Now that creator and star Lin-Manuel Miranda, along with actors Leslie Odom Jr. and Phillipa Soo, have left the Broadway hit “Hamilton,” the show's producers get to find out if the story of Alexander Hamilton has staying power beyond the appeal of the original cast.

Of course, the show is doing just fine, despite those departures.

Miranda is a huge fan of the small screen — the book “Hamilton: The Revolution” mentions a lyrical shoutout to Leslie Knope of “Parks and Recreation, and he took his final bow on July 9 to a version of “The West Wing” theme.

But what if the TV-“Hamilton” connection didn't stop there?

With varying degrees of seriousness, I offer a few ideas of how the TV industry can keep fans in the room where “Hamilton” happened, so to speak.

“Hurricane”: A couple of signature songs in “Hamilton” describe young Alexander's tragic and unlikely early life on Nevis and St. Croix, but there's a great deal of material that those fine tunes don't have time to mine. How about a limited series focusing on a young Alexander? It could delve into the unconventional lives of his parents, the death of his mother, the hurricane he survived and the series of events that led him to set sail for New York. Let's face it, Alexander Hamilton's childhood makes him sounds like the missing Stark sibling from “Game of Thrones”; before he turned 18, this resilient young man endured more loss, dislocation and tragedy than Arya and Jon Snow combined.

“The Schuyler Sisters”: Only three of them appear in “Hamilton: An American Musical,” but there were five of these ladies, and their lives almost demand an intelligently crafted, top-shelf nighttime soap centered on their relationships and their prominent family. One of the great strengths of the terrific book the musical is based on (“Hamilton” by Ron Chernow) and the musical itself are the ways in which they depict the complex bonds Angelica Schuyler Church and Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton had with the indefatigable Hamilton. They both loved the man, but Angelica was married to someone else, and Eliza and Alexander's love was real, but he cheated on her and had a host of flaws, small and large. Eliza could rarely get Alex to spend time with her and the rest of their family, but he very much loved them. Still, his absences would provide a way to differentiate “The Schuyler Sisters” from the Broadway musical; Alexander wouldn't be the main character.

“Sick Burrns”: A “Hamilton Mixtape” is in the works — a fall release that will feature covers of “Hamilton” songs as well as music inspired by the musical — but why not go a little further in that direction? A TV show could combine “Drunk History” and Spike's “Lip Sync Battle,” and could depict musicians and celebrities rapping songs about historical figures and their struggles. To be clear, the celebrities don't have to necessarily write the rhymes nor would they have to be drunk.

“The Family”: Per Hamilton and George Washington's letters, they called themselves a “family.” A limited series could focus on this tight band of brothers during one or two campaigns, or a few seasons of TV could cover the entire conflict in depth. The focus would be on Washington, who had a temper that he learned to keep in check as he led and mentored an extremely varied group of men.

“Best of Women”: Elizabeth Schuyler lived for another 50 years after Hamilton died in a duel with Aaron Burr. An earnest drama about a woman who raised a family on limited funds and was instrumental in the running of an orphanage — and who also did everything she could to restore the reputation of her dead husband — could be fascinating.