"On My Own": How a Small Les Misérables Moment Became a Cultural Anchor
I came to Les Misérables late enough that it felt almost embarrassing to admit it. By the time I finally saw the show, most people I knew had long since chosen their favorite Valjean , sworn allegiance to one particular recording, and could quote the barricade scenes with a kind of devotional fluency. I didn’t have that history. I missed the original-cast waves, the Broadway revival discourse , and the amateur-production debates over keys and cuts. My first encounter with On My Own wasn’t theatrical at all. It was on Dawson’s Creek , of all places, dropped into a moment engineered for maximum adolescent ache. There was no attempt to fold the song into its original context; the show used it the way teen dramas so often did back then, as a pressure valve for emotions the characters weren’t mature enough to articulate. And because the scene played it straight, without winking or hedging, the song hit me before I understood anything about the world it cam...