Musical Theatre

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For lovers, performers and creators of musical theatre (or theater). Broadway, off-Broadway, the West End, other parts of the US and UK, and musicals around the world and on film/TV. Discussion encouraged. Welcome post: https://tinyurl.com/kbinMusicals See all/older posts here: https://kbin.social/m/Musicals

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At the moment this seems to be more articles about the world of professional theatre, and I was wondering if content more focused towards shows in general or even peoples’ individual experiences with shows is welcome here. Also trying to think of things I can post here to help out with engagement, but not doing too well with that.

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Les Misérables has reached a new milestone of 15,000 performances in the West End.

Last night, audience members were treated to a complimentary drink at the Sondheim Theatre, with performer Stewart Clarke (who is currently in the role of Javert) also making a speech to mark the occasion.

Damn it. If I'd known I would have gotten a ticket.

As a point of comparison, the Broadway production of The Phantom of the Opera ran for "only" 13,981 performances.

The English language version of Boublil & Schoenberg's Les Miserables (directed by Trevor Nunn and John Caird) began preview performances at London's Barbican Centre on 28 September 1985 and opened officially on 8 October 1985.

In 1995 a concert was held at the Royal Albert Hall to mark the show's 10th anniversary.

The London production transferred to the Palace Theatre on 4 December 1985 where it ran until it transferred to the smaller Queens Theatre (since renamed the Sondheim Theatre) on 3 April 2004.

October 2010 marked the 25th anniversary of the show and featured a "weekend of total Mizery", with three productions running simultaneously in London: the original production at the Queen's Theatre, the UK tour production at the Barbican Centre, and the 25th anniversary concert at the (then-called) O2 Arena.

The original production closed at the Queen's Theatre on 13 July 2019 to allow for theatre refurbishments. A staged concert was performed at the adjacent Gielgud Theatre for a four-month run.

An updated staging directed by James Powell and Laurence Connor (and developed for the 25th anniversary UK tour) opened at the newly renamed Sondheim Theatre on 18 December 2019 in previews with opening night on 16 January 2020.

Covid forced a temporary closure of the show from 16 March 2020 to 25 September 2021.

Les Miz will celebrate its 38th anniversary this year on 7 October (there being no performance on Sunday 8 October).

Les Miz has therefore played in six different London venues since its English language premiere in five different incarnations, which has got to be some kind of record:

  • the Nunn/Caird production (at the Barbican, the Palace and the Queen's (aka Sondheim))
  • the Connor/Powell production (at the Barbican and the Sondheim (aka Queen's))
  • the 10th anniversary concert (at the Royal Albert Hall)
  • the 2010 25th anniversary concert (at the O2 Arena), and
  • the 2019 staged concert (at the Gielgud).

This is all the more remarkable because the show has been running continuously since 1985 (Covid interruption notwithstanding).

The upcoming world arena tour will add another incarnation and maybe venue to this list.

edit: What have I done, sweet Jesus what have I done? - I totally forgot the TAC!!

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The MasterVoices concert staging of Stephen Sondheim and Burt Shevelove’s The Frogs takes place on November 3 and 4 at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Rose Theater. Nathan Lane has adapted the text and will host and narrate the evening. The cast is Douglas Sills (as Dionysos), Kevin Chamberlin (Xanthias) Peter Bartlett (Pluto), Dylan Baker (George Bernard Shaw), Chuck Cooper, Marc Kudisch (Herakles), Jordan Donica (William Shakespeare) and Candice Corbin (Ariadne)

Richard Kind will take on the role of Pseudolus this winter in a new production of the Stephen Sondheim / Burt Shevelove / Larry Gelbart farce A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum at the Lido 2 Paris on the Champs-Elysées from 1 December 2023 to 4 February 2024. Also featured are Rufus Hound as Hysterium, Patrick Ryecart as Senex, Martyn Ellis as Marcus Lycus, John Owen-Jones as Miles Gloriosus, Valerie Gabail as Domina, Josh St Clair as Hero, and Neima Naouri as Philia.

BOOP! The Betty Boop Musical has announced the complete cast for its pre-Broadway world premiere. The new musical, by David Foster, Susan Birkenhead and Bob Martinwill, play a five-week engagement beginning November 19 at the CIBC Theatre in Chicago. Jasmine Amy Rogers will star in the title role. Joining Rogers will be Faith Prince , Ainsley Melham, Erich Bergen, Stephen DeRosa, Angelica Hale and Anastacia McCleskey.

Joining the London company of Les Miserables on 25 September 2023 were Luke Kempner as Thénardier, Katie Hall as Fantine, Will Callan as Marius, Amena El-Kindy as Éponine, and Djavan van de Fliert as Enjolras. They join current cast members Josh Piterman as Jean Valjean, Stewart Clarke as Javert, Claire Machin as Madame Thénardier, and Lulu-Mae Pears as Cosette. The company is completed by Annabelle Aquino, Hazel Baldwin, Brad Barnley, Michael Baxter, Emily Olive Boyd, Rosy Church, Ben Culleton, Matthew Dale, Matt Dempsey, Sophie-May Feek, Matt Hayden, Tom Hext, Christopher Jacobsen, Jessica Johns-Parsons, Yazmin King, Sam Kipling, Anouk van Laake, Harry Lake, Sarah Lark, Ellie Ann Lowe, Ben Oatley, Adam Pearce, Jordan Simon Pollard, Jonathan Stevens, Phoebe Williams, and Ollie Wray.

Jake Shears and Rebecca Lucy Taylor (aka Self Esteem) joined the London cast of Cabaret on 25 September 2023 as the Emcee and Sally Bowles respectively. They join Nathan Ives-Moiba as Clifford Bradshaw, Beverley Klein as Fraulein Schneider, and Teddy Kempner as Herr Schultz. Emily Benjamin continues as the production’s alternate Sally Bowles until October 18, with Nic Myers taking over (scheduled to perform once a week) the following day. Also joining the company September 25 are Wilf Scolding as Ernst Ludwig, Jessica Kirton as Fraulein Kost/Fritzie, Liv Alexander as Texas, Natalie Chua as Frenchie, Taite-Elliot Drew as Hans, Damon Gould as Victor, El Haq Latief as Helga, and Travis Ross as Bobby, joining Laura Delany as Rosie, Grant Neal as Herman/Max, and Hicaro Nicolai as Lulu. The cast is completed by Rebecca Lisewski, Ela Lisondra, Nic Myers, Andy Rees, Toby Turpin, and Patrick Wilden.

Laura Dawkes and Jammy Kasongo joined the London production of Frozen on 27 September 2023. Dawkes steps into the role of Anna, and Kasongo is the new Kristoff. Also joining the company are Oliver Brenin, Ashley J Daniels as King Agnarr, Lizzy-Rose Esin-Kelly as Bulda, George Hinson, Jonathan Milton, and Ed Wade. These actors join a cast that includes Samantha Barks as Elsa, Craig Gallivan as Olaf, Oliver Ormson as Hans, Richard Frame as Duke of Weselton, and Mikayla Jade and Ashley Birchall, who alternate in the role of Sven. Continuing as part of the ensemble are Rhianne Alleyne, Marianne Bardgett, Rebecca Botterill, Laura Emmitt, Jemal Felix, Jordan Fox, Molly Francis, Matt Gillett, Dominic Adam Griffin, Jordan Livesey, Isabella Glanznig Santos, Ben Irish as Pabbie, Justin-Lee Jones, Aoife Kenny, Harriet Samuels, Jacqui Sanchez as Queen Iduna, Jak Skelly as Oaken/Bishop, Caitlin Tipping, Anna Woodside, and Rodney Vubya.

Disney Princess — The Concert will return to the U.S. for a 39-city run in 2024. The tour will kick off March 5, 2024 in Memphis, Tennessee. The touring cast will feature Lissa deGuzman, Syndee Winters, Anneliese van der Pol and Adam J. Levy. Fans are encouraged to dress up in their "best royal attire," and hear classic Disney favorites.

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Christina Aguilera is executive-producing a new stage musical based on her 2010 movie Burlesque.

EW has learned through a source that the Grammy-winning performer will serve as an EP on the adaptation, titled Burlesque: The Musical, which was written by the film's director, Steven Antin, and includes songs written for the film by Aguilera, Diane Warren, and Sia, with additional tunes created by RuPaul's Drag Race choreographer Todrick Hall and Jess Foley. It is expected to debut in the United Kingdom in the near future.

In 2020 EW ran a verbal history of Burlesque for the film's 10 year anniversary.

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Will Swenson is set to depart A Beautiful Noise, the Neil Diamond Musical. Will Swenson will play his final performance as ‘Neil Diamond – Then’ on October 29, 2023. His replacement will be announced at a later date.

“It’s been the thrill of a lifetime to get to stand in Neil’s shoes,” said Swenson. “It’s been such an incredible honor to get to know Neil, to tell his powerful story, and bring his amazing songs to Broadway audiences every night. I’m immensely proud of the moving, beautiful show we made. I will miss it very much.”

Michael Mayer, director of A Beautiful Noise added, “Making A Beautiful Noise with Will Swenson was a deep and wonderful experience. The true affection he has for Neil’s work and life is palpable in every aspect of his tremendous performance. I will miss him terribly, of course, but will always treasure our time together, and very much look forward to the next show we do.”

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Some Like It Hot has set a closing date for its Broadway run. The final performance of the musical, based on the 1959 film written and directed by Billy Wilder, will be December 30. At closing, it will have played 483 performances.

The show officially opened December 11, 2022 at the Shubert Theatre after previews beginning November 1.

Nominated for 13 Tony Awards for 2022, the musical took home four trophies: Casey Nicholaw for Best Choreography, Charlie Rosen and Bryan Carter for Best Orchestrations, Gregg Barnes for Best Costumes in a Musical, and J. Harrison Ghee for Best Lead Actor in a Musical. Ghee made history alongside Alex Newell (who won Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Shucked), becoming the first openly non-binary performers to win the top Broadway honor.

A national tour will launch in September 2024 and a West End production will follow in 2025.

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Each year, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS presents the Broadway Flea Market & Grand Auction, where theatrical memorabilia from Broadway and Off-Broadway shows—as well as treasures from theatre owners and producing organizations, unions, guilds, marketing groups, ticket agencies, concessionaires, and fan clubs.

The day offers countless priceless opportunities for theatre lovers to find rare trinkets and connect with the community, and all proceeds benefit Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS—the Tony-winning nonprofit. But if you've never been, the bustling crowds and stacked merchandise tables can be overwhelming.

This comprehensive article outlines everything you need to know ahead of this year's Broadway Flea Market, which will be held on West 44th and West 45th Streets, in the heart of New York City’s theatre district, October 1 2023 from 10 AM–7 PM.

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Today, Schumacher announced that he is leaving his role of president and producer of Disney Theatrical Group (DTG) after three decades, telling staff this morning that he’ll segue into a purely creative role as the division’s Chief Creative Officer.

Andrew Flatt and Anne Quart, who have long worked closely with Schumacher, will jointly run the DTG as executive vice presidents.

During Schumacher reign atop DTG's business operations he saw the division become a major player on Broadway and in the nation’s regional theaters, with such powerhouse productions as The Lion King and Aladdin becoming longrunning and touring stage staples.

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Juilliard announced that the Drama Division’s Master of Fine Arts in Acting will join the school’s growing list of tuition-free programs starting in the 2024-25 academic year, becoming funded through scholarships in perpetuity. This milestone achievement furthers the school’s ambition to continue to remove financial barriers and expand access to all who qualify to study at Juilliard.

To enable graduate students to attend all four years of the MFA in Acting program with no tuition cost, the school is combining existing scholarship funding that had been previously raised with a matching challenge grant from theater producer and Juilliard trustee Stephanie P. McClelland and her husband, Carter McClelland. The McClellands’ matching challenge was met through a major gift from producer John Gore as well as by gifts from the Jacques and Margot W. Kohn Foundation and several estates.

Juilliard programs that are either tuition-free or fully funded by scholarships include the Artist Diplomas in jazz, music performance, opera studies, playwriting, and string quartet studies; Doctor of Musical Arts; and Historical Performance. Additionally, the Music Advancement Program (MAP), which serves students ages 8-17 from the tristate area and is part of the Preparatory Division, is also tuition-free.

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Article highlights:

After the closing of The Phantom of the Opera on Broadway comes an unexpected new chapter in the career of one of musical theater’s most successful, if not always appreciated, composers: Several adventurous contemporary directors are declaring they love his work and want to put their stamp on it.

Ivo van Hove, the Belgian director known for his profuse use of video and viscous fluids, is tackling “Jesus Christ Superstar” in Amsterdam, while Jamie Lloyd, the British auteur with a penchant for Pinter and an aversion to scenery, is sharpening “Sunset Boulevard” in London. Meanwhile, in the United States, Sammi Cannold is putting a feminist stamp on “Evita,” while Bill Rauch and Zhailon Levingston are humanizing “Cats.”

Even “Starlight Express,” one of his zanier musicals, which involves actors on roller skates pretending to be trains, is getting a reboot: Luke Sheppard, the “& Juliet” director, is reimagining it for a run scheduled to begin next summer in London.

The shows, and Lloyd Webber himself, occupy a paradoxical place in the theatrical canon.

Critics have sometimes dismissed his work as overwrought. This newspaper’s reviewers, in particular, have often been underwhelmed, initially declaring that “Jesus Christ Superstar” had “minimal artistic value,” and also deriding “Evita” (“like reading endless footnotes from which the text has disappeared”), “Cats” (“if you blink, you’ll miss the plot”) and “Sunset Boulevard” (“lurid”).

But “Evita,” “Cats” and “Sunset Boulevard” won best musical Tony Awards, and all four shows are widely staged and enormously popular. These new productions, reflecting contemporary trends, are emphasizing psychology and politics over spectacle and sentiment.

Sunset Boulevard (London)

Forget the staircase and the turban. Jamie Lloyd is bringing an intense interest in psychological exploration to “Sunset Boulevard” — “putting the emphasis,” he says, “on people and their emotional journey.”

With that aim, he asked Lloyd Webber to rework some aspects of the score “to lean into the darkness and peculiarity of certain moments that are dreamlike or nightmarish.” And, to his surprise, Lloyd Webber agreed. “He’s been so open,” Lloyd said, “which is kind of crazy.”

Evita (Washington)

Sammi Cannold has long been obsessed with “Evita.” She directed a production while an undergrad at Stanford; she visited Argentina three times to do research; and then she pitched an “Evita” revival to New York City Center.

So in 2019, there was Cannold, directing a 12-day gala run of the Lloyd Webber classic. The production was eye-catching, starting with Evita’s iconic white ball gown hovering like a ghost over a flower-bedecked stage. This year, Cannold was able to develop it fully, staging it first at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Mass., and now (through Oct. 15) at Shakespeare Theater Company in Washington, where the Washington Post theater critic Peter Marks called the show “gorgeously reinvigorated.”

Cannold’s take is informed by feminism — “I think she’s a victim and a survivor who learned to use her sexuality as armor,” she said of Perón — but also by the regime’s authoritarianism. “When I first started working on it, I was head over heels in love with Eva — I was so obsessed with her and her history, and I couldn’t really hear any of the criticism,” she said. “I’ve gone on a whole journey, and land in a different place.”

Jesus Christ Superstar (Amsterdam)

Even in Belgium, where Ivo van Hove grew up, “Jesus Christ Superstar” was a big deal. van Hove, who at 64 has never seen a stage production of the show, says: “Nobody could believe that ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ could be a rock thing.”

Now he’s getting his chance, directing an English-language production that is set to begin performances in January at DeLaMar in Amsterdam.

“I can tell you what interests me,” he said. “First, it’s a story of a group of friends who became friends because they believed in one mission: to take care of the poor. Second, these friends become a threat to political and religious leaders. And third are the geopolitical tensions, in this case with Rome.”

“These things,” he added, “feel like very contemporary themes.”

How contemporary? Let’s just say that in van Hove’s production, the cast will begin the show wearing hoodies. And, he said, some members of the audience will be seated onstage, because he wants to create a “pressure-cooker” environment.

What is van Hove’s theory about why Lloyd Webber is drawing inventive directors now? “It’s not for nothing that these musicals became so important for so many people for such a long time,” he said. “There’s something very human there, even when it’s about cats.”

Cats (New York)

The production of “Cats” planned for next June at the new Perelman Performing Arts Center is, at least at first blush, the most outlandish of this latest round of Lloyd Webber productions. Whereas the original concerned a group of cats (obviously) and was set in a junkyard, the characters in this production will be human beings, and it will be set in the Ballroom scene, a dance subculture closely associated with Black and Latino drag queens.

“We are reimagining ‘Cats’ as a queer ball competition,” said Zhailon Levingston, one of the production’s two directors. Old Deuteronomy, an astute and admired character, will be head judge.

The idea was the brainchild of the Perelman Center’s artistic director, Bill Rauch, who, by his own description, has been “obsessed with reinventing classics my whole career,” and who had previously directed a “queer ‘Oklahoma’” at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. “Over the course of that process, I was thinking a lot about ‘Cats,’ and I just kept thinking about the song ‘Memory’ being done in a queer context,” Rauch said. “And I just found it very moving.”

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Article highlights:

Sondheim said days before his death in 2021 that he did not know when it would be finished, but the musical, now called “Here We Are,” begins performances Thursday.

How did a show that Team Sondheim suggested was incomplete at the time of his death get to a point where it was ready for public consumption?

The show's creative and producing team say that two months before Sondheim's death, he had agreed to let the show go forward, following successful reading of the material that existed at that point. They had come up with a rationale for a second act that is light on songs.

So is the show being staged a finished musical? "Who would consider a musical 'finished' until it has gone through a full preview process" the show's producing and creative team said in written responses to questions for this article. "What we are putting on stage now is as finished as any production about to play its first preview. It's ready for audiences, and very much the musical Steve envisioned."

All of the show's songs, and all of its lyrics, were written by Sondheim, and that "as is the case with every musical, the orchestrator and arranger take the composer's melodies and motifs and use them to arrange and orchestrate the instrumental interstitial music. There isn't a note in this score that wasn't born out of Steve's compositions, as will be abundantly clear to audiences."

The book, on the other hand, has been revised since Sondheim's death by its writer, David Ives, and director, Joe Mantello. But the team said that the three collaborators agreed after the informal reading that took place on Sept. 8, 2021, that Steve?s songwriting for both acts was complete.

When Sondheim seemed stymied by the second act, Ives and Mantello suggested that perhaps, once the characters are trapped, they can no longer sing.

"Hopefully it won?t feel unfinished," said the actor Nathan Lane, who took part in the 2021 reading. "It makes sense that these characters, once they're trapped, they can't sing any more."

"My impression was that Steve hadn't finished it in his mind to where he wanted it to be exactly, but an unfinished Sondheim song still sounds like a pretty amazing song," said Michael Cerveris, an actor who took part in two readings at the Public.

There is uncertainty among some Sondheim biographers about how to view this show.

"I'm both eager and apprehensive," said Daniel Okrent, who is writing a book about Sondheim. "I'm eager because I so admire his work, and I'm apprehensive because of his public statements that suggested he wasn't very happy with what he had done, or that he didn't think it was complete."

Others would like more transparency from the creative team about how they have pulled this show together, a process partly described by Frank Rich in New York magazine.

"I think we'd all like to know more about how the sausage was made, especially the second act sausage," said D.T. Max, a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of Finale: Late Conversations With Stephen Sondheim.

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The Wiz has announced the dates and venues for its Broadway stint. The revival will play the Marquis Theatre beginning on 29 March 2024 ahead of an opening night scheduled on 17 April. The Broadway run will be a limited engagement, with an end date to be scheduled. The revival has been touring since 23 September.

The Wiz has an original book by William F. Brown and score by Charlie Smalls. This revival includes additional book material by Amber Ruffin, and the song “Everybody Rejoice” (music and lyrics by Luther Vandross) and the “Emerald City Ballet” (music by Timothy Graphenreed).

The Broadway cast will feature the previously announced Nichelle Lewis as Dorothy, Deborah Cox as Glinda, Melody A. Betts as Aunt Em/Evillene, Kyle Ramar Freeman as the Lion, Phillip Johnson Richardson as the Tinman, Avery Wilson as the Scarecrow and Wayne Brady as The Wiz.

The ensemble will include Maya Bowles, Shayla Alayre Caldwell, Jay Copeland, Allyson Kaye Daniel, Judith Franklin, Michael Samarie George, Collin Heyward, Amber Jackson, Olivia Jackson, Christina Jones, Polanco Jones, Kolby Kindle, Mariah Lyttle, Kareem Marsh, Anthony Murphy, Cristina Rae, Matthew Sims Jr, Avilon Trust Tate, Keenan D. Washington and Timothy Wilson.

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Actors’ Equity Association (the union representing more than 51,000 professional actors and stage managers in live theatre) announced that it has organized Broadway production assistants (PAs), and that the PAs are seeking voluntary recognition from The Broadway League, the organization representing theater owners and producers.

If the League does not recognize the request the PAs will likely “overwhelmingly vote to unionize,” Equity said.

“The Broadway League and our members support the right of employees to lawfully choose a bargaining representative,” the League statement said.

PAs, the union says, are hourly employees who work as part of stage management teams “from pre-production through opening night, doing everything from preparing rehearsal materials to ensuring decisions made during rehearsals are recorded to being extra sets of hands and eyes during complicated technical rehearsals to efficiently running errands that keep the rehearsal productive.”

“Getting a Broadway production up and running is an enormous task,” said Koster, “and the work of Broadway’s stage management teams prior to opening night is fundamental to any show’s success. “Every one of these workers, whether their title is production stage manager, stage manager, assistant stage manager or production assistant, is a skilled professional and essential to the team. And yet, production assistants have stood alone for too long as the only members of these teams without the basic protections of union contracts – without safe and sanitary workplace requirements, without protections against harassment and discrimination, without living wages, without health and pension benefits.”

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Taran Killam will join the Broadway company of Spamalot as Lancelot when the production begins previews on Broadway on 31 October 2023. He will remain with the company through 9 January 2024 when Alex Brightman will take over the role, reprising his run from the Kennedy Center production.

[Nic Rouleau, Savy Jackson, Josh Lamon, More Will Star in in the Zombie Musical ALIVE!] at off-Broadway's Theatre 555.](https://playbill.com/article/nic-rouleau-savy-jackson-josh-lamon-more-will-star-in-zombie-musical-alive) The seven-concert season kicks off 8 Ocdtober 2023.

Vincent Jamal Hooper started his run as Simba in the Broadway production The Lion King on 26 September 2003. Hooper, who is making his Broadway debut, succeeds Brandon A. McCall, who played his final performance 24 September.

On the same date, 26 September 2023, Constance Wu and Corbin Bleu joined the cast of Little Shop of Horrors off-Broadway, as Audrey and Seymour respectively. Wu and Bleu succeed Jeremy Jordan and Joy Woods, who played their final performances 24 September.

Bonnie Milligan, John Cameron Mitchell, Kelli O'Hara, Miriam Silverman, Ann Dowd, Michael Emerson, Carrie Preston, Javier Muñoz, Amanda Green, Nikka Graff Lanzarone, and Marissa Rosen will perform at A is For's Broadway Acts for Abortion concert on 1 October 2023 at 54 Below. Martha Plimpton and Jenn Lyon will co-host, Dan Lipton is MD and Greg Santos directs. Founded in 2012, A is For amplifies art and artists that work to end the stigma against abortion.

Audra McDonald, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Adrienne Warren, Norm Lewis will perform at Broadway Inspirational Voices' fourth annual fundraising event on 9 October 2023. They will be joined by John Manzari, Naomi Funaki, Emilie Kouatchou, Shoshana Bean, Shayna Steele, J Harrison Ghee, and Jared Alexander. Joshua Henry hosts.

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MJ is coming to Germany at the Stage Theater an der Elbe in Hamburg in late fall 2024.

For the German production, all songs will remain in English, while dialogue will be translated into German.

This marks the show's fourth production after Broadway, US tour and London (which is due to open in 2024).

Additional information about the German production, including dates and casting, will be announced at a later date.

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Michael Ball has announced a new tour, titled On With The Show 2024, which is scheduled to take place from March 11, 2024, to March 28, 2024, in venues across the UK.

The presale for the tour will be available on September 28, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. local time. General tickets will be available on September 29, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. local time. Ticket prices have not been announced.

Tour dates and venues include:

  • March 11, 2024 - Brighton, UK at The Dome
  • March 13, 2024 - Portsmouth, UK at Portsmouth Guidhall
  • March 14, 2024 - Cardiff, Wales, UK at St David's Hall
  • March 16, 2024 - Bath, UK at The Forum
  • March 17, 2024 - London, UK at Eventime Apollo
  • March 19, 2024 - Oxford, UK at New Theater
  • March 20, 2024 - Ipswitch, UK at Regent Theater
  • March 22, 2024 - Nottingham, UK at Royal Concert Hall
  • March 23, 2024 - Manchester, UK at O2 Apollo
  • March 25, 2024 - Brimingham, UK at Symphony Hall
  • March 26, 2024 - Glasgow, Scotland at Royal Concert Hall
  • March 28, 2024 - York, UK at Barbican
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Fangirls, written and composed by Yve Blake and directed by Paige Rattray will have its UK premiere at Lyric Hammersmith Theatre in London. Co-produced by Sonia Friedman Productions, the pop musical is set to run for six weeks from 13 July to 24 August 2024. It follows Edna, a 14-year-old misfit in love with Harry, a member of the world’s biggest boy band.

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Darren Criss is set to make his West End concert debut. Taking place at The London Palladium in the West End, Criss will be performing hit tunes from across his career with his own four-piece band and special guests, StarKid’s Lauren Lopez and Joey Richter.

The concert will take place on 15 October 2023 at 8pm – with general sale on 29 September. LW Theatres will have a pre-sale on 28 September.

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The Broadway season of the revival of Merrily We Roll Along starring Daniel Radcliffe, Jonathan Groff and Lindsay Mendez, broke the six-performance house record at the Hudson Theatre with a $1.3 million gross in its first week of previews.

Filling every seat in the venue, the revival carried an eye-popping average ticket price of $225.07, besting the $166.11 of the usual frontrunner Hamilton by a wide margin for the week ending September 24.

Merrily, the Off Broadway transfer from New York Theatre Workshop, grossed, to be exact, $1,304,508 for its first six Broadway previews, breaking the previous six-performance week record of $1.18 million set by David Byrne’s American Utopia. Merrily opens on October 10.

The success of Merrily, along with the Josh Groban-led Sweeney Todd revival, prompts Playbill to ask Are Sondheim Revivals Broadway's Newest Cash Cow?

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“Operation Mincemeat,” a musical by a fresh young British team, is a hit in London’s West End and may head across the Atlantic.

A story in the Washington Post about this (very charming, funny, moving) show. There was another lengthy article in the New York Times last month. Two stories about a British musical currently only running in London, in the two most prestigious newspapers in America? Methinks a Broadway transfer might be planned.

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Which Broadway shows had the biggest overhaul from their out-of-town tryout to their Broadway opening?

This article covers Fiddler on the Roof, Big, Funny Girl, Annie and Next to Normal.

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BroadwayWorld's list of what's known to be coming to Broadway in 2024. Musicals include:

  • Days of Wine and Roses by Adam Guettel and Craig Lucas, starring Kelli O'Hara and Brian d'Arcy James
  • The Notebook by Ingrid Michaelson and Bekah Brunstetter
  • Water for Elephants by PigPen Theatre Co and Rick Elice
  • The Outsiders by Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay & Zach Chance), Justin Levine and Adam Rapp
  • The Wiz by Charlie Smalls, William F. Brown, Amber Ruffin and others
  • Cabaret by Kander and Ebb and Joe Masteroff
  • Smash by Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman, Rick Elice (again) and Bob Martin, based on the TV series
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Andrew Lloyd Webber's Starlight Express has been seen by over twenty million people worldwide, and will make its return to London in a specially designed auditorium.

The musical originally opened in London at the Apollo Victoria in 1984 where it ran for over 7,400 performances. One of the most successful productions has been in Germany at the specially constructed Starlighthalle where it has been running since 1988.

"I am thrilled that Starlight Express will be powering down the tracks again," Andrew Lloyd Webber said in a statement. "The world's first truly immersive musical will this time be an experience like no other. Watch out for the big new plot twist and you will discover why steam power is the future of the railway."

Starlight Express is a high-energy musical that centres around a child's train set which magically springs to life. As engines race to be the fastest in the world, Rusty the steam train finds hope and inspiration in the legend of the Starlight Express.

Director Luke Sheppard (&Juliet, The Little Big Things) leads the creative team for this new production, which features music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and lyrics by Richard Stilgoe.

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When Broadway understudy Mikayla Renfrow received a text saying she was needed to stand in for the lead role of Jasmine in "Aladdin,” she was on a flight from her Italian vacation to New York City. A sympathetic flight attendant ushered her to first class so she would be the first passenger to leave. The pilot then came out and assured he would do everything so she could make her curtain call.

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