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Lin-Manuel Miranda performs with Obama: How his musical made Alexander Hamilton popular

'Hamilton' creator and star Miranda recently performed with Obama at the White House. Miranda's smash hit musical is prompting new interest in the Founding Father.

By Molly Driscoll, Staff writer

鈥淗amilton鈥 writer and star Lin-Manuel Miranda recently brought his hit show to the White House, along with other cast members. Part of that visit included Mr. Miranda rapping in the Rose Garden.

The segment involves President Barack Obama holding cards that have patriotic phrases ranging from 鈥渢he Federalist papers鈥 to 鈥淪unny and Bo鈥 (the Obamas鈥 pet dogs). Miranda used the cards as inspiration for his rapping (and stated at the end of the video, 鈥淚 did not see those words prior.鈥)

The president obviously knows a hit when he sees one happen 鈥 President Obama ends the video by saying, 鈥淵ou think that鈥檚 going viral? That鈥檚 going viral.鈥 (And yes, the video on the White House Facebook page currently has more than 8 million views.)

Miranda鈥檚 musical 鈥淗amilton,鈥 which debuted on Broadway this past August, uses musical styles including rap and hip-hop to tell the story of Founding Father Alexander Hamilton. The show has gotten superlative reviews, and the pricey tickets are extremely hard to get.

In addition to the show itself becoming popular, Miranda鈥檚 production also seems to have spurred a new interest in Hamilton himself. Miranda has stated that he based the show on the 2005 biography 鈥淎lexander Hamilton鈥 by Ron Chernow.聽

In the wake of the show's success, Mr. Chernow鈥檚 book is popping up on bestseller lists, currently ranking at number four on the IndieBound trade paperback nonfiction bestseller list, placing above such books as 鈥淥n the Move鈥 by Oliver Sacks聽and 鈥淵es Please鈥 by Amy Poehler.聽

The musical teaches audience members not only about Hamilton but about his contemporaries, including Thomas Jefferson, Aaron Burr, George Washington, and the Marquis de Lafayette.聽

Miranda makes this history more accessible to many who otherwise wouldn鈥檛 be interested. 鈥淎ll of the songs perform the magic trick of making drama (or, sometimes, comedy) out of heavy-going political and bureaucratic history,鈥 wrote聽Jody Rosen for The New York Times Style Magazine.

Jill Serjeant of Reuters聽notes that the show is 鈥渉ailed as transforming both theater and the way Americans think about 18th聽century history.鈥 George Cox, founder of the group Alexander Hamilton Scholars, and Alexander Hamilton Awareness Society president Rand Scholet both told her they have seen more interest in their organizations since the musical came on the scene.