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Dear Theodosia (Reprise) Lyrics — Hamilton

Dear Theodosia (Reprise) Lyrics

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[Burr:]
Dear Theodosia, how to say to you
Sometime last night, your mother breathed your name
And like a flame that flickers out too soon, she died
She's gone

She dedicated every day to you
She changed my life, she made my life worthwhile
And when you smile
I know a part of her lives on
I know I can go on

You have come of age with our young nation
We bleed and fight for you
Sometimes it seems that's all we do
And you and I will build a strong foundation
And I'll be here for you
The way is clear for you to blow us all away

Someday, someday, yeah you'll blow us all away

Someday, someday...

Song Overview

Dear Theodosia (Reprise) lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda
Leslie Odom Jr. delivers the “Dear Theodosia (Reprise)” lyrics in the workshop video.

Personal Review

Workshop cast performing Dear Theodosia (Reprise)
Performance in the 2014 workshop.

Dear Theodosia (Reprise) runs just over a minute, yet it reshapes Burr’s arc with a single letter-home lullaby. I first heard the bootleg in a dim dorm room: Burr’s voice cracks on “She’s gone,” and the air shifted. This tiny elegy, wedged between “Burn” and “Blow Us All Away,” was cut before Broadway, but its ghost still haunts the score.

Takeaway? Burr’s grief foreshadows the fatal impatience that will soon claim both sons—Philip and, later, Theodosia Jr. The reprise reminds us personal tragedy often lurks backstage while public history struts downstage.

Song Meaning and Annotations

Dear Theodosia (Reprise) lyric video still
Screenshot from the workshop demo.

The verse opens with Burr informing his infant daughter that her mother—the elder Theodosia—has died of postpartum infection. The original “Dear Theodosia” promised a future; the reprise measures its cost. Burr’s melody slips from D-major to B-minor on the word “died,” and the orchestration thins to solo cello—grief hollowing the harmony.

Why it was cut. Lin-Manuel Miranda later said the reprise focused on two off-stage characters and confused viewers because Burr’s wife and daughter shared the same name. The scene also slowed momentum toward Philip’s duel.

Lyric highlights.

  • “Like a flame that flickers out too soon” – a callback to Laurens’ earlier epitaph.
  • “You and I will build a strong foundation” – Burr reasserts the parental pledge, now framed as single fatherhood.
  • “Someday you’ll blow us all away” – the line survives in Act II, transferred to Hamilton’s encouragement of Philip, knitting Burr and Hamilton’s hopes together.

Detailed Annotations

Dear Theodosia (Reprise) is a hushed lament tucked between Burn and Blow Us All Away in the 2014 workshop of Hamilton. Lin-Manuel Miranda later cut it because it lingers on two off-stage Theodosias, mother and daughter, yet the song remains a poignant window into Aaron Burr’s private grief. Below, the workshop annotations are woven into one narrative that keeps their insight while letting the text breathe. Theodosia was lost at sea at the age of 29. Aaron Burr outlived his wife and daughter, too

Overview

The reprise renews the gentle piano figure from the original “Dear Theodosia,” but the mood has darkened. Burr stands beside his daughter’s bedside to deliver unthinkable news:

Dear Theodosia, how to say to you
Sometime last night, your mother breathed your name … she died.

His wording—how to say, not what to say—immediately signals the impossibility of the task. One stunned beat later, the music halts as Burr chokes on the single syllable,

She’s gone.
The silence is as devastating as any chord.

Musical Techniques

  • Broken cadence. In the original duet, Burr and Hamilton sang in equal phrases; here Burr’s voice falters mid-line, and the piano drops out, reflecting a heart that skips under grief.
  • Echoed motives. Burr repeats the melodic contour that once promised hope—“Someday, someday, you’ll blow us all away.” Now the same melody underscores mortality, not potential, deepening its emotional resonance.
  • Actor’s breath. Leslie Odom Jr.’s vocal breaks on words like “fight” and “gone,” allowing the audience to feel Burr’s composure crack in real time.

Character Dynamics

Aaron Burr. In public, he is the composed strategist; in private, he weeps openly, admitting,

She changed my life, she made my life worthwhile.
The line parallels Hamilton’s earlier praise of Eliza in “That Would Be Enough,” subtly aligning the rivals as devoted fathers.

Theodosia Jr. Though silent, she shapes every phrase. Burr promises to replace her mother’s devotion—

I’ll be here for you.
—and trusts that one day she will
blow us all away.
The phrase prefigures Philip Hamilton’s show-stopping number, reminding the audience that both great men pin their fragile hopes on their children.

Thematic Elements

  • Time and loss. Burr calls his wife’s death “a flame that flickers out too soon,” echoing the show-wide dread that there is never enough time, whether for a marriage, a career, or a republic.
  • Nation-as-child metaphor. He tells Theodosia,
    You have come of age with our young nation.
    Personal and political maturation intertwine: as America bleeds and fights, so does Burr to secure his daughter’s future.
  • Foundation building. Burr’s pledge,
    You and I will build a strong foundation,
    nods to his historically progressive commitment to Theodosia’s education—Latin, Greek, French—rare for a girl in the 1790s.

Historical References

The real Theodosia Prevost Burr died of stomach cancer on May 18, 1794, when her daughter was eleven. Miranda compresses chronology; the Reynolds Pamphlet scandal that precedes this scene occurs in 1797, yet dramatic truth overrides calendar accuracy to keep grief near Hamilton’s marital crisis.

The younger Theodosia truly did “come of age with our young nation.” She dazzled dinner guests with classical languages and political discourse before vanishing at sea in 1812—a cruel fulfillment of Burr’s prophecy that she would one day “blow us all away.”

Why It Was Cut

Miranda later explained that audiences confused mother and daughter—both named Theodosia—and that the reprise stalled momentum before the duel-bound second act. Yet traces survive: Burr’s final-duel plea—“This man will not make an orphan of my daughter.”—carries extra weight once you’ve heard him mourn Theodosia’s mother.

Legacy in Performance

Because the reprise underscores Burr’s capacity for love, its removal leaves Broadway viewers with a slightly cooler antagonist. Still, the workshop track circulates online, and fans cherish the extra layer it adds to Burr’s famous ambition-versus-heart conflict.

Closing Reflection

In two quiet minutes, Dear Theodosia (Reprise) turns a father’s lullaby into a requiem. Burr’s promise to nurture both child and country rings noble, yet history will show how violence—political and literal—undoes that dream. The song may be absent from the final score, but its ache lingers every time Burr whispers his daughter’s name in the duel’s shadow.

Song Credits

Scene from Dear Theodosia (Reprise)
Scene from “Dear Theodosia (Reprise)”.
  • Featured Vocals: Leslie Odom Jr. (Aaron Burr), Lin-Manuel Miranda (interjections as Hamilton)
  • Producer & Composer/Lyricist: Lin-Manuel Miranda
  • Workshop Premiere: February 17 2015
  • Genre: Lament / Show-Tune Ballad
  • Length: 1 min 10 sec (workshop)
  • Key: D-major ? B-minor modulation
  • Instruments: piano, solo cello, faint harp swell
  • Label: Independent workshop demo

Songs Exploring Themes of Loss & Resolve

“It’s Quiet Uptown” – Original Broadway Cast
Both songs portray parental grief; Burr internalises loss in private, and Hamilton later walks through silent city streets.

“Tomorrow There’ll Be More of Us” – Workshop Cut
Hamilton learns Laurens has died; the reprise mirrors Burr’s bereavement, pairing the rivals through sorrow.

“Theodosia Reprise” – Sara Bareilles (Hamildrop)
Bareilles softens the cadence, adding gospel-tinged piano; her cover charted on Spotify’s Viral 50.

Questions and Answers

Why didn’t the reprise make the Broadway cut?
Miranda felt it confused audiences and pulled focus from on-stage characters.
Is there an official recording?
Only workshop audio and a Hamildrop cover exist; the song is absent from the cast album.
Did Burr’s wife truly die soon after childbirth?
Yes. Theodosia Bartow Prevost Burr died in 1794, likely of stomach cancer, when Theodosia Jr. was 11.
How many views does the workshop animatic hold?
The most-watched YouTube upload has surpassed 760,000 views.
Have any productions reinstated the reprise?
No stage revival has restored it, but it’s occasionally performed in concert settings.

Awards & Milestones

MilestoneYearNote
Sara Bareilles Hamildrop release2018Reached #12 iTunes singer-songwriter chart
YouTube workshop animatic views2025? 760 K cumulative
Mention in ScreenRant deleted-songs article2020Listed among Hamilton’s key cut numbers

How to Sing?

Burr’s melody ranges A2–E4; keep vibrato narrow, almost spoken. Tempo hovers at 74 BPM—let rests breathe like candle flickers. Sustain final “someday” into a soft head-voice slide.

Fan and Media Reactions

“The reprise wrecks me more than ‘It’s Quiet Uptown’—maybe that’s why they cut it.” – Reddit comment
“Hearing Burr sing about losing Theo Sr. frames his duel anguish in a whole new light.” – Tumblr meta thread
“Bareilles turns the lullaby into a gospel benediction—proof the song deserved daylight.” – Spotify user review
“Miranda called it ‘beautiful but distracting’—still, I wish the Disney+ cut had slipped it in.” – Interview recap
“I play it after every exam—reminds me parents sacrifice quietly, too.” – TikTok stitch

Music video


Hamilton Lyrics: Song List

  1. Act 1
  2. Alexander Hamilton
  3. Aaron Burr, Sir
  4. My Shot
  5. The Story of Tonight
  6. The Schuyler Sisters
  7. Farmer Refuted
  8. You'll Be Back
  9. Right Hand Man
  10. A Winter's Ball
  11. Helpless
  12. Satisfied
  13. The Story of Tonight (Reprise)
  14. Wait For It
  15. Stay Alive
  16. Ten Duel Commandments
  17. Meet Me Inside
  18. That Would Be Enough
  19. Guns and Ships
  20. History Has Its Eye on You
  21. Yorktown
  22. What Comes Next?
  23. Dear Theodosia
  24. Non-Stop
  25. Act 2
  26. What'd I Miss
  27. Cabinet Battle #1
  28. Take a Break
  29. Say No to This
  30. The Room Where It Happens
  31. Schuyler Defeated
  32. Cabinet Battle #2
  33. Washington on Your Side
  34. One Last Time
  35. I Know Him
  36. The Adams Administration
  37. We Know
  38. Hurricane
  39. The Reynolds Pamphlet
  40. Burn
  41. Blow Us All Away
  42. Stay Alive (Reprise)
  43. It's Quiet Uptown
  44. The Election of 1800
  45. The Obedient Servant
  46. Best of Wives and Best of Women
  47. The World Was Wide Enough
  48. Finale (Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story)
  49. Off-Broadway musical numbers, 2014 Workshop
  50. Ladies Transition
  51. Redcoat Transition
  52. Lafayette Interlude
  53. Tomorrow There'll Be More Of Us
  54. No John Trumbull
  55. Let It Go
  56. One Last Ride
  57. Congratulations
  58. Dear Theodosia (Reprise)
  59. Stay Alive, Philip
  60. Ten Things One Thing

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