An interview with The University of Miami’s Henry Fonte about their upcoming developmental production (see listing on right) of Slaughterhouse-Five, with music by Jed Feuer and book and lyrics by Adele Ahroneim, based on the Kurt Vonnegut novel.

How did
Slaughterhouse-Five find its way to the University of Miami?  

Larry Wilker, the former producer at the Arsht Center here in Miami, an old friend, handed it to me and said, “I like this show and I like the people who wrote it. I can’t produce it. Take a look.” I almost fell over when I saw the title. One of my favorite books! But how the hell do you turn it into a musical? And then I read it and listened; and, by George! Jed and Adele really did it! And they kept the essence of the ordinal Vonnegut! I was floored.
Why is this show a great fit for your students and audience?  
Since the show is all about being “unstuck in time,” some characters appear at different stages in their life, and since the play is so presentational and so Brechtian in a way, the ages of the actors are irrelevant. This allows us to use a young cast beautifully, without anyone having to play old. And since we are doing this in our Studio Theatre, the audience is young and hip and expects to see new and even avant-garde work. So it is a perfect fit for us all the way around.
How does the process of this show fit in to the University’s mission for training young artists? 

One of our biggest areas of focus in the training is to produce new works, so that the students get used to working with the writers in the room, and so they learn the etiquette associated with that kind of work: not only the writers being in the room and participating, but the daily changes and the joint development of the piece among all the artists. There is nothing more thrilling for a young performer, or more educational, than to have a song or monologue written or tailored “for them.”
What kind of work will the writers be doing while working on the show and what will be the level of presentation?
The writers will both be here for two visits for a total of about ten days. Our guest director, Douglas Love, Jed and Adele are already deep into pre-production and identifying the parts of the play that they want to concentrate on. The writers will come in with some rewrites, and then depending on how those rewrites fare in rehearsal, will continue to work on them or move on to others. They will be heavily involved and we expect a good number of substantial changes while the show is in rehearsal. The level of presentation is skeletal. And this is on purpose. This developmental workshop is about the script, the music and the lyrics. It is not about production. Every level of production will be minimal.
Why should people swing by Miami to check out Slaughterhouse Five this spring?  
For the opportunity to see the beginning stages of a what we hope is a great new American musical based on one the greatest American novels. Also, to see some great artists working in conjunction with some very talented students to create new work. Isn’t that what NAMT is all about?
For more information about Slaughterhouse-Five, please visit www.miami.edu/THA

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Festival Show Update: MEET JOHN DOE

An update from Andrew Gerle and Eddie Sugarman about their 2005 NAMT Festival show Meet John Doe, based on the Capra film, about the getting the show licensed, recorded and ready to go out into the world.  

There are big new developments for Meet John Doe, and we’re so excited to share them with all the NAMT members and our fellow writers. Since the Festival, we’ve seen several very different productions of the show, and now that it’s been licensed by Rodgers & Hammerstein Theatricals, we can’t wait to see what other theaters, large and small, do with it. We also just released the cast album on Broadway Records with Heidi Blickenstaff, Jim Moye and Robert Cuccioli (one of Talkin’ Broadway’s top 10 cast albums of 2013!), which was a huge thrill and an even huger surprise—more on that later.
We’re so grateful to NAMT and all the organizations that have helped us along the way, and are very excited that the album will allow many more people to meet John Doe. NAMT was the beginning of a perfect development process for us. At a retreat at TheatreWorks, we were able to write several new songs, and then incorporate them at a workshop at Carousel Dinner Theater. A student production at the Hartt School of Music allowed us to see the show and fine-tune the book, and an extensive rehearsal process at Goodspeed Musicals gave us the opportunity to add another couple of songs and address big-picture issues like pacing and flow.
The process culminated with our world premiere in DC at the Ford’s Theater. We swapped out another couple songs for that production, and were overwhelmed by how well the show played for large houses (9 Helen Hayes nominations and 2 wins!). What was maybe most exciting was how much it entertained and moved the Ford’s many high school audiences, who had
very little experience with live theater. We knew if we could “get” that tough crowd, we really had something special, and all our obsessive adjustments over the past 18 months had been worth it.
One big change happened after Ford’s, as we were preparing for our Chicago premiere at Porchlight Theatre. A song we loved on its own, a seemingly obligatory eleven o’clock number for Ann, never played the way we wanted it to in performance. We realized that what makes the movie so compelling and ground-breaking is the way it subtly switches protagonists about halfway through, thrusting John into the spotlight and demanding that he pick up the ball. For Chicago, we cut Ann’s song and wrote a big number for John, leaving Ann instead with a heartfelt monologue at the end which worked in ways her song never did. We’re very happy to have both John’s new song and Ann’s monologue represented on our new cast album.
After the Porchlight production, Rodgers & Hammerstein licensed the show (thrilling on its own), and asked us to make an up-to-date demo of the score. Amazingly, what started as a demo in Andrew’s home recording studio turned out so well (our dream cast and top Broadway musicians had something to do with it) that Broadway Records heard it and decided to release it commercially! It’s out in the world now, and we’re especially proud of how the album is not only a document of these wonderful performances, but that it tells the story on its own. We actually added that final monologue for Ann at the last minute (tracks were already off being mastered!), to make sure the story was clear and landed the way it does in the theater.
What’s been especially gratifying for us is seeing the show play in very different sized houses and with different kinds of casts. From our student production at the Hartt School, to the developmental production at Goodspeed, to the lavish Ford’s premiere, to the more modest black-box production in Chicago, the story continues to be meaningful and moving. Most fun for us, our love for the songs of the ’30s and ’40s has come through each time, and the jazzy big band score is as melodic and toe-tapping as the classic songs of that era, whether with Jonathan Tunick’s 10-piece orchestration or the 5-piece version we used in Chicago and on the album. With the political dysfunction that continues to plague this country, we’re very proud of the relevance the show continues to have and how it deals with questions from our own time: politics as entertainment and the role of the media in setting the tone for what kind of country we want to live in.
We hope theaters will listen to the cast album and read the script (much of it the original snappy period banter from the movie)—we think they’ll find a show that is both traditional and contemporary, that entertains and says something important at the end of the evening.

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Musical Gift Giving this Holiday Season

The holidays are here and ’tis the season of giving. After you are done giving to your favorite not-for-profits (like NAMT) this year, why not spread your love of musical theatre!
Over the last few years, many of our Festival shows have released albums. They are all great gifts and run the gamut from rock (Lizzie) to bluegrass (Golden Boy of the Blue Ridge), something for everyone!

Or maybe you want an album devoted to just one artist?  We have a few of those, too, from NAMT Festival alumni writers who have put out non-show albums of their work: 

 

All of these albums and more (including scripts, piano scores and mp3 downloads) can be bought at NAMT’s Amazon store!  And when you shop on our store, NAMT receives a portion of the profits from Amazon, so it is like you are giving twice!

Click here to start shopping!

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An interview with Ann-Carol Pence, Associate Producer of Aurora Theatre, about their upcoming production of The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brown, by Kait Kerrigan and Brian Lowdermilk.  



Sam is a girl who has what every teenager wants: brains, a boyfriend, functional parents and an acceptance letter to the college of her choice. Yet, she sits in her car with her bags packed and can’t turn the key in the ignition. At a crossroads, Samantha must come to terms with her parents’ expectations, her first love and a lost friendship before she can start the car, drive away and find freedom!


How did Sam Brown find her way to Aurora?

Anthony [Rodriguez] and I are avid new musical followers; moreover, I am personally excited by composers, so I have followed Brian Lowdermilk pretty closely. He is just a powerhouse songwriter. Some of his songs are the type of great new material that singers are singing for cabarets so I already knew tunes like “Run Away with Me.” When I heard “Freedom,” I can remember weeping in my office. It was unbridled joy of two girls in a car singing at the top of their lungs. How I remember when I was that girl!

We immediately contacted them and then came a long two-year journey of agents and producers that I will not bore you with. Suffice it to say, the way you get to do new musicals is that you must be very persistent and confident beyond belief that you can make a difference. 

What drew you to the show?
It is a story of possibility. I love shows that look at the world from a young person’s view and shine a light on what could be. Kait & Brian are on that same precipice. They have the opportunity to be the next great musical writing team of this generation. Anthony & I want to bank on those composers that have limitless possibility!
Has anything changed on the show since it was produced at Goodspeed Musicals two summers ago?

Kait & Brian have done some rewrites, but what we are inspired about is that we give the authors a chance to work on their piece while we are producing it. If we thought the piece was finished, we would have given that opportunity to another show. I know Kait & Brian are most interested in working on set & tone for this show, and the tone of a piece is created as a result of what their words and music evoke.
It was interesting to hear them say they may not want applause after numbers. I find that fascinating because I adore applause. I believe it is the wonderfully unique device in musical theatre. In a play, an actor can deliver this riveting monologue that paralyzes us, but we rarely intrude on the moment by applauding. Musical theatre gives audiences the chance to enter the conversation. Applause says to that character—”Me too,” “That’s how I feel,” “Breathtaking!”—all by just a gesture of putting hands together. That is magical to me.

Why is Sam Brown a great show for your theatre and audience?
We live in an area that boasts a great public school system. We have a major partnership with Georgia Gwinnett College. Education is everything. But many young people are not achieving all that they are meant to achieve because they are afraid and feel they are the only people who have ever experienced that debilitating fear. Through great shows written about “possibility,” we can look back on that time and recognize that we were once in that place, use that insight and choose to influence the next generation of leaders. We do that with our Apprentice Program. We want to do that with our high school students. They deserve to ride on our backs!

Why should people swing by Lawrenceville, GA to catch the show?
The critically acclaimed Aurora Theatre is the fastest growing theatre in the Metropolitan Atlanta area and the only professional theatre in Gwinnett County. We have a beautiful new facility and a large season ticket base. Recently, we received 7 Suzi Bass Awards (Atlanta’s version of the Tonys) for our work, the most of any theatre in the region. We are dedicated to using our success to further the success of new musicals, to pay it forward. We feel we can offer the most support by giving composers the opportunity to hear their music performed by a live band instead of just a rhythm section. Atlanta has a long history of supporting musicals and Aurora provides musical theatre lovers the chance to see great musicals before they go to Broadway. 

For more information on The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brownn, please visit www.auroratheatre.com

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New Work in Progress: THE OTHER JOSH COHEN

An interview with Paper Mill Playhouse’s Mark Hoebee about their upcoming production of The Other Josh Cohen by David Rossmer (NAMT Fest ’10- notes to MariAnne, ’00- Joe! The Musical) and Steve Rosen.


The Other Josh Cohen is more than an original new musical comedy. It’s the true story of a good guy who is trying to break a streak of incredibly bad luck. He’s single, broke, and just a few days before Valentine’s Day his apartment is robbed of everything but one Neil Diamond CD. Six days later a mysterious letter arrives in his mailbox which changes his life forever. Will his Jewish guilt allow him to enjoy his good fortune? Will he ever be able to stop kicking himself if he doesn’t? And will there ever be a time when nice guys finish first? Yep.


How did Josh Cohen find his way from his Off Broadway productions to Paper Mill?
I have known NY producer Kevin McCollum since we did summer stock together the year we both graduated college. Kevin and I have kept in touch over the years and have discussed several projects that he had which might be appropriate for Paper Mill including White Christmas which was wildly successful here last season. After Josh Cohen ran at SoHo Rep, Kevin spoke to me about the show and sent me the materials. I found the piece incredibly funny, charming, entertaining and was most impressed by the company of actor/musicians that bring the show to life – two of whom are the authors of the piece David Rossmer and Steve Rosen.

What drew you to the show and why is it a good fit for your audience?
I was most excited about this show playing at Paper Mill because it speaks to the new demographic of audience members here. Paper Mill’s audience has been shifting and changing over the last six or so years. We now have a subscriber base of over 20,000 with an annual attendance of more than 200,000. The segment of audience with the largest growth has been patrons in the 35-50 age demographic. They are mostly urban transplants who have moved to the area to enjoy the benefits of living in the suburbs and to start families, but they retain their younger, hipper sensibilities. We have found that they are looking for contemporary, slightly edgier, more sophisticated musical options, and that is exactly what this show offers.

Paper Mill has a history of developing large new musicals like your recent hit, Honeymoon in Vegas, but this show is a smaller show in topic and size. Will the show get bigger for your stage or stay small and quirky?

Paper Mill has been producing new musicals for many years. Back in the 80’s and 90’s we had a new works initiative that launched many new musicals and plays including Paper Moon, Comfortable Shoes, Sayonara and many more. In more recent years we have been working with commercial partners and have produced several world premieres including Newsies (Disney Theatrical Productions) and Honeymoon in Vegas (Roy Gabay and Dena Hammerstein) as well as launching national tours like Little House on the Prairie starring Melissa Gilbert and the 25th Anniversary production of Les Misérables, which we collaborated on with Cameron Mackintosh and then toured for 3 years. We are producing Josh Cohen in our winter slot which typically showcases a play or small musical. Last year we did Lend Me a Tenor in this slot and several seasons back we produced Spelling Bee, so Josh Cohen fits perfectly into that model. Paper Mill is obviously a much bigger space than Soho Rep, but we maintain the small and quirky nature of the piece, which is a large part of its charm.

What has changed for Josh Cohen since its Off Broadway run last fall?
The authors and the director Ted Sperling are revisiting the show right now. There are a lot of possible changes on the table currently, but until the show gets into the rehearsal studio, I couldn’t say which ones will make it to the stage.

Why should people head to Millburn, New Jersey this winter to catch The Other Josh Cohen?
A trip to Paper Mill offers a great opportunity to see the exciting work we are doing here which, of course, includes Josh Cohen. This show is a fun, feel-good evening full of humor with a brand new terrific contemporary score. Our talented writer/performers David and Steve are a witty and fresh new voice in musical theatre that no avid theatre-goer should miss. Anyone who makes the short trip from NYC won’t be disappointed.
For more information on The Other Josh Cohen, please visit www.papermill.org

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Get to Know MY HEART IS THE DRUM

An interview with Stacey Luftig, Jennie Redling and Phillip Palmer, writers of the 2013 Festival show My Heart Is the Drum, about how they explored African society to create such a dynamic piece, their musical and cultural inspirations and how NAMT has evolved their show throughout the Festival process.

What was the impetus to create a story around a young girl with dreams larger than her African village? 

Phillip, who had been traveling and studying traditional music in South Africa and Ghana, wanted to dramatize the people and important issues he encountered there, namely the intersection of the devastating HIV/AIDS epidemic—particularly for women—and the deep poverty that is so different from what Americans experience. He also wanted to tell a story of a person with great potential who most likely would be wildly successful if she had been born into a middle-class American family, but who had to fight like crazy to have even the most basic opportunities where she happened to be born. Phillip’s original outline also explored the connection between people in different countries, including a separate plot line about a dynastic Virginia cotton farming family that lobbied for the American cotton subsidies that depressed the West African cotton market and drove Efua and her family into poverty. Jennie, who had written several plays with strong teenage female protagonists and who was also a rape crisis counselor, was drawn to the material. Keeping the core characters and setting Phillip created, she reshaped the story and breathed life into Efua and the coterie of strong women who surround her.

The struggle between embracing tradition and moving away in search of progress seems to be a central theme of this piece. What are you trying to negotiate in this discussion?

This has been a big topic for the three of us; not only the theme of tradition versus progress, but education versus ignorance. Efua, our heroine, rebels against tradition. Her main means of rebellion is her pursuit of a college education (rare for girls in her community), because she wants more for her life “than just marriage and babies.” In doing so, she looks down on some of those around her, whom she considers ignorant because they are less curious and more content with their lives. Understandably, her arrogance becomes destructive to these relationships. While she does have some book knowledge, what Efua lacks is experience and wisdom. While seeking the chance for a college education, however, Efua does acquire a degree of wisdom—a quality she didn’t know she needed. Her growth is characterized by a greater open-mindedness, compassion, and a new appreciation of some of the traditional values and beliefs that she pushed away in the first place. However, traditional beliefs
can sometimes contradict, as opposed to complement, what is learned through formal education. This is where “negotiations” became tricky for us. For example, there are characters in our show who believe in curses, and some who believe specifically that “the wasting disease” is brought on by a curse. While we strive to show the power of education in general, and its power to fight HIV in particular, we also worked to convey respect for beliefs much different than ours, and respect for those who hold such beliefs.

A lot of the language both in the script and the score seems rooted in agriculture and images of growth. What inspired you to express ideas in this way?

Stacey Luftig:Speaking as lyricist, there were many reasons for this inspiration. First of all, our main characters, who live in a small West African village where the economy is based mainly on farming, are much more connected to the earth than most Americans are, and are dependent upon its rhythms for survival. Whether or not people have food or the money to buy food is tied in part to global political decisions, but most basically to how well the crops grow. Efua, meanwhile, is trying to nourish her mind so that she, too, can flourish and grow. The first obstacle she faces, when trying to win a scholarship to college, is tied to the land; the day that Efua tries to turn in her scholarship essay, she is taken from school to work on the family farm. So, metaphors and language tied to growth and agriculture felt like organic choices.

There is a really intriguing mix of realism and the fantastical/spiritual in this piece. Was that always the plan, or did it evolve as time went on?

Jennie Redling:No, spirituality was not explicitly a part of the story at its earliest stages, when Phil outlined the piece. But as Phil and I began working together to dramatize the obstacles to advancement that would be typical for a young girl in Ghana, and as these obstacles became actual life-threatening matters, I felt that our heroine would turn to sources of strength that went beyond the human sort. I also had an instinct that the journey for this young woman, who was proud of knowing so much, would be to discover something within herself that she did not know was there. Phil’s concept depended on the language of drums, which led to the idea that the sound of Efua’s heartbeat, like the beating of a drum, might represent the voice of her true self.
My research confirmed the centrality of the spiritual realm in African culture, specifically honoring ancestors, so our story seemed to naturally evolve into one where so much is stacked against the heroine that a spiritual messenger or guide is called for to keep her steady and on course—though not necessarily to save her. From there, it wasn’t much of a leap to the heroine identifying with a strong relative, no longer alive, who has always been a protective presence, and from there to all of the villagers having such a spiritual source of strength in the face of the hardships they are up against every day.

As the story progresses and Efua arrives in Accra, we are introduced to the discussion of HIV and malaria. How do those topics tie in to the earlier themes of education in the piece, back in the village?

There are times when becoming educated about certain subjects becomes a life or death proposition, as with health issues such as HIV (and malaria, which is not a main issue for us). And when you are an educated person in general, you are more likely to make informed decisions that not only enrich your experiences, but lead to a more healthy and prosperous life. Efua’s journey starts out as that of an extremely idealistic young person, despite the bleak circumstances of her life. She wants to leave her village unfettered by family of any kind, have exciting experiences anywhere but there and teach children all sorts of subjects. As she accrues life experiences, she gains greater appreciation of the culture that formed her.  Although she still pursues her education, she ends up going back to her village to teach the children there not only about poetry and art, but about how to survive in the world. So the term “education” takes on a more layered meaning.

The music is infectious and extremely percussive, at times haunting and exhilarating. What elements did you draw on to help you create this musicspecific to the Ghanaian culture, and otherwise? 

Phillip Palmer:I’m a big fan of many styles of traditional African music. Being able to incorporate some of them is a part of why I wanted to write a musical set in Africa. The first is traditional West African drumming and singing, which often includes a repeated rhythmic pattern played on a Gonkokwe (double cowbell), interlocking drum or marimba parts and simple, catchy melodies. I used these elements in the songs “Seeds, Dirt, and Cotton,” “Pretty Things” and “Today Begins Your Life.” I also love the tight, layered choir singing we associate with South African groups like Ladysmith Black Mambazo and the Soweto Gospel Choir, and I used this style in “Funeral Chant.” I employed these types of sounds for the more traditional characters and song moments in the show (though the songs are far from traditional, incorporating a musical theatre sensibility as well). But my favorite songs from the show are those that more thoroughly blend traditional African and musical theater elements, such as “Welcome Sun,” “A World Beyond Kafrona” and “Your Heart Is the Drum.”

Has the NAMT process clarified or forced you to re-evaluate certain aspects of the piece? 
 
The process of tightening and shortening Act I for the NAMT presentation has been a great exercise in discovering what was essential to telling the story clearly. Our advisers and our director have also been enormously helpful in that process. Two changes in particular emerged. First, we were able to identify (and remedy) an important spot where the audience might have lost track of what our heroine was feeling, and do so with a new song—that subsequently got trimmed down, like everything else, for the presentation. Second, we found ways to create a more consistent atmosphere throughout the show—an issue that had been plaguing us for a long time. 

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FESTIVAL SHOW UPDATE: Ripper

An interview with writer Duane Nelsen about the big changes to his 2009 Festival show Ripper as it prepares for a production this month in Chicago.

Ripper is a musical thriller set against the backdrop of history’s most notorious unsolved crime spree. Centered around the PennyWise Music Hall where a magician amuses her audience with deathly illusions while real murders are taking place on the streets outside—the show explores how acts of evil impact our lives and the simple desire to be safe in a dangerous world. The main character, the mysterious Ripper himself, is omnipresent, yet never on stage in this big ensemble show in which what we see is never what it seems.
Ripper had a production at Broadway Rose Theatre in Oregon a few years ago. What did you learn from the full production?
So much! Ripper had been through a lot of readings, recordings, workshops and festivals, but nothing compares to a full production. Probably the most important thing was discovering that Ripper needed to be an ensemble show. There had always been multiple stories in the show, but one of them involving the reporter, Chester, was always in the forefront. In production, I saw that it made audiences think the show was about him, when it really wasn’t, and his journey didn’t reflect the importance that people were putting on him. It had the additional effect of making the other stories around him seem either less important than they were or somehow subordinate to his, which was also wrong. I saw that I really needed to equalize the stories in importance and strengthen the single thematic idea that they all hang on; this way, the real “star” of the show, the physically absent yet ever-present Ripper, could shine.
What has changed in the story of Ripper since that production? 
Chester, the reporter, had always been part narrator in the show, so that was the first thing to go. The fourth wall is still broken, but now it’s broken by the victims after they’re dead, or by the “voice” of the Ripper, which now haunts many more scenes. The opening has been completely reworked to bring equal emphasis to the stories we’re going to follow, and the last 15 minutes were completely re-conceived in order to bring all of the stories together more effectively, both musically and thematically. Another three songs were cut or replaced, and at least half the book was rewritten, too. More humor was added thanks to the expansion of several minor characters, and overall, there’s both more clarity and more complexity to all the characters. But the most important change came as a result of the Newtown massacre. That horrifying event really hit home for me, partly because I have two school-age children myself. Witnessing what all those families went through and hearing the common refrain of “Why, why, why?”—just as we did on 9/11 and too many other occasions—really brought into sharp focus for me the horrible price innocent people pay for senseless acts of violence. The common thread in all of those stories is that those terrible expressions of evil are also countered by extraordinary acts of love and kindness, and sacrifices often by the least expected person. And that’s where Ripper found its heart. All this horrible stuff happens that shatters our faith in humanity, and then someone comes along and restores it in ways we never thought possible. 
What other physical changes can we expect to see? 
The O’Malley Theater at Roosevelt University seats 250, so it’s less than half the size of the Broadway Rose, and it’s a 3/4 thrust, so the physical show is going to be quite different. It’s really in your face, and I love that. The fantastic set design by Michael Lasswell blurs the line between the PennyWise Music Hall and the audience, and they will really feel part of the show. It’s built like a Transformers toy, where it appears like a unit set and then suddenly turns into something else. It’s very cool. Overall, we’re taking a very theatrical approach to many aspects of the physical production, using tight pools of light to emphasize the isolation and darkness surrounding this world. There’s still a fair amount of magic performed on stage, but some of it has been altered for this production–I’m not sure if they have the guillotine yet! Another interesting change is the use of a 4-person “choir” to sing the voice of the Ripper. It’s all in 1st person, with tight harmonies, and very creepy. The biggest physical change may be that we are doing the show with no doublings, which means we have a cast of 29, plus an orchestra of nine! It really points to the vital role that universities like Roosevelt can play in developing large new works.
How did this production come about? 
The director, Ray Frewen, who happens to be an accomplished actor, had been connected to the show since the very first recording many years ago. At the time, I hired him to play Mr. Raktin, the proprietor of the PennyWise. In the course of rewrites, Mr. Ratkin became Mrs. Ratkin along the way, and Ray was out of a gig. Fortunately, he’s a great director, and has been wanting to get his hands on it for years. The stars finally lined up and here we are. 

Why should people swing by Chicago to check out the revised Ripper?
Because these incredible students are going to scare the life out of you in the best possible way, and make you laugh, and break your heart, and make you wish you could see this show again and again—all the reasons I go to the theatre. There’s so much more to the show now than there was at NAMT or at Broadway Rose, and this is a great opportunity to witness the results that came from those earlier opportunities. It’s never been better. But even if you can’t make it to Chicago, you might still be able to see it. We’re working on doing a live streaming event! Keep up to date at ripperthemusical.com, facebook.com/rippershow and twitter.com/rippershow.

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NEW WORK IN PROGRESS: Snapshots

An interview with Goodspeed Musicals’ Bob Alwine about their current production of Snapshots, a new musical that uses the songs of Stephen Schwartz to tell a new story.


Sue and Dan, after 20 years of marriage, have drifted apart. They discover a box of photographs in their attic which leads them to relive the memories captured in the snapshots. The couple discovers the humorous twists of how love united them and why life has pushed them apart. All couples will see themselves in Snapshots.


How did Snapshots find its way to Goodspeed?
I saw a production of Snapshots at TheatreWorks in Palo Alto in 2008. I knew that the writing team was looking to develop the work further, so I suggested a production with Goodspeed Musicals. I remained in touch with the team for the last five years which lead us to the current production in our Norma Terris Theatre in Chester, CT.

The show has already had a couple of productions. How can Goodspeed help further the show’s development at this stage?
The journey began in 1991 when the book writers approached Stephen Schwartz to see if he was interested in a revue of his work. Over the years there have been several breaks in the writing process. During these breaks the writers grew as artists, as did their respective life experiences. This journey helped to inform the characters while expanding the body of available songs. The various productions have had different creative teams, so these productions became very useful in showing the writing team what did and didn’t work. This collective information will be applied to the production at Goodspeed.

How much do you anticipate changing while at Goodspeed given that you never officially open the shows at the Terris?
Like all shows at the Norma Terris, the team will continue to work during the run. Since the show has been through several previous incarnations, more emphasis will be placed on refining the work under the leadership of a creative team new to the show. Stephen Schwartz and book writer David Stern will be available to us during the process as we explore the storytelling aspects of the show.

What drew you to this show?
The show has a unique format. At its core the show features the catalogue of celebrated songwriter Stephen Schwartz. However, the structure of the show, unlike a revue, has a complete emotional arc for the main characters. To make the storytelling work, Stephen Schwartz made revisions to some lyrics in order for the repurposed songs to make sense. His active participation in the process, including writing one new song for the show, has created a work that is neither a revue nor a book musical, but instead a musical scrapbook.

What do you think will surprise people the most about the show when they come catch it in Connecticut?
Audience members who know the Stephen Schwartz songbook will be surprised at how the songs from Wicked, Pippin and Godspell have been repurposed and combined with songs from Rags, Children of Eden, The Magic Show, Enchanted, etc. to tell an emotional journey of the central couple, Sue and Dan. Audiences who are not familar with his body of work will be introduced to the full breadth of this celebrated songwriter.
For more information on Snapshots, please visit www.goodspeed.org.

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FESTIVAL SHOW UPDATE: Lizzie

An interview with the writers of Fest 2011 show Lizzie (formerly known as Lizzie Borden), Steven Cheslik-deMeyer (SCD), Alan Stevens Hewitt (ASH) and Tim Maner (TM) about the upcoming concert, three productions around the world and a studio cast album!

In 1892 on a sweltering August day in a small New England town, “somebody” brutally murdered a well-to-do elderly man and his second wife with an axe. Lizzie Borden, their youngest daughter, was the primary suspect, arrested and tried. Without any witnesses to the hideous crime, she was acquitted, and the murders remain unsolved to this day. Though Lizzie was ultimately declared innocent according to the law, her infamy lives on.

Lizzie has had quite a bit of development since it left the Festival.  Other than the new name, what has changed with the show since it was at the Festival?
ASH: If you think of the show as a gatefold vinyl double album (a la Tommy, or Jesus Christ Superstar), pretty much the entire Side 1 has been rewritten, with the addition of two solos for Lizzie and one for Alice to allow the audience to understand where they are starting from and to get onboard with them. Also, one of the central musical/lyrical themes (which is reprised, transformed, at the end) is now introduced in a completely different way from how it had been previously. Whereas it had been an internal dialogue for Alice, it is now a lullabye (“Maybe Someday”) sung by Alice to Lizzie. It brings the harrowing “Side 1” to a gentle close.
SCD: We wanted to strengthen the introduction of Lizzie’s friend Alice who becomes so pivotal in the story, so we wrote a solo for her early in the first act. We also rewrote Lizzie’s song “Gotta Get Out Of Here” to be more explicit and hard-hitting. Those are the big changes, but we also made lots of little tweaks here and there. 

You had the opportunity to have the show developed at Baldwin Wallace University and at the Village Theatre.  What did you learn about the show as it changed theatres, actresses and regions? 
SCD: The BWU production was the first time the show was produced where we weren’t closely involved. It was great to find out that we really can hand it to a group of talented folks and feel confident that our idea of what the show is remains intact. It helps that the BW students directed by Vicky Bussert are phenomenally talented! We made discoveries about the first act and the Alice character that led to the changes mentioned above. Village gave us the opportunity for a trial run of lots of new elements: Alice’s new song and the new orchestrations, a more rock and roll-style set and lighting. The folks at Village gave us great support in the process.
TM: We’ve learned new things every time, from new design teams, from different levels of production, from the unique variations all of the amazing women who have taken on the roles have shown us. We’ve gotten to really look at the show from different perspectives that have strengthened it at every turn.

What has surprised you about people’s response to the show outside of New York City?
ASH: I don’t know if there have really been any “surprises” for me about how Lizzie has been received. It certainly has been thrilling though, and immensely gratifying to experience it connecting so strongly with people.

The show played last month at TUTS in Houston, having a concert version in Philly this fall with 11th Hour Theatre Co. and then jumping over to Denmark for a production in the spring.  What is it like to have your show spreading around the country?
SCD:It’s tremendous! This show has been cooking for a long, long time. It’s always felt really special to us, like it had the potential to connect with a wide audience. Now that that is starting to happen, it’s incredibly gratifying. As an artist that’s what you always hope will happen.
ASH:Around the country AND THE WORLD!  (Cue demonic laughter….) Are you kidding? It’s AMAZING. I’m particularly interested to see how this subject from classic American mythology goes down with folks who have a different cultural perspective.
TM: It’s kinda unreal, but amazing. All those years ago when Lizzie began it was really pure fantasy to think anything like this could happen, and now it’s happening. It’s a rare thing in life to actually have a fantasy come true, and I’m very thankful.

A studio cast album is being released this fall.  Tell us a bit about recording the album and working with that cast. 
SCD: The conceit of Lizziehas always been that it is a rock concept album come to life on the stage, despite the fact that until now the album only existed in our minds. Now it’s real. It’s great to have this thing that we can hand people and say, “This is the show. Everything you need to know about Lizzie is here on this record.” And the guys who play on it and the women who sing it blow me away every time I listen.
ASH: Well, we were very fortunate that we were able to get all the planets to align. Much credit to our producer Brisa Trinchero for green-lighting it and actually making it happen and to Broadway Records for their commitment to the project. I don’t even know where to start talking about the album cast… Carrie Manolakos, Storm Large, Carrie Cimma, Ryah Nixon. Incredible, one-of-a-kind talents, all.  Really, so privileged to have been able to work with them, and they each turned in phenomenal performances that reward repeated listens. I am very proud of what we accomplished. I can’t wait for people to hear it. And hear these women.
TM: The women are just amazing. Incredible singers/performers, and great people to work with. Same for the band/musicians. It was an incredible team effort from artists, to producers, to graphic designer, to our amazing engineer and more.

What are your hopes for the Borden sisters in the next few years? 
TM: I hope the House Of Borden continues to expand to include more theaters, more audiences and more amazing artists through new productions, concerts and the release of the album.  I want to attend many more opening nights.
ASH: I would love as many people as possible to have the opportunity to connect with Lizzie. I love the idea that, with the record available online, a kid in Japan, or Alaska, or Brazil, or Iceland, or Lithuania, could potentially find his or her way into the piece.  And I would love to see people continue to come together in dark rooms all over the world and experience great artists bringing it to life right in front of their eyes and ears.
SCD:More productions! We’re at the end of the option period with the producers we’ve been working with the last couple years, so we’re giving a lot of thought to next steps. We would all love a big New York production, since New York is home, but that’s the tough nut to crack. Everything is kind of in flux right now. Stay tuned!

For more information on Lizzie, please visit www.lizziethemusical.com

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NEW WORK IN PROGRESS: The Black Suits

An interview with Center Theatre Group’s (CTG) Associate Artistic Director, Kelley Kirkpatrick, about their upcoming production of The Black Suits by Fest Alumnus Joe Iconis (Bloodsong of Love, ’12) and Robert Maddock.


Every rock and roll fantasy begins in a garage. Scattered among the drums and guitars are the hopes, dreams, angst and rebellion of a new generation screaming to be heard. Joe Iconis takes us behind the music as four teenage Long Island misfits band together to escape Garden City, to conquer the world, to be “cool and whatever.” Now if the Black Suits can only win the St. Anne’s Battle of the Bands, their friendship just might survive the perilous transition to adulthood. The Black Suitscelebrates the wannabe rock star in all of us: with a score that sends us out of the theatre singing and longing to be eighteen again.

How did The Black Suits find its way to CTG?  
I first became aware of TBS after seeing Bloodsong of Love at the NAMT Festival in 2011. I spoke with Joe and his agent, Scott Chaloff, briefly after the NAMT presentation, as I wanted to let them know how much I enjoyed it. Scott followed up (like a good agent always does) with me the following week and we had a long conversation about Joe and where he was in his composing and writing career. While ultimately I didn’t feel that Bloodsong of Lovewas quite the right fit for CTG at the time, I thought Joe was a tremendously gifted composer. Scott sent me The Black Suits to read along with a few of the songs from the show.
After reading and listening to it, I thought The Black Suits showed a lot of promise, but CTG wasn’t in a position to produce a new musical in the upcoming season, so I had to pass (for now). I asked Scott if he could arrange a meeting with Joe and me in order for us to get to know each other a bit more; sort of like an artistic first date between composer and not-for-profit institution. Joe and I had a terrific meeting discussing his past and future projects as well as ideas he had for future shows. I felt that Joe would be an exciting artist to share with CTG’s audiences in Los Angeles and we agreed to stay in touch and look for the right opportunity to work together in the future.
Fast forward to the fall of 2012 and Scott Chaloff called and asked if I would look at a new draft of The Black Suitsas they had just completed a developmental production at Barrington Stage Co. I read it right away and was very excited by the work that had been accomplished since the last draft. I immediately passed it on to Michael Ritchie and asked him to read it and consider it for the 2013/14 season at the Kirk Douglas Theatre.

How does the show fit into CTG’s overall new works programming? 
At any given time, CTG has 5-7 plays and 2-3 musicals in various stages of development. Whether they be commissioned, submitted or discovered, CTG has the great luxury of working with a very wide vocabulary of new works due to our three unique theaters. CTG can go from a new musical by Kander & Ebb (Curtains) at the Ahmanson, to Michael John LaChiusa & Ellen Fitzhugh at The Taper (Los Otros) and finally to Alex Timbers and Michael Friedman (Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson) at the Kirk Douglas.
We decided to present The Black Suitsat the Kirk Douglas as that serves as our primary home for early and mid-career artists that we want our audiences to develop a long and lasting relationship with.

CTG has been very active on working on the show including readings and a workshop.  How does CTG make a plan on how to specifically develop each show and why was this course chosen for this show? 
Once Michael gave the thumbs up to start moving forward with the show, I met with Joe and John [Simpkins, director] to discuss next steps. At CTG, we tend to let the artists chart their own course while we remain at the ready to support, advise and keep them from running into the rocks when needed. I asked Joe and John one question: “What do you need?” It is my favorite question to ask any artist. We ended up doing a two-week workshop focusing on the book while starting to explore the choreography (with the incredible Jennifer Werner). Prior to this, they had never had the opportunity to spend a prolonged period of time just working on the script with actors. Before the workshop began, we had several note sessions and generated a list of the areas of the script we wanted to focus on during the workshop process.
In the end, the workshop taught us a lot about the show, but we agreed that there was still more work to do. We didn’t have the script we wanted to start rehearsals with. So, we gathered again for a lengthy note session and decided to do a one-day “work session” with actors. We spent the morning of the work session putting in new pages, reordering songs and trying out new ideas that came out of the prior two-week workshop. That afternoon we read the script for the creative and production team as well as CTG’s commercial producing partner. A week after the one-day work session, the team gathered for one final note session prior to going into rehearsals. We now felt that we could begin rehearsals with a script that allowed Joe and John to focus on getting the show up in front of audiences and less on “fixing” the script. Of course, there will still be things to address in rehearsals, but the heavy lifting was finished.

What are your hopes for the show while it is at CTG? 
I simply want to give our audiences the best show possible. I can’t wait for them to “meet” the incomparable Joe Iconis and the insanely talented team behind The Black Suits.

Why is this show a good match for your LA area audiences? 
This show is right up our audience’s alley at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. They are always up for a new voice and new experience. They love to be challenged and entertained and be the first to see and hear the next generation of theater artists.

Why should people hop over to CTG to catch The Black Suits this fall?
Because for any NAMT member who comes I will personally buy a drink at the bar and regale them with stories of new musical development!

For more information on The Black Suits, please visit www.centertheatregroup.org.

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Reflections on the Festival

A guest blog entry from Rob Taylor, writer of The Sandman, presented last weekend at the Festival of New Musicals.  

Now a mile high and two hours behind, the weeks just past in New York in preparation for the NAMT Festival presentations of our little nightmare musical “The Sandman” feel less as if they occurred in a distant time zone, and rather more as if they happened within a time warp.

Can it be over already? Did we actually find and rehearse a cast, slice and shrink an entire Act into a 45 minute cliffhanger, and convey the essence of the macabre little world of our imagining to all those people? Impossible.

And it all would have been impossible – were it not for the surreally magical way in which a dream cast and creative team seemed to materialize around us, and were it not for the outstanding and intuitive support NAMT seemed ready to provide at every turn.

Eight years ago, Richard and I participated in another NAMT Festival. As happy as we were to have been included in those 2005 proceedings, the organizational improvements put
in place by Betsy, Branden and the rest of the NAMT staff in the interim – well, they made participating in this year’s Festival an absolute dream.

To be introduced through NAMT and our consultant (Stephanie Cowan, we adore you!) to a director without whom we now can’t imagine moving forward (Sam Buntrock, where have you been all our lives?), to have a line producer in place from the get go (Robb Nanus, you rule!), to have access to a casting director (Michael Cassara, we owe you big time), to be provided with a stage manager who knows the ropes (Lisa Dozier, thank you for all you do, and for hooking us up with Josh Quinn!), to have such thoughtfully and clearly laid out deadlines throughout the entire process and the support to help keep us on top of them – it all made such an enormous difference. You afforded us the absolutely crucial commodity of time to focus on just being writers, and for that Richard and I are deeply, deeply appreciative.
 
And because we felt so supported this time around, when things did go awry – and something always does – we never actually spiraled into panic. Mild bouts of anxiety perhaps, but never true panic. Even being locked in our rehearsal room at CAP21 for what seemed like an eternity on our first day, and having to MacGyver our way out with a nail clippers as the clocked ticked down on cast members locked outside the door as well as inside, everyone not only remained calm, but it ended up establishing a terrific sense of all being in it together for the entire company.

So, thank you NAMT for including our bizarre (and apparently somewhat polarizing) piece in this year’s festival.  We hope we did you proud.

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: We Don't Wanna "Show Off!"

Day 25

It’s finally here! SHOW OFF! is tonight at 7pm! Do you have a ticket?

In honor of this event, let’s look at the show this title is borrowed from—The Drowsy Chaperone, which appeared in our 2004 Festival. Refresh your memory of the show with a video feature about the Original Cast Recording…and if you attend SHOW OFF! tonight, you may even see an original cast member recreating one of the performances shown below:

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Day 24

This Festival show has had over 4000 productions in the US and Canada alone—but it has also been translated into many different languages and performed all across the world. (Including, albeit in English, in London, where it won the Olivier Award for Best Musical!)

Check out this fun clip from a Norwegian-language production of Stiles & Drewe’s Honk! at Stavanger kulturskole in Stavanger, Norway:
 
What Honk! song do you hope to see in SHOW OFF? 

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: "A New World" of Musical Theatre

Day 23

Songs for a New Worldput Jason Robert Brown on the map, and appeared in the Festival in 1997. As this composer gears up for a Broadway run in January with his newest show, The Bridges of Madison County, why not look back at the show that started it all?

Read the original New York Times review for the show’s original Off Broadway run.

Watch and listen to Audra McDonald singing the popular song “Stars and the Moon:”

 Buy tickets today to SHOW OFF!, where there a sure to be world-class performances like the one above.
 

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: "Gimme Gimme" a Great Musical

Day 22

Today we look at the 2002 Best Musical Tony Award winning Thoroughly Modern Millie! Speaking of Tonys, have you seen the award night performance of the literally-toe-tapping number, “Forget About the Boy?”

Might another exciting number from Millie be featured in SHOW OFF? Attend to find out!

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: This Show is a "Spark of Creation"

Day 21

Only 5 days left until SHOW OFF! (It’s not too late to buy a ticket!)
These last five days will feature some of our biggest and most successful, dazzling Festival shows!

We begin with John Caird and Stephen Schwartz’s Children of Eden, which appeared at the Festival in 1996. Watch an interview with Mr. Schwartz below, where he discusses the genesis of the show and names it as his favorite!

 

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FESTIVAL COUNTDOWN: Music Rehearsals

A guest blog entry from David Hein, writer of Come From Away to be presented at this year’s Festival of New Musicals.  
 
I grew up listening to Newfoundland folk music – bands like Great Big Sea, Shanneyganock and The Navigators playing instruments like accordion, mandolin, bodhran, tin whistle and “ugly sticks.” They sang sea shanties with thirty verses that you couldn’t understand all the words to about drinking, shipwrecks, drinking, lost loves, drinking, loneliness and more drinking. In kitchen parties along the coast, people would dance until they fell down or drank until they fell down or a little of both. Raucous and rowdy, Newfoundland folk is passionate music and, like Newfoundland itself, it’s a looooong way away from the musical theatre of New York (which we also love – it’s just that, until Once, that kind of music wasn’t heard much in these here parts).

We first workshopped Come From Away at The Canadian Musical Theatre Project with a four piece band: (1) acoustic guitar, (2) fiddle/viola/cello, (3) accordion/mandolin/guitar and (4) bodhran/drums/mandolin/low whistle. We were trying to represent not only this amazing original style of music, but also to represent through music what happened in Newfoundland after 9/11 when so many passengers were stranded there – a fusion of many diverse cultures. So we not only needed to play Newfoundland folk, but ambitiously, we decided to also add a little Texan country, some African drums, Moldovan choral chanting, Hebrew and Hindu prayers and more…

But when we brought Come From Away to Goodspeed, we were told we could only use a piano – and that it would be played by our music director who was assigned to us – some guy named Dan Pardo. Honestly, we were
kind of dreading our crazy Celtic folk show being translated into formal classic music theatre arrangements, with pristine pronunciation, and coming out sounding like Gilbert and Sullivan (not that there’s anything wrong with G&S). But when we arrived, Dan invited us out to the Griswold Inn (the oldest pub in America). When he’s not working on shows like Showboat and Mame, Dan plays concertina at the Gris each Monday night – they sing sea shanties, drink a lot and make the crowd sing (and drink) along. After that, we knew our show was in good hands.

Fast forward to now: we’ve only got a 29-hour reading to teach all these styles of music and we’ve got more than just a piano, but far fewer instruments than we’d originally envisioned. We’re at CAP21 for our first rehearsals with a ridiculously talented cast who have performed in some of our favorite Broadway shows. Dan has updated our original orchestrations (written by the equally amazing Callum Morris) and they sound wonderful. Frankly, our cast could make anything sound wonderful – but we still only have a very short time to teach everything – and even though the cast seems to be taking it in, we really only get one or two passes…

On our third rehearsal, we meet the band. NAMT restricts the band size to 2-3 performers, so we have Erikka Walsh, who’s played violin in Oncesince its initial development; Eli Zoller, who plays guitar, mandolin, bass, banjo and drums; and Dan, back playing piano and concertina. It’s a rushed rehearsal – Erikka has to get back to Once and we’ve got to head to a NAMT writers meet-n-greet, so we don’t get to everything.

Today, we had our sitzprobe – bringing the band and cast together. This is the moment of truth… and it all works! Dan’s orchestrations sound beautiful underneath the twelve choral voices. Eli somehow turns his guitar into a guitar-drum and Erikka hits every note. And the cast is magic. Ruthie Ann Miles and Nick Choksi are singing in Hindi, Spencer Moses and Jason SweetTooth Williams are singing in Hebrew, and everyone is singing in Newfoundland-ese. By the last song, everyone’s clapping and stamping their feet and it feels like we’re in an East Coast pub singing sea shanties.

Sure there’s still some work to do, but we’ve still got some rehearsals – and it feels like all these disparate bits and pieces will come together. Which is kind of one of the themes of Come From Away: telling a story about all these different people from around the world coming together in a tiny community. And telling that story by playing music from around the world – and finding the common denominators that tie them together. Come From Away is a true story musical about a little town that shared everything it had with new friends from around the world – and we can’t wait to share this show with our new friends at NAMT.

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: A Sneak Peek

DAY 19

Today we take a break from looking at Festivals past and jump ahead to this year’s! Here is a sneak peek at our 2013 Festival program—front page, back page, and inside page about how the festival runs. Will you be joining us later this week for the live festivities?  

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: Beyond the Festival

Day 18

Since 2002, the Festival of New Musicals also features a concert performance called The Songwriters Showcase. These shows are chosen for many different reasons, from being National Fund recipients to ones being developed by NAMT Membersto Festival runner-ups. One thing that never changes is how great the shows are—some have even moved on to Broadway!

Learn about some of their big and recent successes below:

First Date by Michael Weiner and Alan Zachary was featured in 2012 and is currently running on Broadway.

Spring Awakening by Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik was featured in 2005 and opened on Broadway in 2006.

High Fidelity by David Lindsay-Abaire, Amanda Green and Tom Kittwas featured in 2004 and opened on Broadway in 2006.

Memphis by Joe DiPietro and David Bryan was featured in 2002 and opened on Broadway  in 2009.

Fly By Night by Will Connolly, Michael Mitnick and Kim Rosenstock, which was featured in 2012, has an upcoming run at member theater Playwrights Horizons, and recently played at another member theatre, Dallas Theatre Center.

Next Thing You Know  by Ryan Cunningham & Joshua Salzman was featured in 2011 and recently released a cast album!

Tamar of the River (f.k.a. Tamar & the River) by Marisa Michelson and Joshua H. Cohen was featured in 2010 and is currently running in New York City, produced by Prospect Theater Company.

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: Ready to Perform...Part 2!


DAY 17

Part 2 in our series on licensed NAMT Festival shows is here!

Today we discover what the licensing houses MTI & Theatrical Rights Worldwidehave to offer. Check it out below!

Will any of these shows be featured in SHOW OFF? Buy tickets now and find out soon!

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DAY 16

The Story of My Life by Neil Bartram and Brian Hill appeared in the 2007 Festival and ran on Broadway 2009. One of its next stops: South Korea, for a full production translated into Korean!

Check out one of the show’s stand-out numbers “Mrs. Remington” sung by the original Korean cast.

Click here for an English version, to compare.

Will a song from The Story of My Life be featured in SHOW OFF….possibly this very one? Buy tickets today!

 

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FESTIVAL COUNTDOWN: One Week Away

A guest blog entry from Kevin Del Aguila, writer of The Astonishing Return of…The Protagonists! to be presented at this year’s Festival of New Musicals.  

It’s a week away from NAMT, I’ve got our 40ish-minute cut of the show ready, we’ve written a new song for the presentation, we’ve assembled an UNBELIEVABLE cast, and yet all I can do is think about the venue where the whole thing will take place: New World Stages.

New World Stages is where I go every night. Not because I love hanging out in a basement, but because that’s where I’m currently performing in Peter and the Starcatcher, reprising the role of “Smee” that I originated on Broadway. Our producers recently announced that the show will be closing in mid-January, so I’ve felt a little nostalgic about New World recently, and started to think about how much time I’ve spent there.

With a style that can only be described as “airplane hanger chic,” New World Stages is the place where I first became involved with NAMT as the director of the See Rock City and Other Destinations presentations in 2008. Hey! That’s not true!  I was a performer in 
the musical Lizzie Borden at NAMT in 2000 when it took place at the (now demolished) Douglas Fairbanks Theater many moons back. Well, forget about that.

These days, I’m wearing my author hat at NAMT. And my little superhero extravaganza, The Astonishing Return of…The Protagonists!, will be showcased not just within the same theatreplex that I go to every night, but on the exact stage where another show I wrote ran Off Broadway for five terrific years. The show was called Altar Boyz and it gave me my first taste of commercial success. I was no longer just “a guy who writes,” I became “the guy who wrote Altar Boyz.”  A small, but tremendous upgrade to my career.

In fact, several of my collaborators from Altar Boyz are involved in our NAMT presentation, from performers (Andy Karl, Tyler Maynard and Carlos Encinias) to our Music Director (Lynne Shankel) to our director Chris Gattelli, who won a Lucille Lortel award for his choreography of Altar Boyz at a ceremony held at…New World Stages!

Walking around NWS (as the kids call it), I find that each area brings back a memory.  The stairwell where I slept between shows. The hallway where I met that TV actor. The couch where I first read a review of Altar Boyz that called my book “wafer thin” (oh, if I had a nickel…). The bathroom where someone unknowingly recommended my own show to me. It’s a place where I’ve had a lot of anxiety, laughter, failure and success. In short, it’s the theatre.

The Protagonists! is a project that I started writing when New World Stages was still just a $2 movie theater. I am very thankful to NAMT for helping to bring it to life and looking forward to adding another memory to the place.

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: Three Timers Club

DAY 15

Earlier in this series we shared with you a bit about David Kirshenbaum, the only author to have 4 shows featured in the NAMT Festival. Today, we share the authors who have had three works showcased–and there are six! Learn about their history with the Festival below.

How many of our Three-Timers will be featured in SHOW OFF? Buy tickets now to find out on October 20.

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FESTIVAL COUNTDOWN: Get to Know COME FROM AWAY

An interview with Irene Sankoff and David Hein, writers of the upcoming Festival show Come From Away, about exploring an unexplored topic, composing a musical inspired by Newfoundland and how the Festival has challenged this writing team.
Come From Away depicts an aspect of 9/11 that is not often focused on. How did you hear about the event in Newfoundland, and what inspired you to write about it?
Irene Sankoff: Our friend Michael Rubinoff (a NAMT member through Sheridan College and the Canadian Music Theatre Project) suggested the idea – and after a quick Google search we found so many articles and news clips that we’d be sitting there for hours looking at them with tears in our eyes. We saw that there were events planned in Newfoundland to commemorate the 10th Anniversary of 9/11, and we noticed many of the people who had been stranded there so unexpectedly were returning to visit the friends that they had made 10 years earlier – and so we decided we had to be there too. We applied for a grant from the Canada Council for the Arts to spend close to a month out there – and we got it. 

When we arrived everyone was so willing to share their stories with us, and they spoke of one another and their memories with respect and love and gratitude toward the Newfoundlanders for putting them up, feeding them, entertaining them and befriending them during such a terrifying time. It was such a positive response to a hateful act and the people who were there to experience the Newfoundlanders’ hospitality really want this aspect of history to be shared. The stories are not only touching, there are humorous ones, too. At one of the shelters, a local asked a passenger if there was anything she needed – she said “A cup of coffee… and my dog.” The local left the shelter and then returned a while later with a cup of coffee and the family’s pet dog to keep her company. That’s just one story of the many amazing stories we heard…

What is the intended function of the story as a re-telling instead of happening in the present tense?

IS: We were inspired initially by The Laramie Project. Both shows are about a town’s response to a tragedy as told through the people who were affected by it. It’s important to underline how much the time spent in Newfoundland still resonates with the people who were stranded there after 10 years. And we wanted to relay the stories as much as possible in the way they were told to us.We weren’t interested in a fictionalized retelling of history, since what actually happened was so amazing (having said that, we still needed to take thousands of stories from hundreds of people and turn them into a musical, so some of the people we met are merged into one character, and some events that happened we ascribed to different characters, but while it’s not a documentary, it’s all based on truth). Finally, the story we wanted to tell wasn’t just that people were treated incredibly when stranded in Newfoundland—we wanted to show that they and the Newfoundland community were changed by these events—and we felt we could only do that by showing what happened next when the passengers returned home. The town felt emptier and quiet for the first time. And passengers who returned home wrestled with their experience being so different from everyone else’s – and they all mourned losing something amazing that they never expected to find. It was really only ten years later, when these groups reunited, that the story finally felt resolved. 

The Newfoundland accent is fascinating. What was it like writing for this dialect, and what were your considerations for how quickly an American audience would catch on?

IS: Ow’s dat, B’y? Oh, my ducky, the Newfoundland tongue – she’s right difficult! But she’s a beauty too, B’y!
We were immersed in the dialect while visiting Newfoundland in September 2011, and found some
folks were easier to understand than others! We missed the punch line of many jokes because when the locals got together they would speak faster and faster as they got excited, and once a joke landed they would look at us expectantly and we would just stare back blankly! We recorded a lot of verbatim interviews and we also got ourselves a copy of the Newfoundland Dictionary. We tried to keep speech patterns and figures of speech as intact as possible, and while workshopping made changes to clarify intent if people were confused. What’s emerged still represents the richness of the language, but doesn’t lose anyone along the way.

What cultural aspects of Newfoundland informed the musical composition? Were you aiming for a specific genre of music or did each song evolve from a different musical style?

IS: Newfoundlanders told us that at least one person in every house plays an instrument and David grew up on

East Coast music and folk festivals. He couldn’t wait to start composing for a bodhran (a hand drum), accordion, fiddle, penny whistle and ugly stick (basically a stick stuck in a boot with bottle caps screwed into it…no, really). But along the way, we got really excited about trying to represent through music what happened in Newfoundland over those five days – a merging of cultures from around the world over top of a base of Newfoundland folk. For passengers who came from Moldova, we listened to Russian and Moldovan music. For passengers who came from Texas, we listened to country rock.  We added African percussion for passengers from there and somehow we found common denominators to create a musical metaphor for the world coming together.

One of your main characters is American Airlines captain Beverley Bass, the first female captain of a commercial airline. What was it like writing a character with such real-life historic import?

IS: We are in awe of Beverley! She told us that as she was growing up she had no understanding of sexism, so when she decided at a very young age she wanted to be a pilot, she saw no reason why she couldn’t become one. It’s amusing that even in 2013 people assume that she’s a flight attendant until the script reveals otherwise. Women especially respond to Beverley’s song in the second act detailing what flying means to her and how she got where she is today – lyrics which were very close to the verbatim story that she told us herself. Beverley is a huge supporter of us and fan of the show – she just sent our new baby daughter an adorable welcome gift and she’s constantly cheering us on over Facebook! We have shared the music with her as the show has developed, and she saw a live streaming of the show as it was performed in Canada from her home in Texas! Beverley, like many of the people we spoke to, continues to keep in touch with us and follow the show’s development. In fact, we might have a couple special guests at NAMT!

When you two work together do you more or less stick to respective categories as book writer or composer, or do you both dabble in everything? 

David Hein: We write everything together – book, music, and lyrics – although since I used to be a singer/songwriter, I tend to start the songs and write the majority of the music – but by the end, we can barely remember who wrote what. We each work in different ways. I tend to slap things on a blank page and Irene goes in to refine them, and what follows is usually hours of conversation and debate before anything else goes down on the page.

Has the Festival process presented any challenges or elucidated anything for you about Come From Away?

DH: What challenges HASN’T it presented? From script cutting, to finding our newborn daughter a passport, to casting from Canada via google and youtube…but despite all that, the NAMT staff, our advisors, and our director and music director have really shared the workload, and really jumped in when Irene gave birth at the beginning of August, which has made it a completely wonderful experience. From a script and music perspective, it’s really forced us to take a step back and look at what’s essential to our piece – which is wonderful, because one of our challenges was that we felt our Act 1 was a little long. Fitting it into a 45-minute reading required tweaking each line and really being economical, and we’ve had to kill some of our darlings, but we feel like we’ve made it leaner and faster in the process. Having said that, some of our favorite stories and songs are in Act. 2, or have ended up on the NAMT cutting room floor… but we’re crossing our fingers that this isn’t the last time we’ll see them!

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25 DAYS OF NAMT: Larson Grants Abound

DAY 14

The list of merits given to alumni writers of the Festival is too long to list—but we will try! Here is a look at all the Alumni authors to win Jonathan Larson Grants, listed by the year they were awarded.

2013: Joshua Salzman and Ryan Cunningham
2012: Dan Collins and Julianne Wick Davis
2011: Michelle Elliott and Danny Larsen
2010: Daniel Maté, Michael Kooman and Christopher Dimond
2009: Mark Allen, Thomas Mizer and Curtis Moore
2008: Gaby Alter, Susan DiLallo
2006: Andrew Gerle and Eddie Sugarman, Joseph Iconis, Brendan Milburn and Valerie Vigoda
2005: Neil Bartram, Nathan Christensen and Scott Murphy, Michael Cooper and Hyeyoung Kim, Glenn Slater and Stephen Weiner
2003: Nell Benjamin
2002: Julia Jordan, Michael Korie, Peter Mills
2001: John Bucchino, Laurence O’Keefe
2000: Beth Blatt and Jenny Giering, Chad Beguelin and Matt Sklar, David Kirshenbaum, David Simpatico
1999: Kirsten Childs

Congratulations all!!
Make sure to attend SHOW OFF! to see numbers by many of the award-winning composers listed above!

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