "Nina")and Jesse
  • "Pretender" — Amanda (as "Nina")
  • "I'm Not Sorry" — Amanda (as "Nina") and The Diva
  • "I Heard Your Voice In a Dream" — Jesse
  • "Caught In the Storm" — Jesse

Act II
  • "[TBD Coming Home Song]" — The Diva (as "Sara Smith")
  • "Good For You" — Amanda (as "Nina")
  • "Heart-Shaped Wreckage" — Amanda and Jesse
  • "Broadway Here I Come (Reprise)" — Amanda
  • "The Love I Meant To Say (Reprise)" — Jesse
  • "The Goodbye Song" — Jesse, Amanda, The Diva and Ensemble[36]

Original Broadway production

During production of the show, executive producer Craig Zadan said: "We stand on the set, watch the Bombshell numbers and say, "Wouldn't this be great on Broadway? And so far that's where we've left it. Our priority now is producing a great TV show".[37]

In June 2015 following the sold-out performance at the Minskoff Theatre, it was announced that "Bombshell" would head to the Broadway stage. The executive producers of "Smash" and the "Bombshell" concert Neil Meron and Craig Zadan are set to executive produce the Broadway production. No timeline for the show has been announced.[38]

Critical reception

The pilot of Smash received overwhelmingly positive reviews from television critics, but the critical response was less positive as the season progressed.

Review aggregator Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 of reviews from mainstream critics, calculated a score of 79 based on 32 reviews.[39] Maureen Ryan of The Huffington Post called it one of the strongest new shows of the season.[40] The Huffington Post writer Karen Ocamb praised the writing and the creativity of the series.[41] Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times called the show a "triumph" and also went on to say that the creator Theresa Rebeck as well as her team, "have managed to capture the grand and sweeping gesture that is musical theater and inject it with the immediate intimacy of television."[42] David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle, gave the program a rave review and said that, "[It's so] good you can't help wondering why no one thought of it before, a compelling mix of credible real-life melodrama with a fictionalized approximation of what it takes to get a Broadway show from the idea stage to opening night."[43] Tim Goodman from The Hollywood Reporter called the pilot episode "Excellent, a bar-raiser for broadcast networks" and called it superior to Glee.[44] He also praised writing and acting for the series, comparing it to the quality of a cable television series.[44] Matt Mitovich of TVLine called the cast "pretty damn perfect" and complimented the musical numbers.[45] Robert Bianco of USA Today gave the show three and a half out of four stars and wrote, "Unless you're allergic to musicals in general and Broadway in particular, you should find that a compelling central story, a strong cast, an out-of-the-procedural-mold premise and some rousing, roof-raising numbers more than compensate for any lingering problems."[46] Tanner Stransky of Entertainment Weekly ranked the pilot episode as the 8th best television episode of 2012 saying, "After we watched the subsequent 14 episodes of Smash with a mixture of fascination and dismay (seriously, did Debra Messing's Julia wear a men's pajama top to meet her lover?), it was difficult to recall that the pilot was positively magical. But it was. In fact, that episode-ending performance of 'Let Me Be Your Star' (featuring dueling divas Megan Hilty and Katharine McPhee) was among TV's most watchable and gleeful three minutes of the year. Rare is the series whose high-water mark is its pilot, and Smash is a shining example."[47]

However, the critical reception for subsequent episodes was less enthusiastic. Chris Harnick of The Huffington Post wrote, "How has the rest of Season 1 been so far? Not so phenomenal. That's not to say it has been downright terrible—there have been some highly entertaining moments—but it certainly hasn't been goosebumps-inducing, like the final moments of Episode 1, set to 'Let Me Be Your Star.'"[48] Kevin Fallon summed up the response in The Atlantic, writing that "there's been an almost visceral reaction to how rapidly and sharply the show's quality has dipped, and just how much promise Smash has thwarted...In other words: It's bad." Fallon cites other critics in demonstrating the general acceptance of this opinion.[49]

Awards and nominations

Smash received a number of awards and nominations. In 2012, it was nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards, winning one for Choreography.

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2011 Critics' Choice Television Award Most Exciting New Series Won
2012 Primetime Emmy Award[50][51] Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series Uma Thurman Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Josh Bergasse Won
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series Marc Shaiman (Original Music) & Christian Bacon (Score) Nominated
Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics Marc Shaiman & Scott Wittman
("Let Me Be Your Star")
Nominated
Teen Choice Award Choice TV Breakout Show Nominated
Choice TV Breakout Female Star Katharine McPhee Nominated
Television Critics Association Award Outstanding New Program Nominated
Women's Image Network Awards Best Drama Series Won
Best Actress in a Drama Series Katharine McPhee Won
Debra Messing Nominated
2013 American Cinema Editors Award[52] Best Edited One-Hour Series for Commercial Television Andrew Weisblum ("Pilot") Nominated
Dorian Award[53][54] LGBT TV Show of the Year Nominated
Campy TV Show of the Year Nominated
TV Musical Performance of the Year Katharine McPhee & Megan Hilty
("Let Me Be Your Star")
Nominated
Katharine McPhee, Raza Jaffrey & cast
("A Thousand and One Nights")
Nominated
Golden Globe Award Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy Nominated
Grammy Award Best Song Written for Visual Media "Let Me Be Your Star"
(Marc Shaiman & Scott Wittman)
Nominated
GLAAD Media Awards[55][56] Outstanding Drama Series Won
CDG Awards[57][58] Outstanding Contemporary Television Series Molly Maginnis Won
MPSE Golden Reel Award[59] Best Sound Editing: Short Form Musical in Television Dan Evan Farkas, Annette Kudrak and Robert Cotnoir MPSE ("Hell on Earth") Won
Society of Operating Cameramen[60] Camera Operator of the Year in Television Jeff Muhlstock Nominated
Primetime Emmy Award[61] Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics Marc Shaiman & Scott Wittman
("Hang the Moon")
Nominated
Andrew McMahon
("I Heard Your Voice In a Dream")
Nominated

Pre-release

In June 2011, Smash was one of eight honorees in the "Most Exciting New Series" category at the 1st Critics' Choice Television Awards, voted by journalists who had seen the pilots.[62] Due to the already positive buzz surrounding the show, NBC offered early viewings of the pilot on different platforms. From January 15 through January 30, 2012, it was screened on selected flights of American Airlines. From January 16 through February 6, 2012, the full pilot was offered for free on iTunes, Amazon Video, Xbox, and Zune.

Ratings

The ratings for the Season 1 premiere were strong but ratings steadily dropped as the series progressed. The pilot episode was watched by 11.44 million viewers and had an 18–49 rating of 3.8/10.[63][64] It was also the third-highest rated new drama debut of the 2011–2012 television season (behind Once Upon a Time and Touch)[65] and delivered the biggest 10 p.m. rating of any drama in this television season.[66] The program also had the highest 18–49 rating and viewership for an NBC series in the time slot since November 2008,[67] but ratings declined in subsequent episodes. The fourth episode, aired on February 27, was seen by 6.6 million viewers and received a 2.3/6 rating in the 18–49 age group.[68] However, the show's fifth episode, aired on March 5, saw a 17% increase in ratings. It had an 18–49 rating of 2.7/7 and was seen by 7.76 million viewers.[69] But ratings for the show decreased in later episodes, with the eighth episode dropping to an 18–49 rating of 2.1/5 and viewership going down to 6.4 million viewers.[70] Nonetheless, it has become NBC's #1 drama in adults 18–49 and total viewers.[71] The series was also up 160 percent in adults 18–49 versus NBC's season average in the time period prior to Smash (with a 2.6 rating vs. a 1.0, "live plus same day") and in total viewers, Smash has improved the time period by 100 percent (7.7 million vs. 3.9 million).[72]

For Season 2, Smash was scheduled for Tuesdays at 10 at mid-season starting February 5, behind the low-rated The New Normal and several weeks before the new season of The Voice premiered, and the ratings cratered, with the February 5, 2013 2-hour 2-episode season premiere getting a 1.2 rating in the 18-49 demo. The ratings slid further to 0.9 for the 3rd episode and stayed around that number through the sixth episode, when NBC announced it was moving Smash to Saturdays as of April 6, 2013 and changing up its Tuesday lineup to put its dating reality show Ready for Love behind The Voice.[73]

Season Timeslot (ET) Season premiere Season finale Rank Viewers
(in millions)
Viewers High
(in millions)
Viewers Low
(in millions)
18-49 Average 18-49 High 18-49 Low Ref
1 Monday 10:00 p.m. February 6, 2012 May 14, 2012 #51 8.94 11.44 5.34 3.2 3.8 1.8 [74]
2 Tuesday 10:00 p.m.
(February 5 - April 2, 2013)
Saturday 9:00 p.m.
(April 6, 2013)[1]
Saturday 8:00 p.m.
(April 13 - May 11, 2013)
Sunday 9:00 p.m.
(May 26, 2013)[75]
February 5, 2013 May 26, 2013 #113 2.72 4.48 1.80 1.4 1.2 0.4 [76]

Syndication

Ovation has picked up off-network rights to Smash. The first season debuted on July 19, 2013. Season two episodes, scheduled to begin airing in November 2013, were pushed forward to January 2014.[77]

International distribution

Country/Region Channel Premiere date
 Australia W Channel
Seven Network
February 21, 2012
August 28, 2012
 Belgium Prime April 3, 2012
 Brazil Universal Channel
Rede Record
March 28, 2012
April 3, 2013
 Canada CTV February 6, 2012[78]
 Finland MTV3 August 21, 2012[79]
 France TF1 July 4, 2012
 Germany RTL II January 3, 2013[80]
 Hungary m1 (TV channel) March 21, 2012
 Iceland Stöð 2 March 7, 2012
 Indonesia Diva Universal March 19, 2012
 Israel HOT3 February 23, 2012
 Italy Mya (pay television) February 19, 2012
La5 (free-to-air) November 30, 2012[81]
 Japan Dlife November 3, 2012
Latin America Universal Channel March 28, 2012
 Malaysia Diva Universal March 19, 2012
 Netherlands RTL 5 April 2012
 New Zealand TV3 September 6, 2012
 Norway TV3 June 5, 2012
 Philippines 2nd Avenue (RJTV) February 9, 2012[82]
 Poland Canal+ Poland September 20, 2012
 Portugal TVSeries February 15, 2012
 Romania Diva Universal September 25, 2012
 Russia Diva Universal September 11, 2012
 Singapore Diva Universal March 19, 2012
MediaCorp Channel 5 January 30, 2013
 South Africa M-Net Series October 2012[83]
 South Korea FOX Channel Korea March 2012
 Spain Divinity October 11, 2012[84]
 Sweden TV3 February 27, 2012[85]
 Thailand Diva Universal March 19, 2012
 Turkey Universal Channel April 16, 2012
 United Kingdom Sky Atlantic April 21, 2012

DVD releases

The first season of Smash was released under the title Smash: Season One as a widescreen four-disc DVD box set on October 29, 2012 formatted for Region 2. The DVD formatted for Region 1 was released on January 8, 2013. Distributed by Universal Studios Home Entertainment, the set features every episode and includes several DVD extras including behind-the-scenes footage and making-of features as well as extended and deleted scenes and a blooper reel. Also included is an UltraViolet copy of each episode.[86]

The Target exclusive edition of the season one set includes a fifth disc that includes the full-length music video for "Touch Me" performed by Katharine McPhee, as well as twenty minutes of additional interviews with Jack Davenport (Derek Wills) and Megan Hilty (Ivy Lynn).

Season 2 was released on DVD on August 6, 2013.[87]

References

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