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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The upcoming movie adaptation of the 2017 Mean Girls musical based on the 2004 movie of the same name based on the 2002 book Queen Bees and Wannabes will now be hitting US theaters Friday, 12 January 2024 instead of coming to the Paramount+ streaming service (as originally planned).

The movie adaptation is being directed by Arturo Perez and Samantha Jayne from a script written by Tina Fey, with songs by Jeff Richmond and Nell Benjamin.

The film stars Angourie Rice as Cady Heron, Auli'i Cravalho as Janis, Jaquel Spivey as Damian, Avantika as Karen Smith, Bebe Wood as Gretchen Wieners, Christopher Briney as Aaron Samuels, Mahi Alam as Mathlete Kevin Gnapoor, and Reneé Rapp reprising her Broadway role as Regina George. Busy Philipps is set to appear as Mrs. George and Jenna Fischer will play Ms. Heron. Tina Fey and Tim Meadows will reprise their roles from the original film with Jon Hamm joining as Coach Carr. Tony nominated star of the Broadway production, Ashley Park, is also set to appear in the film.

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Highlights for those unable to get past the paywall:

“Tiananmen: A New Musical,” with a book by Scott Elmegreen and music and lyrics by Drew Fornarola, follows two fictional students at Beijing Normal University who are named after real students killed by the military. Initially, the students, Peiwen and XiaoLi, have contrasting perspectives on the protests, but they fall in love and witness history as tanks roll into the square and soldiers draw their guns.

The musical wrestles with the tension between the revolutionary act of remembering and the authoritarian attempts to erase history. In one of the closing scenes, set in the present day, XiaoXia, the sister of XiaoLi, lights a candle as part of a vigil remembering the protests. A soldier arrests her and snuffs out the flame.

Earlier in the show, in a fictional monologue as his soldiers gun down protesters, Deng Xiaoping, China’s top leader at the time, says, “People will forget what we did here.”

When it was announced that Zachary Noah Piser would be playing the lead role, he happened to be on a concert tour of five Chinese cities with a group of Broadway actors.

One day later, Piser, who played the title role in “Dear Evan Hansen” on Broadway last year, posted a short statement on Instagram, where most of his posts are bright and colorful.

This one featured just seven words set against a blank white backdrop: “I have withdrawn from the musical Tiananmen.”

Those involved with the “Tiananmen” musical, which premieres at the Phoenix Theater Company next month, are well aware that China aggressively censors discussions of the Tiananmen protests, in which Chinese troops killed hundreds if not thousands of pro-democracy student activists.

Jason Rose, the musical’s lead producer, said Piser’s manager told him — without providing details — that the actor felt pressure to leave the show and to post on Instagram. The manager, Dave Brenner, denied saying that.

“It was a decision he had to make and it was not an easy one,” Brenner said of Piser, declining to comment on why the actor quit a day after the public casting announcement. Piser also declined to comment.

Since the show, which follows the account of two Chinese students during the 50 days of protests at Tiananmen Square, was optioned by Rose’s Quixote Productions two years ago, some members of its cast have been worried about how the Chinese authorities might respond.

It is unclear exactly why Piser, who is Chinese American, decided to leave the show he was set to star in. But the show’s original director and at least one other cast member dropped out, Rose said, because of fears about the safety of family members in China. The Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

The departures illustrate how frightening it can be for people with connections to China to bring attention to the 1989 protests in Beijing. The Chinese government continues to evade responsibility for the massacre and tries to eradicate any remembrance of the event — the brutal conclusion to weeks of demonstrations that had pierced the Communist Party’s facade of invincibility.

“Even doing a regional production in Phoenix, Ariz., there is so much concern over the control and reach of the Chinese government that American actors are afraid to be involved in the show,” said Kennedy Kanagawa, who replaced Piser in “Tiananmen.”

The show’s new director and choreographer, Darren Lee, who is Chinese American, said he accepted the job only after determining that he did not have direct relatives who might face retaliation from the Chinese government.

“It was the first time where I’ve ever been in the position where I asked my parents whether or not they thought it was OK to take the show,” he said.

To this day, the Chinese government is vigilant about eliminating discussion of Tiananmen. The word remains one of the most censored topics in the country, second only to President Xi Jinping, said Xiao Qiang, an expert on censorship and China at the University of California, Berkeley.

It does not matter, Xiao said, that this show is being staged at a regional theater.

“Even the word ‘Tiananmen’ would generate fear in the Chinese government and that fear would generate a very repressive action,” he said.

Within China, people who publicly discuss what happened at Tiananmen can face jail time or see their children prohibited from attending universities. In May, the activist Chen Siming was arrested by the Chinese authorities over a social media post paying tribute to Tiananmen, according to Human Rights Watch.

Often the mere specter of danger is enough to muzzle any dissent, Xiao said.

The cast of “Tiananmen” is entirely Asian American and Pacific Islander, but those who are not ethnically Chinese have less concern about their involvement. Kanagawa and Oka, who are both Japanese American, said they felt comfortable speaking about the show because neither has family ties to China.

Potential consequences have been front of mind for other contributors. After Piser dropped out of the show, Rose said, some cast members grew more fearful and asked not to be featured in news releases or photographed.

The cast has had daily conversations, Kanagawa said, about repercussions for participating in the show. Some fret about being banned from visiting China or having business contracts canceled. Others fear for the safety of their relatives.

“People in China disappear still, and the idea of that being a family member is legitimately terrifying,” Kanagawa said.

“Every person in the room has decided, for whatever reason — could be artistic, could be political, could be whatever — to be there,” said Lee, the musical’s new director. “Everyone also understands that their comfort and their safety is paramount.”

Rose said Piser and the theater company had worked cooperatively until the actor arrived in China on his concert tour. At that point, “everything changed,” Rose said.

“I was always aware of the sensitivities, but frankly that’s what drew me to the show,” Rose said. “If this were 1954 or 1951, would Russia be dictating our arts scene?”

“This is a show that needs to be told,” he added, “particularly because of the efforts to erase the bravery and courage from history.”

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The creator and star of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend has a new solo piece, Death, Let Me Do My Show , now running Off-Broadway.

For Bloom, Death, Let Me Do My Show is a way of processing what happened in 2020. At the very beginning of the pandemic, she gave birth to a daughter, who had to stay in the NICU. Meanwhile, the maternity ward was readied for the overflow of COVID-19 patients. During those same fraught few days, Bloom also lost her songwriting partner of five years, Adam Schlesinger, who died of complications from the virus after being hospitalized and placed on a ventilator. Schlesinger collaborated with Bloom on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.

“This show really helped me,” she says. “By working on this and intellectualizing it, there’s a scabbing over of wounds that has happened. It’s part of my narrative now. I find it cathartic to talk about things out in the open. It helps me heal.”

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The company of Broadway's A Beautiful Noise has had quite an eventful week last week. September 14 saw star Will Swenson, who was out on a scheduled break, having to journey back to the city after his standby, Nick Fradiani, took ill (alongside multiple other company members).

Then on September 17, 13 different cast members had to call out of the production. Such a large number of absences led to the productions associate director, Austin Regan, making his Broadway performance debut as Fred Weintraub/Tommy O'Rourke.

On social media, the company of A Beautiful Noise has openly acknowledged the continued worldly presence of COVID-19 and its impact on the show. The production's swing and co-dance captain Robert Pendilla shared the production's September 17 call board on social media, to memorialize the feat carried out by the swath of understudies and swings that performed at the matinee

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London’s Almeida theatre has announced a stage adaptation of the Oscar-nominated romance Cold War, a postwar tale of two musician lovers whose passion is disrupted by the privations of the eastern bloc. Cold War earned three Oscar and four Bafta nominations.

The stage adaptation will be by Conor McPherson, the Irish playwright who vividly dramatised Bob Dylan’s songwriting in Girl from the North Country. Elvis Costello songs will feature alongside choral works and traditional Polish folk songs.

Set to runbetween November 2023 and January 2024, the production will be directed by Almeida's artistic director Rupert Goold.

Anya Chalotra, known for the lead role of Yennefer in TV fantasy drama The Witcher, will play the headstrong Zula, while Luke Thallon – recently directed by Goold in the Peter Morgan play Patriots – will play her pianist lover Wiktor. Also announced in the cast is Elliot Levey, who won an Olivier award in 2022 for his performance in Rebecca Frecknall’s West End production of Cabaret.

Cold War is another foray into musical theatre for Goold, following his 2022 production Tammy Faye, a new musical about the US televangelist of the same name. It featured music by Elton John, lyrics by Jake Shears and a book by James Graham, and won two Olivier awards this year for actors Katie Brayben and Zubin Varla.

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Musical Con, the UK's official Musical Theatre fan convention which returns to Excel London on 21 & 22 October for its second year, has announced further special guests forming this year’s line up.

Added to the line-up are theatre legends, composer of Les Miserables and Miss Saigon, Claude-Michel Schönberg, legendary choreographer and this year's recipient of the Special Recognition award at the Olivier Awards, Dame Arlene Phillips (Starlight Express, Grease, Guys & Dolls), and lyricist and composer of fan favourite's Heathers, Legally Blonde and Bat Boy, Laurence O'Keefe.

Other notable stars and creatives announced include Matt Henry MBE (Kinky Boots, The Drifters Girl), John McCrea (Cabaret, Everybody's Talking About Jamie), Joanna Ampil (Miss Saigon, Cats, Waitress), Divina De Campo (Spongebob Squarepants, Hedwig and the Angry Inch), Rob Madge (My Son’s A Queer, But What Can You Do?), director and Sheffield Crucible Artistic Director Rob Hastie (Operation Mincemeat, Miss Saigon, Standing At The Sky's Edge), casting director Stuart Burt (Cabaret, Miss Saigon, Standing At the Sky's Edge), designer Ben Stones (Operation Mincemeat, Miss Saigon, Standing At The Sky's Edge), director Anthony Lau (Miss Saigon), writers Jake Brunger & Pippa Cleary (The Great British Bake Off Musical), and choreographer Mark Smith (The Little Big Things).

Claude-Michel Schönberg said: “Musical Con is helping musical theatre to be understood, appreciated and celebrated by audiences as never before. I am delighted to be part of it and my hope is we will inspire the next generation of young people to work with us in the most wonderful industry in the world.”

More information and tickets here.

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Australian musical theatre performer Christie Whelan Browne (who has starred in shows including Xanadu, Muriel's Wedding and Britney Spears The Cabaret) has brought a lawsuit against Oldfield Entertainment, alleging victimisation after she complained of alleged harassment by Craig McLachlan, her castmate in a 2014 production of the Rocky Horror Show.

McLachlan was acquitted of alleged sexual assault in December 2020 and dropped defamation action against media outlets and Whelan Browne in 2022.

Whelan Browne's federal court lawsuit has been filed against the theatrical company and does not seek relief from McLachlan. Her case against Oldfield centres on alleged discrimination experienced during the show and in the company’s responses to her complaints from 2017 onwards.

“I know that I deserved better treatment, that I deserved to feel safe and respected in my workplace,” Whelan Browne said in a statement on social media earlier in September.

“Other women in the arts deserve better and I won’t accept that anything less than that is ‘just the way it is’.”

Mediation is planned for late November to potentially avoid a trial.

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Just got an email from Lincoln Center Theater (LCT) announcing that Andre Bishop will step down from the role of Producing Artistic Director in 2025 after over 30 years at LCT.

During Bishop's tenure LCT developed or revived musicals such as The Light in the Piazza (by Adam Guettel and Craig Lucas), Contact (Susan Stroman and John Weidman), Parade (Jason Robert Brown and Alfred Uhry), Falsettos (William Finn and James Lapine), Flying Over Sunset (Tom Kitt, Michael Korie and James Lapine) and many, many more.

Before joining LCT in 1992 Bishop was artistic director of Playwrights Horizons for ten years, where he developed shows such as Falsettos, Sunday in the Park with George and Assassins.

Bishop has won countless awards, including 17 “best production” Tony Awards, and was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2012.

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After more than two decades, the Nederlander Organization has decided to part ways with Ticketmaster and use its own ticketing service. Rivaling the Shubert Organization’s Telecharge ticketing service, all tickets to shows presented in the Broadway landlord’s nine theaters can now be purchased through BroadwayDirect.

The move comes a couple of years after the Broadway theater owner Jujamcyn Theaters sent shockwaves through the theatre industry, splitting with Ticketmaster and selecting SeatGeek as the exclusive ticketing service for its five theaters. Adding a third major player to the primary marketplace for Broadway tickets, “this is one of the most disruptive moves on Broadway in decades,” commented one producer.

But, it was only a matter of time until Ticketmaster, which once served 15 Broadway theaters, would see its Broadway market share shrink.

In 2011, the Nederlander Organization set up BroadwayDirect as a platform to promote Broadway shows with news articles and interviews. But, the company has been inching more and more into the ticketing world, expanding the website to offer online ticket lotteries in 2016, and buying the ticketing technology company TixTrack last year. “The acquisition of the company is a natural next step,” stated its executive vice president Nick Scandalios at the time.

Now since Ticketmaster has been booted from Nederlander theaters, the company only serves the New Amsterdam Theatre, which Disney leases from the New York State Urban Development Corporation in exchange for two percent of the revenues generated from the shows presented in the theater escalating to three percent of the revenues once $30 million is received.

While executives at the Nederlander Organization declined to discuss their reason for breaking up with Ticketmaster on Broadway, using their own ticketing platform allows the company to collect service fees and customer data. Gaining invaluable insights into the demographics and ticket purchasing patterns of Broadway audiences, the company will be able to make more informed decisions about which shows to book in its theaters and which shows to develop and produce on Broadway.

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30 October will officially become National Wicked Day in honor of the musical’s debut at Broadway's Gershwin Theatre on 30 October2003.

This is the first time that a Broadway musical will have its own official day in the National Day Calendar, joining other National Day celebrations such as National Barbie Day (9 March), National Star Trek Day (8 September) and National Acne Positivity Day (1 September).

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Kennedy Kanagawa has replaced Zachary Noah Piser in the lead role of Peiwen in the upcoming production of Tienanmen by Drew Fornarol and Scott Elemgreen at the Phoenix Theatre Company, Arizona Piser departed the production - which starts 4 October 2023 - last month. The cast also includes Ellie Wang, Grace Choi, Austin Ku, Michael Ching, Marc Oka, Sy Chounchaisit, Brandon Gille, Kuppi Jessop, Danielle Mendoza, Michelle Chin, Raymond Dimaano, Alexi Ishida, Peter Eidler, and Rommel Pierre O’Choa.

Savion Glover will not only choreograph and co-direct the New York City Center's gala production of Rodgers & hart's Pal Joey, but also be part of the dance ensemble. Featuring a new book by Richard LaGravenese and Daniel “Koa” Beaty, the revival reimagines the main character to be a Black jazz singer struggling to make it big in the Chicago nightclub circuit. That role will be played by Ephraim Sykes, alongside the previously announced Elizabeth Stanley as Vera, Aisha Jackson as Linda, Loretta Devine as Lucille, Brooks Ashmanskas as Melvin, and Jeb Brown as Tony. This version will blend songs from the original score other Rodgers and Hart tunes.

The cast of the 25th Anniversary North American Tour of Mamma Mia!, which will open in Denver this October before continuing on to play 35+ cities across North America, has been announced. Leading the tour as Donna Sheridan is Christine Sherrill. She will be joined by rising star Alisa Melendez as Sophie Sheridan. Joining them are Carly Sakolove as Rosie and Victor Wallace as Sam Carmichael. Casting also includes Jalynn Steele as Tanya, Rob Marnell as Harry Bright, Jim Newman as Bill Austin, and Grant Reynolds as Sky. The ensemble comprises Louis Griffin, Patrick Park, L’Oréal Roaché, Haley Wright, Gabe Amato, Adia Olanethia Bell, Xavi Soto Burgos, Emily Croft, Madison Deadman, Jordan De Leon, Nico DiPrimio, Patrick Dunn, Stephanie Genito, Tassy Kirbas, Danny Lopez-Alicea, Makoa, Faith Northcutt, Jasmine Overbaugh, Gray Phillips, Blake Price, Dorian Quinn, and Amy Weaver.

The US tour of the Regents Park Open Air Theatre’s production of Jesus Christ Superstar will begin the 2023-2024 season on October 3, 2023 in Columbus, OH and go on to play over 60 cities including Toronto, Charlotte, Denver, Tampa, Little Rock and more. As previously announced, Jack Hopewell and Elvie Ellis return to the tour to star as Jesus and Judas. Jaden Dominique joins the tour in the role of Mary, Grant Hodges as Caiaphas, Alex Stone as Pilate, and Mekhi Holloway as Annas. The ensemble includes Aja Simone Baitey, Ethan Hardy Benson, Joshua Bess, Sherrod Brown, Kalei Cotecson, Jaylon Crump, Alec Diem, Jaleel Green, Domanick Anton Hubbard, Haley Huelsman, Jeremy Makana Hurr, Katrice Jackson, Cameron Kuhn, Taylor Lane, Thomas McFerran, Jeilani Rhone-Collins, Johann Santiago Santos, Reese Spencer, TJ Tapp, Anakin Jace White, and John Zamborsky.

Richard Kind & John Owen-Jones to Lead Sondheim's A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum in Paris. Kind will star as Pseudolus and Owen-Jones will take on the role of Miles Gloriosus. The cast also is set to include Rufus Hound as Hysterium, Patrick Ryecart as Senex, Martyn Ellis as Marcus Lycus, Valerie Gabail as Domina, Josh St Clair as Hero, and Neima Naouri as Philia.

Shirine Babb joins the Broadway's A Beautiful Noise. Babb assumes the role of the Doctor on 22 September, taking over from Linda Powell.

On the Annie US national tour, beginning October 7, Rainier “Rainey” Treviño, an 11 year old from Chesapeake, Virginia joins the company as Annie. She joins returning cast members Stefanie Londino as Miss Hannigan, Christopher Swan as Oliver Warbucks, Julia Nicole Hunter as Grace, and Mark Woodard as FDR. Additional newcomers to the family friendly musical include Jeffrey T. Kelly as Rooster and Samantha Stevens as Lily. The dog Georgie, rescued by William Berloni, stars as Sandy. The 2023-2024 orphan class are Savannah Austin, Arianna Guller, Avery Hope, Addie Jaymes, Kylie Noelle Patterson and Jade Smith. The ensemble includes Savannah Fisher, Jerquintez A. Gipson, Caroline Glazier, Chance K. Ingalls, Kaleb Jenkins, Jaelle Laguerre, Tony Mowatt, Nick Traficante, Kaylie Mae Wallace, Callie Alexa, Brooke Olivia Gatto, and Trent Tyson.

The first UK and Ireland Tour of Hamilton will star Shaq Taylor as Alexander Hamilton, Sam Oladeinde as Aaron Burr, Gabriela Benedetti as Peggy Schuyler/Maria Reynolds, KM Drew Boateng as Hercules Mulligan/James Madison, Daniel Boys as King George, Maya Britto as Eliza Hamilton, Aisha Jawando as Angelica Schuyler, DeAngelo Jones as John Laurens/Philip Hamilton, Billy Nevers as Marquis de Lafayette/Thomas Jefferson and Charles Simmons as George Washington. They are joined by Simeon Beckett, Taylor Bradshaw, Cletus Chan, Kyerron Dixon-Bassey, Kyeirah D’marni, Yesy Garcia, Jonathan Hermosa-Lopez, Levi Tyrell Johnson, Honey Joseph, Akmed Junior Khemalai, Richard Logun, Buna McCreery-Njie, Mia Mullarkey, Antoine Murray-Straughan, Kiran Patel, Izzy Read, Alice Readie, Harry Robinson, Phoebe Samuel-Gray, Jasmine Jia Yung Shen, Samantha Shuma, Michael James Stewart, Rhys West, Jack Whitehead and Sian Yeo.

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André De Shields is getting a new honor, from his native city of Baltimore. There will be a ceremonial street dedication 21 September 2023 to name the southwest corner of the 1800 block of Division Street as "André De Shields Way."

De Shields grew up in Baltimore and graduated from City College High School in 1964. He was given the key to the city in 2019, and performed with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2021.

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London's Almeida Theatre's production of Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik's Spring Awakening will be screened at selected UK cinemas in November 2023.

The cast of this Ruperg Goold-directed production includes Laurie Kynaston (Melchior), Amara Okereke (Wendle), Nathan Armarkwei-Laryea (Hanschen), Asha Banks (Thea), Taylor Bradshaw (ensemble), Catherine Cusack (all the adult women), Carly-Sophia Davies (Ilse), Kit Esuruoso (Otto), Mark Lockyer (all the adult men), Bella Maclean (Martha), Emily Ooi (ensemble), Joe Pitts (Georg), Maia Tamrakar (Anna), Stuart Thompson (Moritz) and Zheng Xi Yong (Ernst).

Venues and specific release date are to be confirmed, with the show being screened in locations in November.

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Playbill explores the origins of this type of Broadway power ballad, which no longer occurs at 11 PM.

Summary of the article below. Also check out the playlist.

11 o'clock numbers are named for the time they would have occurred on stage, back when Broadway shows began later in the evening than they do today. This soul-stirring penultimate number is considered a key part of a musical's structure, with the finale song often serving as a bow wrapping up the plot, which usually would be all but aligned by the end of the 11 o'clock number.

The term is nebulous, and is often used by fans to describe the feeling a song imparts rather than bestowing the title after formulaic analysis. However, such a song usually has at least three of the following characteristics:

  • A show-stopping showcase for the star.
  • The second-to-last sequence in the show.
  • A moment of great dramatic realization or revelation.
  • The energetic summit of the evening to which the entire show had been leading.
  • A song that could, with minor adjustments, be performed out of context by recording and cabaret artists.

While solo star 11 o'clock numbers are often the most enduring in the public consciousness (in part due to the second life many of these songs have due to characteristic 5, which keep them alive long after specific productions close), vividly energetic or emotional group numbers also qualify. Eg "Brotherhood of Man" from How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying

Some songs commonly touted as 11 o'clock numbers are technically disqualified from the moniker due to their position in the show. Eg "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again" from Phantom.

Intricate reprises now occasionally occupy the traditional position of the 11 o'clock number. Eg "Wait for Me" from Hadestown.

Some immensely successful shows make dramatic choices to reinvent or entirely eschew the format. Eg "For Good" from Wicked.

Perhaps what is most important about 11 o'clock numbers are the way they make an audience feel. The emotional payoff of such richly dramatic or energetic numbers serves as the glowing memory in an audience member's mind when they leave the theatre.

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“Smash,” the TV series about the making of a fictional Broadway musical, takes an early step toward becoming a real-life Broadway musical on Sept. 22, with a pair of industry readings led by Tony nominees Robyn Hurder and Kerry Butler.

Hurder plays Ivy, an actress cast in the lead role of a new musical about Marilyn Monroe, and Butler appears as Karen, Ivy’s understudy. Their characters share the names of two pivotal roles in the TV show, which also focused on the development of a Marilyn Monroe musical called “Bombshell.”

While it retains the series’ most recognizable elements, the musical adaptation of “Smash” departs in other ways with a storyline and cast of characters that are inspired by the series but not direct translations. “It’s definitely a new script,” said director Susan Stroman of the musical’s book by Bob Martin and Rick Elice. “It has a dramatic twist at the end of it. But you will see familiar characters.”

In the reading, Alex Brightman and Krysta Rodriguez portray a married composer-lyricist duo who are writing the score for “Bombshell”; Vanessa Williams plays the show’s producer; and Brooks Ashmanskas takes on the part of the director with Tony winner Bonnie Milligan appearing as his associate director. Kristine Nielsen (as an acting coach) and Milligan’s “Kimberly Akimbo” castmate Justin Cooley (as an intern) round out the reading’s cast. (Rodriguez appeared in the TV series in an entirely different role.)

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Highlights for those not able to get past the paywall:

What propels the highs and lows of Merrily We Roll Along, the 1981 Stephen Sondheim-George Furth musical that begins performances this month at the Hudson Theater, is friendship. But for the stars of this first Broadway revival - Jonathan Groff, Lindsay Mendez and Daniel Radcliffe - embodying the implosion of that friendship may well be more emotionally charged, rewarding and wrenching than anything they've done before.

As often happens with actors portraying intimacy, the sentiments they evoke in performance have bled into real life - or the good feelings anyway, when their characters are still fresh, hopeful and unconditionally smitten with one another. These well-seasoned pros may be in their 30s or early 40s, but when they describe their relationship - offstage, I mean, although the line becomes blurry: they're as effusive and dewy as Romeo and Juliet before the going got tough.

"It's such a special show in that way," said Groff. "Often I feel you get that with the people you play romantic interests with. But the love story in this show is the friends. So there's this intensity in a friendship that I've never experienced with a play before."

Groff made those observations last fall when Merrily, the American directorial debut of the British actress (and frequent Sondheim interpreter) Maria Friedman, had just started previews in its Off Broadway incarnation at New York Theater Workshop. That its transfer to Broadway seemed guaranteed once it opened had much to do with the aching, loving sincerity with which its cast suffused it.

More perhaps than any of the recent Sondheim productions, this tear-streaked Merrily pronounces a definitive finis to the perception of the composer as an overly cerebral artist of chilly, distancing cleverness.

Friedman's approach, of locating and clinging to the show's wrenching emotional center, clearly affected its 20-some member ensemble, which has been increased by two for Broadway. When the Workshop production ended its limited, sold-out run in January, Groff said he and his co-stars were a wreck, even knowing we were going to Broadway, to say goodbye to an experience that meant so much.

Nonetheless, Groff, Mendez and Radcliffe agreed to think as little as possible about Merrily for the next seven months. And while they continued to keep in close touch (they all attended Sweeney Todd together), they avoided discussing it.

While [the birth of his first child] kept Merrily thoughts mostly at bay, Radcliffe - who registers as the most obsessive of the three - admitted that he continued to practice his solo "Franklin Shepard, Inc.," a rapid-fire tongue twister. He would even sing it while holding his son. "He seems to respond to really fast music," Radcliffe said.

The bond among the stars felt, if anything, tighter than when I spoke to them last December. They were aware of it from the moment they met. "When the three of us first walked into the room," Groff said, "there was a natural..."

"It was a heart connection," Mendez said.

Groff continued: "It's a vibe. It's chemistry. You have it on dates sometimes. And then going night after night after night and digging into the energy that was between us and the show deepening it. The three of us have, it's such a gift - a meant-to-be alignment of personality and energy."

What they share, among other things, is a bone-deep love of that currently beleaguered art form, the theater. Groff and Mendez, who turned 40 this year, arrived in Manhattan in their late teens from Pennsylvania and California to "pound the pavements," as they said, sounding like the hoofers in a Busby Berkeley musical.

By that time, the London-born Radcliffe, 34, was already world-famous as the title character of the Harry Potter film franchise, in which he starred for a decade. His parents had been stage actors before he was born, and Radcliffe said that, growing up, he spent as much time going to theater as to the movies.

"I think I love the element of risk," Radcliffe said of working in theater.

So would he describe himself as a member of that New York-centric cult that makes a religion of the Broadway musical? "They're the high priests," he said, pointing to the others. "I'm like an altar boy." He said that hearing a perfectly normal phrase like "How do you do?" will trigger his co-stars to start performing a lyric with just that phrase.

Sure enough, when a few moments later I mentioned that I grew up in Winston-Salem, N.C., Groff and Mendez responded immediately and simultaneously in swooping falsetto and soprano. "Winstooon-Saaalemm," they sang, quoting a number I had almost forgotten from the musical The Light in the Piazza.

When they discussed their lyrics and dialogue from Merrily, they often seemed tremulous with the excitement of discovery. With an exactitude and passion that was unexpected at the end of a long rehearsal day, they parsed several scenes and musical numbers for me, especially moments when their characters just miss the chance to repair what's gone wrong in their relationship.

Groff and Mendez started crying during several such descriptions, as if they had only just fully realized the extent of the destruction being done.

Mendez said those moments resonate even more fully now than they did seven months ago. "When we rehearsed this downtown, and had started being friendly, the thing that would hit me in my heart, was the idea of the friendship. But now it's the actual friendship; we feel the way we feel they feel in 'Opening Doors', she said, referring to an ebullient, optimistic trio performed when their characters are just starting out in New York. "So to think about that deteriorating is pretty gutting."

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Stephen Schwartz has signed an exclusive global publishing agreement with Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG). UMPG is the global publishing division of Universal Music Group.

With this deal, UMPG will hold the exclusive and global rights to the majority of Schwartz’s song catalog (excluding songs from “Godspell” and “Pippin”).

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The hit Atlantic Theatre Company production of Adam Guettel and Craig Lucas’s musical Days of Wine and Roses will come to Studio 54 on Broadway beginning January 6 2024. Opening night is set for January 28.

Directed by Michael Greif, the company is led once again by Kelli O’Hara and Brian d’Arcy James, who play a couple in the 1950s who struggle to build a family amid their mutual alcoholism. It is adapted from the 1962 film and 1958 teleplay by JP Miller, with a score by Adam Guettel and book by Craig Lucas, who previously collaborated on The Light in the Piazza.

Additional casting will be announced soon.

Vogue ran a profile on the two stars and the musical's development (over 20 years in the making!) in June, during the show's off-Broadway run.

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The musical of The Devil Wears Prada - with music by Elton John, lyrics by Shaina Taub and book by Kate Wetherhead - will open in October 2024 at the Dominion Theatre in London's West End. It will be preceded by a limited run preview engagement at Theatre Royal Plymouth in July 2024.

Jerry Mitchell will direct and choreograph the London production, following last year’s Chicago pre-Broadway try-out (which was directed by Anna D. Shapiro). That production didn't get great reviews but the show has been substantially reworked since.

Mitchell has assembled a totally new creative team for his staging, with the West End bow set to feature scenic design by Tim Hatley, costume design by Gregg Barnes, lighting design by Bruno Poet, and sound design by Gareth Owen. Casting is by Jill Green.

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Clare Burt will join the cast of Stephen Sondheim’s Old Friends at the Gielgud Theatre in London, when the show kicks off on 21 September 2023. Burt replaces Haydn Gwynne, who had to withdraw from the production due to unexpected personal circumstances. Old Friends is headlined by Broadway legends Bernadette Peters and Lea Salonga. Joining them are Christine Allado, Clare Burt, Janie Dee, Damian Humbley, Bradley Jaden, Bonnie Langford, Gavin Lee, Jason Pennycooke, Joanna Riding, Jeremy Secomb, Jac Yarrow, Marley Fenton, and Beatrice Penny-Touré. The company is further bolstered by Harry Apps, Bella Brown, Richard Dempsey, and Monique Young.

Aston Merrygold and The Vivienne will star in The Wizard of Oz (the version featuring additional songs by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice) in Liverpool this December. Merrygold will play The Tin Man with Liverpool-raised, RuPaul’s Drag Race UK winner and Dancing on Ice finalist, The Vivienne taking on the iconic role of The Wicked Witch of the West. The Wizard of Oz opens its UK and Ireland tour at Liverpool Empire Theatre on Tuesday 13 December 2023, playing an extended festive season through Sunday 7 January 2024.

Jarrod Spector joined the Broadway production of Hamilton as King George on September 12 2023. Spector takes over for Euan Morton, who played his final performance on September 10. Spector earned a Tony nomination for his featured turn as Barry Mann in Beautiful — The Carole King Musical. His other Broadway credits include The Cher Show, Jersey Boys and Les Misérables.

Casting for Irving Berlin’s White Christmas at the Crucible Theatre, Sheffield, UK has been announced. The show runs from 9 December 2023 to 13 January 2024 and stars Craig Armstrong as Ezekiel and Understudy Waverley, Megan Armstrong as Ensemble/as cast and Understudy Martha, George Blagden as Bob, Charlie Booker as Ensemble, Danny Collins as Sheldrake and Understudy Phil, Alastair Crosswell as Onstage Swing, Ewen Cummins as Waverley, Adam Davidson as Ensemble, Jasmine Davis as Ensemble, Emily Goodenough as Ensemble, Understudy Judy and Dance Coach, Ryan Gover as Ensemble, Chloe Hopcroft as Onstage Swing, Emma Johnson as Ensemble and Understudy Betty, Thomas-Lee Kidd as Ensemble and Understudy Bob, Sandra Marvin as Martha, Grace Mouat as Betty, Natasha Mould as Judy, Stuart Neal as Phil, Hakeem Tinubu as Ensemble, D’Mia Lindsay Walker as Ensemble and Lucy Young as Ensemble.

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The National Alliance for Musical Theatre (NAMT) has revealed the slate of directors and music directors for the 35th annual Festival of New Musicals, which takes place October 26–27 2023 at New York City's New World Stages.

The industry-only event showcases 45-minute concert adaptations of new musicals in the final stages of development for producers and artists from around the world.

The schedule and list of musicals and participants for the festival can be found on the NAMT website. Musicals include:

  • Fallout by Dmitry Koltunov and David Goldsmith
  • Fountain by Christopher Anselmo and Jared Corak
  • Fountain of You by Tasha Gordon-Solmon and Faye Chiao
  • Mija by Anna Gilbert, Gaby Moreno, Evynne Hollens and Rebecca Tourino Collinsworth
  • Never Be King by Charlie H Ray and Sam Columbus
  • The Oscar Micheaux Project by Alphonso Horne, Jesse L Kearney, Peter Mills and Cara Reichel
  • Wonder Boy by Jaime Jarrett
  • Yoko's Husband's Killer's Japanese Wife, Gloria by Brandy Hoang Collier, Clare Fuyuko Bierman and Erika Ji

Directors for this year’s Festival will include Rebecca Aparicio (Latinx Playwrights Circle), Dev Bondarin (associate artistic director, Prospect Theater Company), Catie Davis (Beetlejuice), Bo Frazier (Chicago's tick, tick…BOOM!), Kimille Howard (artistic director, Lucille Lortel Theatre’s NYC Public High School Playwrighting Fellowship), Jess McLeod (Woolly Mammoth BOLD resident director), Leora Morris (Alliance Theatre's Ride the Cyclone) and Abbey O’Brien (Waitress, Jagged Little Pill).

Music directors will include Kurt Crowley (Hamilton, Freestyle Love Supreme), Andrea Grody (The Band’s Visit), Jesse Kissel (Chicago, The Visit), Lily Ling (How to Dance in Ohio), Anessa Marie (White Girl in Danger), Patrick Sulken (Little Shop of Horrors), and Alyssa Kay Thompson (1776).

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Stella Miles Franklin’s pioneering 1901 novel My Brilliant Career is getting its first musical adaptation, in a production that will cap off Melbourne Theatre Company’s 2024 season.

Announced on Wednesday, it will be the first musical directed by MTC’s artistic director Anne-Louise Sarks, who has already cast her Sybylla Melvyn in Kala Gare, who played Anne Boleyn in the hit Australian production of Six.

“We’ll be injecting contemporary feminist thought into a century-old story,” Sarks said of My Brilliant Career, which will open on 7 November 2024. “We’re going to blow the roof off the Sumner [theatre],” she said, describing Gare as “the embodiment of fearless punk energy”.

With a book and music by Dean Bryant, Sheridan Harbridge and Mathew Frank, the pop-rock musical will tell the story of a free-spirited teenage girl growing up in 1890s rural Australia, forced to choose between a marriage and a life of writing.

“This is not a conventional romance. This new version is messy. It’s joyful. It’s chaotic. It gets us inside the mind of a teenager struggling to live life on her own terms,” Sarks said.

Bryant said the production will combine “the raucous energy of Six with the brashness of Fangirls and the actor/musician vibe of Once”.

An earlier version of the musical received a development workshop in 2019 at Monash University (prior to the involvement of Sheridan Harbridge as co-book writer). This workshop also produced that rare thing, an Australian cast recording.

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U.S. Representative Lauren Boebert was escorted out of a Sunday night performance of the “Beetlejuice” musical in downtown Denver, accused by venue officials of vaping, singing, recording and “causing a disturbance” during the performance.

In an incident report shared with The Denver Post on Tuesday afternoon, officials with Denver Arts & Venues wrote that two patrons were asked to leave the city-owned Buell Theatre during the performance of the touring Broadway show. They previously were issued a warning during the intermission regarding behavior that prompted three complaints from other theatergoers, the report says.

The report does not name Boebert as one of the patrons or identify the other person. But her campaign office — while disputing the behavior alleged — confirmed that she was escorted from the Buell on Sunday night during the “Beetlejuice” show.

The incident report states that after receiving the intermission warning, about five minutes into the second act security officials received “another complaint about the patrons being loud and at the time (they) were recording.” Taking pictures or recording is not permitted at shows.

The report quotes one of the ushers: “They told me they would not leave. I told them that they need to leave the theater and if they do not, they will be trespassing. The patrons said they would not leave. I told them I would (be) going to get Denver Police. They said go get them.”

Denver Arts & Venues on Tuesday night released security video showing Boebert’s interactions with theater staff as she and her companion were escorted out

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The Broadway Flea Market & Grand Auction will return to New York City with collectables, experiences and stars on Sunday, October 1, 2023.

Pre-bidding on

  • live auction, and - silent auction
    items that can only be found at the #BroadwayFlea is now live. Among the items and exclusive experiences are handwritten and signed musical phrases, lunches and backstage meetings with Broadway stars, props used in performances, rare collectibles from vintage Broadway and autographed Playbills and posters from current and classic Broadway shows.

Tables from Broadway and Off-Broadway shows, theater owners and producing organizations, unions, guilds, marketing groups, ticket agencies, concessionaires and fan clubs will line West 44th and West 45th Streets. The first shows joining the lineup are & Juliet, Here Lies Love, The Lion King, Kimberly Akimbo, Moulin Rouge! The Musical, Six and Sweeney Todd, plus special tables honoring The Phantom of the Opera and the 40th anniversary of the original cast of La Cage aux Folles. More participating shows will be announced in the coming weeks.

Every dollar donated during the Broadway Flea Market & Grand Auction will help ensure a safety net of services for those in the performing arts and help provide access to lifesaving medications, counseling, healthy meals, housing and more to those across the country living with HIV/AIDS and other critical illnesses. Last year’s event raised a record-breaking $1,043,825. Since 1987, the 36 editions of the event have raised more than $17.5 million.

Among the items are:

Lunch with Academy Award winner and esteemed Tony Awards host Ariana DeBose

  • a private meet-and-greet with Josh Groban, as well as two VIP seats to see him in the Tony Award-nominated revival of Sweeney Todd
  • musical phrases handwritten and signed by Jason Robert Brown from Parade, Stephen Schwartz from Wicked, Stephen Sondheim from A Little Night Music and more
  • a Mean Girls script signed by Tina Fey
  • a custom Harold Hill Broadway Funko POP! figurine signed by Hugh Jackman
  • show memorabilia autographed by Sara Bareilles, Christian Borle, Wayne Brady, Carol Channing, Jessica Chastain, Kristin Chenoweth, Common, Daniel Craig, Gavin Creel, Andre De Shields, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Sutton Foster, Andrew Garfield, Steve Martin, J. Harrison Ghee, Joel Grey, Katharine Hepburn, Michael R. Jackson, James Earl Jones, Nathan Lane, Patti LuPone, Pedro Pascal, Bernadette Peters, Audra McDonald, Debra Messing, Bette Midler, Alex Newell, Eva Noblezada, Ben Platt, Billy Porter, Hal Prince, Andrew Rannells, Lea Salonga, Stephen Sondheim, Phillipa Soo, Bruce Springsteen, Elaine Stritch, Lily Tomlin, Aaron Tveit, Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber and many more

Theater lovers around the world also will be able to digitally join in the Flea Market fun with the return of the online #FleaBay auctions on eBay. Details will be announced soon.

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Water For Elephants, the new stage musical adapted from the acclaimed 2006 novel by Sara Gruen to be directed by Kimberly Akimbo director Jessica Stone, will open on Broadway this spring.

With a book by three-time Tony nominee Rick Elice (Jersey Boys, Peter and the Starcatcher) and a score by the band and performance troupe PigPen Theatre Co., Water For Elephants will begin previews on Saturday, February 24, 2024, at the Imperial Theatre, with an opening night set for Thursday, March 21.

The show premiered at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre in June this year, and starred Isabelle McCalla (current leading Shucked on Broadway), Ryan Vasquez, and Bryan Fenkhart. Casting for the Broadway production will be announced soon.

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