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How Fans Play A Part In Broadway

Recently, there’s been some discussion on the inter-webs regarding how large, exactly, of a part fans play in determining which shows go to Broadway. Some people believe that fans are completely irrelevant from this decision- the high-level execs are in charge, not the fans; while others believe that fans play an instrumental role. I’d like to analyze both sides of the argument, look at a few examples, and hopefully discuss a few different stances on the issue.

Throughout several social media sites (I’m looking at you, Tumblr…), there have been some harsh words exchanged between fans of different shows, arguing about how important each show’s fan-base really is. For example, “Fansies” have questioned their impact on how long Newsies has run on Broadway. Some people accuse fans of being useless, however in the case of Newsies, fans probably played a pretty substantial role in keeping the show on Broadway for as long as it has been. From an economics standpoint, fans create demand for the “product” (or in this case a show), and suppliers know they can capture a profit from it. Thus, high demand from the show has allowed it to be so successful. In that respect, fans are definitely important.

Another facet that’s been discussed is whether fans are important in the decision of what new shows to mount. The recent announcement that Disney CEO Bob Iger wants to develop Frozen into a stage show, ultimately to play on Broadway, has caused excitement and uproar throughout the fandom. Eager fans have taken some credit for influencing this decision, claiming their enthusiasm for the movie and love of the cast, many of whom are alums of the Great White Way, have played as a factor. The truth to this is debatable. While fans are responsible for making the movie such a box-office hit, it’s likely that Disney’s decision to license Frozen as a stage show was profit-driven, rather than being a move solely for fan satisfaction.

Nonetheless, fan enthusiasm is the key to promoting a show and making it successful, so one might like to think that fans play some part in the decision after all. As I explained earlier, in an economic model, fans create demand and allow the show to profit, so most decisions are influenced at least in that regard.

What do you think? Do you believe fans play a greater or smaller role in bringing shows to Broadway or determining the success of a show’s run? Weigh in in the comments!

Frozen On Broadway — Good or Bad?

How many times have you seen Frozen? Once? Three times? Fifteen? Once you see it, you can’t help but keep going back for more. Naturally, a movie like that makes an incredible amount of money. Because the movie has already made an incredible profit, so many extras have already been announced including  a sing-a-long, a sequel, and even a Broadway musical. We’re all extremely excited to see what Disney has in store, but I’m a little hesitant about a few things concerning the live show.

The beautiful music, hilarious characters, and simply magnificent storyline really make this an amazing piece for the stage. And we know it has the audience. However, will it transfer over to the stage well? The biggest concern on everybody’s minds is the lack of music. The songs written by Disney song-writing veteran Alan Menken are wonderful, but there are very few. There would have to be more music written for the show. Music written in the style of the show, that is relevant, added to an already musical piece is not the easiest thing to create. They’d have to pull it out of thin air. However, whatever Alan Menken writes is brilliant, and that gives us hope! And they also did so with the musical The Little Mermaid, and Newsies so we know adding songs is possible.

The next big concern is the transfer from animated motions, lines, and characters to real life people. Beauty and the Beast is a wonderful musical. Great music, fantastic story. But for some characters, such as Le Fou and Gaston, their relationship is overly cartoonish and cheesy when depicted on stage. The same thing could very well happen to Olaf the Snowman and Sven the Reindeer. Not only, is their behavior a concern, but how they’re going to be depicted on stage? Puppets like Lion King? Odd costumes? Maybe even an actual Reindeer? Okay, so the last one isn’t as likely. But it sure would be adorable!

Next, lets talk special effects. With the movie so effect heavy, the stage musical has to be just as heavy, maybe even a little more. The ice from Elsa’s hands is going to be incredibly hard. How is she going to build an ice palace around her? Especialy considering it needing  the ability to disappear from stage quickly so the attention can go back to Anna and Kristoff. The massiveness and elaborateness of the ice palace in the movie will most likely be extremely difficult to recreate.

While there are doubts in the air about the stage adaption of this glorious animated film, Disney must have great plans to bring it to life! I can’t wait to hear more!

Why Kinky Boots Deserved The Grammy, and Everything Else Ever

“This is theater.”

After seeing Kinky Boots on Broadway for the first time, I couldn’t stop thinking that. I expect a lot when I see a musical. Of course, I want to be entertained, but I want it to change something for me. Theater is life, and by seeing a show, I’m glimpsing into another world and taking that experience with me. I would hope that experience would change my perspective. I’ve noticed that some contemporary musicals have lost sight of this, but definitely not Kinky Boots.

If you haven’t had the opportunity to see Kinky Boots yet, it follows Charlie Price, the son of Price & Son, when he decides to quit the shoe factory to move with his girlfriend. Unfortunate circumstances align, and he is forced to take over the factory to save the workers, people he has known his whole life, and save his father’s legacy. The business continues to fail until he bumps into the vibrant Lola, a drag queen, who gives him the idea to manufacture high-heeled boots for men, starting a very interesting partnership.

It certainly sounds like an odd plot, and it is, but yet there is nothing more relatable. When Lola faces scrutiny at the factory, her message, “You change the world when you change your mind,” first appears. The gravity of this is almost immeasurable, assigning whomever is at the end of it with complete responsibility. “YOU change the world when YOU change your mind.” Though some can initially perceive Lola as shocking, the antithesis of acceptable, this musical isn’t done with any excess crassness or vulgarity, because it doesn’t need to hide behind that. Any initial judgements the audience may have against Lola are immediately humiliated. This is so important in our society today, where prejudice is rampant, no matter what opinion is being held. Intelligent discussions are ruined with anger and hatred, defeating the purpose of them in the first place. Lola proves to us that having an open mind does not mean giving up your opinion, it means strengthening it.

With this intense of a message, Kinky Boots might have been unrelatable and insincere, and that’s where Cyndi Lauper’s brilliant score comes in. With a sound unlike any other musical, Lauper creates a score equal parts hilarious, entertaining, poignant and beautiful. The upbeat songs have a very 1980’s-esque energy that propels the plot at high speed, with lyrics hilarious and enticing. Lola’s songs are a highlight, full of depth and vibrance. She also manages to compose ballads with tunes and messages so beautiful, that I am still strongly affected by them today. The closing number, Raise You Up/ Just Be, leaves the audience both at a loss of words and energized.

From performing at the Macy’s Thanksgiving’s Parade to the pre-game show at the Superbowl, even the most closed-minded of society can receive the message Kinky Boots has to offer, delivered in a genuinely refreshing way. And that change of perspective, most definitely, is theatre.

Photo by Broadway.com

Newsies: Talent On Stage and Off!

It seems like just yesterday that Newsies was being put on at the PaperMill Playhouse, a regional production with dreams of being on Broadway. And then the show got a 16 week limited run on Broadway that turned into an open ended run, and now the show is producing tickets by the bulk, enough to have standing room only on the weekends, and be near sold out during the week. The show is known for it’s insane stagedoor and dedicated fans, and none of that has calmed down in the almost two years it’s been on Broadway.

But two years calls for many cast changes, and with most of the original Broadway cast gone or moved around, I thought it would be nice to reminisce on the talent that has jetéd across the Nederlander stage, whether that be secret talents or just good old fashioned “I want your voice” talents.

1. Andrew Keenan-BolgerThis guy is known throughout the Broadway community for having been in Mary Poppins on Broadway before originated the role of the lovable Crutchie back at PaperMill. However, there is so much more to Andrew than the wonderful singer and lovable attitude he brought to Crutchie. He’s also a director, and has two seasons of a popular web show Submissions Only under his belt. The third season is coming up soon and was even announced by the New York Times. Not too shabby! We sure miss him limping on stage, but he’s busy doing amazing things behind the camera, and who are we to argue with that?

2. Laurie Veldheer: Laurie Veldheer was a Katherine understudy that you can now see every night in Mamma Mia as Sophie herself! I personally love Laurie because she’s such a sweetheart, and is so grateful for everything she has. Every time she talks she lights up a room, a computer, however you’re hearing her talk. Unfortunately I have yet to see her perform in anything, but with understudying Katherine and now onstage eight times a week as Sophie, more people will know this girl very soon.

3. Andy RichardsonI have to talk about Andy Richardson because he is someone puts us all to shame. He understudied Crutchie before taking over the role after Andrew Keenen-Bolger left, and now plays the role full time. As if that’s not enough, he’s fluent in ASL, is a National Merit Scholar, goes to NYU full time where he’s double majoring in ASL and Theatre. This is the epitome of someone who can do everything. I have no idea how he does it, but maybe there’s a superhero costume under those Newsies clothes.

4. Hogan Fulton: This guy is another one who does it all. Hogan came on as a temporary replacement from LA last year when Tommy Bracco took out his knee. After playing Billy on the West End, the dancer from Billy Elliot filled in after Ryan Steele left, known for his incredible fouetté turns that made him a character that stuck out, Hogan stepped in like it ain’t no thang. In addition to being an incredible dancer, he also composes his own songs. Many of them are on his tumblr, where he also writes his own poetry. An artsy type — allow me to swoon now.

5. Jeremy Jordan“Why are you including Jeremy Jordan? He originated the role of Jack Kelly!” And that is exactly why I’m including him, dear reader! The originator of Jack Kelly had an amazing 2012 season, with two shows, Bonnie and Clyde and Newsies, up for Tony Awards. He’s gone on to be in SMASH as the moody yet lovable composer, and Jamie in The Last Five Years with Anna Kendrick. He’s also been in countless concerts, and even starred in a Sondheim show A Bed and a Chair with Bernadette Peters. While he’s not on Broadway right now, we have to give this guy credit – he’s one of the actors who started it all.

Obviously everyone in this cast is incredibly talented, you have to be to be doing incredibly taxing dance moves eight times a week, but these are just five of my favorites. Feel free to add your own!

The Fault in Our Stars and More Great Novels For Stage Adaptation

These days it seems all forms of media are connecting, sharing and exploring different versions of the same stories. Everything is displayed in different ways. For example, The Snow Queen, one of the classic fairytales we all know and love, has recently been portrayed in movie theaters around the world in the popular animated film, Frozen. It has been announced Frozen is heading to Broadway, yet another form of media that has been adapting preexisting stories since its beginning. There are lots of fabulous books out there that would make delightful musicals, but three really stand out and are destined to be staged. Warning, spoiler alerts may be ahead! You have been warned!

1. The Help by Kathryn Stockett

One of my favorite books of all time is a beautiful story of defiance and bravery. In the town of Jackson, Mississippi, circa 1962, a woman known simply as Skeeter notices the unfairness of the treatment of her friend’s maids. Being the journalist she is, she, with the help of these maids, writes a book about the way the employers treat their help.

Rather than having this show filled with big numbers, I think a bunch of soft numbers to express thoughts and emotions would be better. While it would be a musical comedy, it would still have many touching moments including ones of fear and suspense, making it quite versatile. I picture Minny (a maid that provides comic relief) as someone who would come in after a deep moment and belt out a soulful, gospel song about what she did to Miss Hilly (Minnys ex-employer) to get her revenge for being wrongfully fired. Stuart (Skeeter’s love interest) should have a bigger role in the theater adaptation, maybe even belting a love ballad.

If I could cast this show, I’d have Celia Keenan-Bolger (The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee) as Skeeter. Miss Keenan-Bolger has the perfect voice for the heroine. She can be quiet and timid when speaking with her over bearing mother and the antagonist, Hilly. But when she starts to get to her feet, she can belt notes that will chill your bones! Aibileen (the main maid who writes a good portion of the book) should be played by Cicely Tyson (The Trip to Bountiful). She is known for playing Constantine in the film version of “The Help” but I think she would make a strong Aibileen. Hilly should be portrayed by Megan Hilty (9 to 5) and Stuart should be played by Jeremy Jordan (Newsies). This would create a powerful, all-star cast that would rock the house!

2. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

In 1922 Nick Carraway moves to Long Island, across the bay from his cousin, Daisy. He becomes extremely intrigued with his mysterious neighbor, who lives next door and throws parties every weekend. The neighbor, Gatsby, becomes even more mysterious as he learns more about him, even after meeting the man. He soon becomes involved in the mans life and learns the secrets of J. Gatsby.

This book has so much symbolism and so many hidden themes and agendas that it seems it’s only inevitable that it’ll end up on stage. (In fact, two different productions have been written, it just hasn’t made it to NYC yet.) Can’t you imagine the huge party scenes? There would be big dance numbers, maybe even tapping, and a big band type orchestra! The costumes would be bright, colorful, and sparkly! The lighting would be pulsing and energetic, as well as the orchestrations. Flappers and gangsters and booze, oh my! Even the intimate scenes would have energy about them that would bring the house down. It’d be the next big musical!

Nick Carraway should be the magnificent Aaron Tveit (Next to Normal) who has the voice of the angel. He should be watching for Gatsby, played by none other than Christian Borle (Legally Blonde: The Musical). Tveit has an innocence to him that seems perfect for Carraway before he meets Gatsby. And, as we all know from his performance in Next to Normal as Gabe, he can play serious very well. Borle, on the other hand, can do serious with a light side behind him. He can easily be mysterious and friendly all at once. Daisy, the beautiful love interest, should be the gorgeous Laura Osnes (Cinderella). Daisy needs to be innocent, pure, and a gem–all of which Laura is in real life. With this cast, this show would win every Tony award out there.

3. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

Okay, face it; we all knew this one was coming. This book has been the talk of the town since it got the attention of, well, everyone! With a new movie coming out on June 6, 2014 and it being #1 on the New York Times Bestseller List for 7 consecutive weeks, its only right that it has been getting a lot of attention. It focuses on 16-year-old cancer patient, Hazel Grace Lancaster, who meets Augustus Waters at a support group her mother forces her to attend. They both embark on an international journey to answer questions regarding the ending of a book. And of course, they can’t help but fall in love.

This musical would be serious and a tearjerker, just like the book. Heart warming songs would glide and transition the scenes, progressing the story. The set could be simple or extravagant, depicting Amsterdam with a city backdrop or with a bunch of storefront pieces. The costumes would be simple. They would wear typical everyday clothes, like a teenager would wear. It should be a subtle show, really focusing on the story and theme rather than snappy dance numbers.

The casting for this one is too easy. Sarcastic Hazel Grace should be played by the wonderful Jennifer Damiano (Next to Normal). Her Gus should be Corey Cott (Newsies). Santino Fontana (Cinderella) would be the perfect Patrick! Patrick is the leader of the support group who talks about the same things over and over. He’s funny, he can be serious, and he’s the perfect age for Patrick. I’d kill to see this show. Can Santino lead the introduction to the support group?

Peter Pan on NBC: Keeping Tradition Alive

After the success of The Sound of Music last December, with over 18.5 million viewers, NBC has signed on to do a musical again for the 2014 holiday season.  This time around producers Neil Meron and Craig Zadan (produced films Chicago, Hairspray) will be traveling to Never Never Land with the musical Peter Pan. This will actually be the fourth time the musical has been broadcast on NBC, the last time being in 1960. It’s great to see how the tradition of Broadway entertainment on national television is being brought back for new generations.

Part of the reason why I think NBC is cashing in on more live entertainment is the popularity musicals are bringing back in the 21st century. Ever since the 14 million dollar musical Wicked in 2003, blockbuster musicals are a growing trend on the New York stage. Big production companies like Dreamworks and Disney are bringing adaptations of books, movies, and television to Broadway. Musical theater has never been more in touch with pop culture than it is today.

NBC is also starting to see how music in television and movies are becoming popular, especially with younger viewers they are trying to attract. PBS started this tradition by bringing musicals like In the Heights, Memphis, and Les Miserables to TV. Pitch Perfect and The Sing Off have brought accapella music to the mainstream culture; choirs have also become popular with the hit TV show Glee. Talent competition shows like American Idol, The X Factor, America’s Got Talent, and The Voice attract viewers with live voting for their favorite competitors and have launched the careers of stars like Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, and Jennifer Hudson. Smash brought the world behind the musical to television and brought along the creation of new musicals Bombshell and Hit List through hiring Broadway and pop composers to write for the show.

Partly in thanks to producers like Neil Meron and Craig Zadan, the resurgence of movie musicals has brought the same enthusiasm to television. Musicals like Chicago, Hairspray, Mamma Mia, and most recently Les Miserables have become box office hits attracting audiences with spectacle and huge stars. In 2014 alone, three Broadway musicals are hitting the silver screen: Jersey Boys, Annie, and Into the Woods.

Not only is the popularity of musicals entertaining, but also keeps alive a deep rooted part of our culture: The American Musical. Keeping art alive is a part of being an artist, and reviving musicals on television from the 1950s is keeping that tradition alive.

Crash Course: Respect for Acting by Uta Hagen

Uta Hagen is a genius, and Respect for Acting is undoubtedly ingenious. But whenever I go to discuss this book with people, I am most often met with, “Oh yeah, I’ve never read that.” Today, I am going to erase all excuses of my peers, and present the main ideas of this fantastic book to you in a few brief paragraphs!

PART ONE- THE ACTOR

Basically, there are two kinds of actors. The representational actor imitates a characters behavior. They think of their physicality at all times, they try to make the faces their character would make; they try to act like them. To an extreme extent: it’s kind of like impersonation.

The presentational actor focuses less on how they are coming across, and believes that they will portray their character correctly when they can find their character in themselves.

This is where she expands on the more truthful actor: the presentational one. This is the best part of the book!!

In life, we assign ourselves many adjectives. (I am talkative, ambitious, and fun.) We assign our friends many adjectives. (She is quiet, sarcastic, and intelligent.) So by these sort of descriptions, we do these to our characters, as well. WE MUST STOP!

We, as actors, must develop a full sense of identity! Sure in some situations, I might be talkative, but if you place me in a room full of cold strangers, I definitely am not! And it’s the same with everything else. I can’t limit myself to a set list of adjectives, for I can portray every personality trait underneath the sun when put in the right circumstances. And THAT’s how we become presentational actors, because knowing that you are a different person with a different personality all the time, you can play characters truthfully from within yourself! And isn’t that freeing?

But now you might be asking me, “Okay, I can relate to my character’s personality, but I’ve never been in their situation, how do I still respond truthfully?”

This is where emotional memory comes in. This is a very complicated and frankly controversial topic, but basically:

If you are faced by a situation that you ‘cannot relate to’ onstage, you find its real life counterpart in your life. You may have never been chased by a bear, but you do remember a time in your life where you were trying to escape something. You keep that memory with a specific trigger in your mind, and you access it in your scene. That’s emotional memory.

PART TWO- THE OBJECT EXERCISES

The stars of Part Two are the nine questions that every actor should ask themselves before portraying a role.

  1. Who am I? (Character)
  2. What time is it? (Context, year, day)
  3. Where am I? (Country, neighborhood, room, etc.)
  4. What surrounds me? (Animate and inanimate)
  5. What are the given circumstances? (Past, present, future and events)
  6. What is my relationship? (To objects, characters, and events)
  7. What do I want? (Character’s immediate and superobjectives)
  8. What’s in my way? (Obstacles to objectives)
  9. What do I do to get what I want? (Actions, words)

 

PART THREE- THE PLAY AND THE ROLE

The objective, as mentioned in part two, is what drives your characters. It is what they want to accomplish with every line, with every glance at another character, with every stage direction to ‘cross stage left.’ Your character is doing all these things for a reason.

In regular life, we might get into a heated argument with one of our peers and say, “You are a horrible person, and your hair looks like straw!” Are we saying this to point out to them a personality trait that they possess? No. We do this to insult them. That is an example of an objective.

The character also has something called a superobjective, which is what they are trying to accomplish throughout the whole play. All of the minor objectives should ultimately lead up to accomplishing the superobjective. Think of the superobjective as the boss of all of the lesser objectives. An example of a superobjective could be: to find security or even to find love.

Following Uta Hagen’s brilliant method, you can now be equipped to finding a truthful reaction in artificial circumstances!

Wait…WHO’S Been In Les Miserables?

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you know that the worldwide phenomenon, Les Miserables is coming to Broadway in the spring. In fact, you may even know if you’re hiding under that rock. The point is, this show is one of the biggest shows coming to Broadway this spring, and we bloggers at Camp Broadway couldn’t be more excited.

The show has a stellar cast that includes Ramin Karimloo (coming from the Toronto cast) as Valjean, Will Swenson (Hair) as Javert, Caissie Levy (Ghost) as Fantine, Nikki M. James (Book of Mormon) as Eponine, and Andy Mientus (Spring Awakening) as Marius. An allstar cast if I’ve ever seen one.

Les Miserables came on everyone’s radar with the movie that premiered in 2012, and the 25th anniversary that featured Norm Lewis as Javert and Karimloo as Enjolras, but not many people know much about casts before that.

On West End where it’s run for over twenty five years, people have crossed the stage including Patti LuPone (original London Fantine), almost all of the ensemble from the Les Miserables movie, Sierra Boggess (Fantine), Ramin Karimloo, who started his career understudying Marius for friend Hadley Fraser. Both would go on to play opposite each other as Valjean and Javert.

On Broadway, from the first run and the 2006 revival included replacements such as, Nick Jonas (Gavroche, later Marius), Lea Michele (young Cosette, later Eponine), Celia Keenan-Bolger (Eponine), Ann Harada (Mme. Thenadier), Lea Salonga (Eponine, Fantine), and Max Von Essen (Enjolras).

Just coming off the MUNY’s production, Phantom’s Hugh Panaro (originated Marius in 1st Ntl Tour and Broadway) and Norm Lewis (Original Revival Javert) as Valjean and Javert  in Les Miserables. Most likely, if you have a favorite actress or actor, they probably played a role in Les Miserables, regionally or on Broadway. The show has been the starting point, or for many people the pinnacle, of many people’s careers. To have a show that so many people strive to star in back in New York is exciting not just for the crowd, but for the actors currently on Broadway.

Who knows who we could see in Les Mis in the next few years? Besides the stellar cast we have, who would you love to see in Les Miserables?

Five Under-Appreciated Musicals You Should Get to Know

Discovering a new show to fall in love with is one of my favorite things about being a musical theater geek. There’s nothing that compares to the excitement of hearing one song, loving it instantly, and then ending up with the entire cast recording of a show on your iPod. Not to mention the newly-found lyrics and lines all over your Twitter feed and Facebook timeline.

I know that for each under-appreciated show, there is a secret group of people who love it more than any other musical you could possibly think of, and that certainly makes me feel better for those musicals and their fate. There are, however, shows that simply deserve more attention – musicals that never made it big, ones that have been forgotten, or have somehow just slipped under the radar of the younger generation of theater fans.

Sometimes, you might feel like discovering something you have never listened to before and that may be hard if you have no idea where to start looking. That’s exactly where a list of under-appreciated musicals could really come in handy. So there we go: without too many plot spoilers, here are five musicals you should know more about, if you don’t love them already!

1. The Pajama Game

Based on a novel, this 1954 musical covers topics such as feminism (women working in the 50s!) and labor troubles (no one’s getting paid enough!) through a story about a pajama factory. While the topics The Pajama Game covers are serious, the show itself is equal amounts hilarious and touching, the songs are catchy, and the characters are all equally lovable in different ways: from the supporting roles of the factory employees, to Sid and Babe – the two main characters whose rocky love story on the two sides of the trade union (and the factory’s hierarchy) becomes the center of the musical.

The romantic plot line, however, is no more important than the workers’ strike, and their struggle to get fair pay for their work at the factory. The perfect balance between those two aspects of the plot, along with the comedy of some of the musical numbers and dialogue make the show interesting and appealing to a very wide audience.

Recommended Songs: “I’m Not At All in Love,” :There Once Was a Man,” “7 ½ Cents
You’ll love it if you like: Kinky Boots, 9 to 5, any show with a factory/office or an unlikely love story!

2. She Loves Me

Have you ever seen You’ve Got Mail? Late 90s, Meg Ryan, Tom Hanks, and that adorable final scene with the running dog that always makes me cry? The romcom and Harnick and Bock’s She Loves Me (1963) are both adaptations of the same novel! The plot is quite similar and honestly, not too surprising: a man and a woman think they hate each other but end up falling in love without even realizing it. It’s cute, it’s romantic, it gets just sad enough to prompt a few melancholy scenes towards the middle of the second act.

She Loves Me stays much closer to the source material than the Nora Ephron movie. The musical keeps the original setting – the entire plot revolves around the employees of a perfume and cosmetics shop in Budapest, where the main characters – Georg and Amalia, meet and where all of the challenges of their relationship begin.

Like with The Pajama Game, the comedic moments and all of the supporting characters (who are just as interesting as the leads!) make the show perfect for young theater fans. Also Krysta Rodriguez once said she’d like to play Ilona, Amalia’s best friend, and I think that’s the beginning of a revival cast right there!

Recommended songs: “I Don’t Know His Name,” “Try Me,” “Vanilla Ice Cream
You’ll love it if you like: Newsies, First Date, ice cream, romantic comedies

3. The Threepenny Opera

This musical is old—like, really old. Like, 1920s old. Written by Kurt Weill and Bertold Brecht, it is an adaptation of an eighteenth century English opera. While the production history of the musical is really interesting, and the importance of the show and its creators in the world of theater is undeniable, it’s honestly not the kind of musical a young, 21st century theater kid would immediately be interested in.

Here’s why you should be: it’s all about criminals and horrible people in Victorian London. The main character is all kinds of dark and despicable, and happens to be a serial killer. What’s worse is none of the other characters are all about rainbows and sunshine, either. Even the policemen who are supposed to be “the good guys” are just as corrupt and dangerous as the criminals and degenerates!

I’m sure that, with the upcoming off-Broadway production’s stellar cast, people will be prompted to revisit and rediscover the musical. It would be fascinating to see the way its social criticism is received and interpreted by a whole new generation of theater goers almost an entire century after the musical was first performed!

Recommended songs: “The Ballad of Mack the Knife” (or just watch the opening of the 1930s film!)
You’ll love it if you like: Sweeney Todd, Les Miserables, Victorian England

4. [title of show]

Imagine two guys, Hunter and Jeff, who are writing a musical. And it’s all about writing a musical. And because that’s a great, meta idea, Hunter Bell and Jeff Bowen actually sat down and wrote a musical about Hunter and Jeff… writing a musical. Since every show, even the one-act hilarious and almost absurd ones, needs a title, they called the show [title of show] (2006), and thus a musical that doesn’t get nearly enough love was born.

Once you get past the obvious absurdism of the entire concept, and the fact that all of the characters in the show are named after the original cast, you’re left with what’s simply one act of brilliant comedy that manages, lightheartedly while getting its point across, to bring the audience’s attention to what has to happen in order for a show to become something that exists outside its creators’ minds.

In that sense, [title of show] is really not that different from, for example, Sondheim’s Sunday in the Park with George – it is a musical about the artists’ craft, and everything that happens throughout the show is centered around the work that goes into finalizing a work of art. What makes [title of show] so lovely is the way it manages to incorporate that topic within a perfectly crafted post-modern comedy that is hilarious and engaging from the moment you hear the mere concept of it, and has you absolutely hooked by the time you reach the Finale.

Recommended songs: “Secondary Characters,” “Nine People’s Favorite Thing
You’ll love it if you like: Sunday in the Park with George, people making art, hilarious pop culture references

5. Bonnie & Clyde

We all know the story: Bonnie and Clyde’s life is tragically cut short by nearly 130 bullets fired at them—or by, you know, Frank Wildhorn’s show closing after just 69 performances on Broadway.

It hasn’t been that long since that closing night, and I feel like this is the one musical on the list that everyone kind of knows about. I don’t think, however, that it gets nearly as much appreciation as it deserves. Heartbreaking love story, crime and angsty belting aside, there is so much more to Bonnie & Clyde that makes the musical incredibly special.

A dramaturgical masterpiece, it tells the story of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow a lot more truthfully and honestly than most adaptations of their life story, which focus on the crimes they committed and glamorize killing people while ignoring the passion, the love and the struggles that were the reason behind everything Bonnie and Clyde (and their gang!) did.

The show’s dialogue and lyrics, as well as the set and costume design in the original Broadway production are dedicated on portraying Bonnie and Clyde, and everyone else in their lives, as human as possible. The musical makes you understand them and sympathize with them (even if, of course, you don’t condone their crimes!) a lot more than every History Channel documentary on the topic. Maybe sometimes, and definitely in Bonnie & Clyde’s case, just singing about things on a Broadway stage makes them more understandable than ever.

Recommended songs: “This World Will Remember Us,” “Dyin’ Ain’t So Bad
You’ll love it if you like: The 1930s, history, action… Laura Osnes and Jeremy Jordan

Photo via The New York Times