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The Cast & Cameos of Tick, Tick…Boom! and Why You Know Them (or Should)

November 23, 2021
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By now, you may have recovered normal hydration levels after crying all weekend from the glorious movie musical ‘Tick, Tick…Boom!’, now on Netflix. A musical theatre adaptation for the ages, ‘Tick, Tick…Boom!’, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s directorial debut and a copyeditor’s nightmare (I think it’s official ‘tick, tick…BOOM!’?? nothx), is the rare passion project that is as undeniably compelling for the general public as it is fervent in its appreciation and respect for a relatively niche genre. The lovingly created film paints a fully provocative, engrossing portrait of the late Jonathan Larson, the musical theatre composer who created two incredible lasting works before an untimely death, the devastation of which has threatened to define his legacy more than his brilliant creations. Lin’s (we’re on a first-name basis btw) directorial debut is spellbinding. He treats Larson’s life story, as told through Larson’s painstaking creation of what would eventually be ‘Tick, Tick…Boom’ the stage show, as only another such creator could, fully understanding the desperation, the hope, the single-minded devotion, the heartache.

The resulting film is one so fine that it is generating tons of Oscar buzz, which the fuckers rarely give to deserving movie musicals. Those of us who have known and loved the musical TTB for years are completely satisfied with this careful and meticulous adaptation, and those who are brand-new to it join us as die-hard fans. (At least the ones I know have. Or they know better than to tell me otherwise.) And we are all left adoring this excellent film about the creative process and what artists sacrifice for their craft, about this man and all the brilliance spilling out of him, and above all about our love for musical theatre.

This last part is evidenced in all aspects of the film, and not least by the people onscreen. Lin brought out the big guns for this one. His rolodex is probably the sickest one on the planet. The musical theatre legends, the exciting up and coming talent, and the beloved performers of all ages and bio lengths who fill the screen in roles big and small and miniscule (no small parts!) act as a treat for musical theatre lovers who amid crying over how great Andrew Garfield is and how wonderful the music sounds and how beautifully the story weaving was done can shout ‘OH MY GOD THAT’S _!!!’ over and over to the delight (not delight) of anyone watching with them. In February, when we do our gigantic pre-Oscars movie review roundup, I’ll talk more about this masterpiece, but today I’m here to go through the faces we saw and what we know them from.

Main Cast

Jonathan Larson: Andrew Garfield
What you know him from: Winning a Tony Award for Angels in America, Hacksaw Ridge and other great movies, Spider-Man and other spidery movies. Also he’s Jewish; we love that.

Michael: Robin de Jesus
What you know him from: Originating the role of Sonny in In the Heights on Broadway (‘chillax! you know you lumme’ I DO LUM YOU) (p.s. In the Heights is the other best movie of 2021 these are facts); being the best part of several other Broadway shows like the Douglas Hodge La Cage. Last seen in Ryan Murphy’s Netflix adaptation of The Boys in the Band. He was also Michael in the amazing theatre-kid cult movie Camp, which I hate to tell you is almost 20 years old (gasp!).

Roger: Joshua Henry
What you know him from: Billy Bigelow in the last revival of Carousel; making his name on Broadway in American Idiot, The Scottsboro Boys (ugh talk about crying and deserving more acclaim), being the best part of Violet with Sutton Foster which is saying something since she was perfect, being part of the spellbindingly-cast-but-not-as-strong-as-it-should-have-been Shuffle Along.

Carolyn: MJ Rodriguez
What you know her from: the lead of Pose, baby! How good is Pose! How good is she on it! We cry so much!

Susan: Alexandra Shipp
What you know her from: Straight Outta Compton, the Aaliyah movie.

Karessa: Vanessa Hudgens
What you know her from: being a teen star? Gigi on Broadway (lol), Grease! Live on NBC, Rent Live. She loves doing live stuff! Fun fact: I have never seen High School Musical. I know. Not by choice, I just haven’t gotten around to it in 25 years or whatever. Funner fact: I have watched High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, which I enjoy.

Freddy: Ben Levi Ross
What you know him from: He was one of the Evan Hansen replacements on Broadway.

Ira: Jonathan Marc Sherman
What you know him from: He’s a playwright first and foremost, most recently having written Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, which played off-Broadway and starred Jennifer Damiano and Michael Zegen (we love them).

Diner patrons in the opening number, 30/90 (what a bop right???)
Roger Bart
What you know him from: being the super creepy evil pharmacist on Desperate Housewives (I still remember how scary!), winning a Tony for You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown; The Producers; Young Frankenstein (frahnkenSHTEEN). Currently playing Doc Brown in London’s Back to the Future musical. Fun fact: He’s the singing voice of Hercules in the amazing animated movie. HE CAN GO THE DISTAAAANCE.

James C. Nicola: long (LONG) time artistic director of the New York Theatre Workshop.

Party scene
Scott the finance guy: Ryan Vasquez
What you know him from: Before being absolutely hysterical in this movie (I mean, he is us, those of us not professionally in theatre who geek out over it wholeheartedly), Vasquez was in the original cast of Waitress and has apparently played literally every male role in Hamilton.

Fun fact (this shit is FULL OF FUN FACTS! SO FUN!): The R&B ish song playing on the boom box as Jonathan and Susan go down into the bone zone is ‘Green Green Dress’, a song from the stage version of TTB cut for the film but I believe included on the film soundtrack with a full version by Garfield and Shipp. This version in this scene is sung by Joshua Henry!

Michael’s fancy pants building
I’m sure there are lots more famouses in this scene but I could not make out their faces.

Concierge: Luis Miranda
What you know him from: being Lin’s dad, being my mom’s biggest crush (I know and she has a lot), lots of great political work, also waving to Nina in ‘Breathe’ in In the Heights movie (Lin will put his dad in everything and we’re not mad).

Doorman: Chris Sullivan
What you know him from: One of several members of Freestyle Love Supreme in this movie! He’s the one known as Shockwave. I wish I had a cool nickname. Anyway thanks to the person who corrected me since I got my Chrises Sullivan mixed up!

Parking attendant: Andrew Bancroft
What you know him from: More Freestyle Love Supreme!

Writing workshop
OKAY this is where I started really screaming. EVERYONE sitting in this room is a musical theatre creative, and I LOVE that Lin did that, solidifying that this movie and TTB in general is so much for the people it’s about. I’m not going to pretend I recognized everyone (I’m sorry but I would not know Georgia Stitt by face) but these are the ones I did yell about. If you knew all of them, bravaaa.

Jason Robert Brown: composer of all my faves, like The Bridges of Madison County, The Last Five Years, Parade, Songs for a New World. Also 13 (fun fact I sat in the front row of the first Broadway preview LIKE A NERD) and is friends with Ariana Grande as a result.

Alex Lacamoire: known for being the right-hand man of Lin when it comes to his orchestrations and generally being the best ever. Orchestrator of In the Heights, Hamilton, Dear Evan Hansen, also this movie!

Shaina Taub: composer of the great musical version of Twelfth Night; friends with my friend from Hebrew school.

Dave Malloy: MY BOY DAVE! Wild & Crazy composer of Natasha, Pierre, & the Great Comet of 1812 and other wild & crazy works like Moby Dick (SO COOL), Ghost Quartet, Octet, Preludes, and of course the f-ing nutty Beardo, which is about Rasputin, don’t forget that one.

Stephen Schwartz: composer of Godspell (which gets a hilarious shoutout later in the film), Wicked, Pippin. What a dude.

Who lives who dies Jeannine Tesori: composer of Fun Home; Caroline or Change; Violet; Thoroughly Modern Millie. A legend.

Tom Kitt: Seems very tall; Tony- and Pulitzer-winning composer of my beloved Next to Normal. Oh man, Next to Normal, guys. Also wrote Bring It On! the musical with Lin, and If/Then, which was good-not-great but has one of my favorite shower singing songs (IF WE’RE ALWAYS! STARTING OVER!)

Quiara Allegria Hudes: book writer of In the Heights the musical, screenwriter for ITH the movie, also is from Philly so COME THROUGH QUIARA.

Richard Kind: Uncle Richard as we call him. I mean, you know him from everything. He’s the greatest ever. Currently being hysterical with every single word he utters as Andrew’s father on Big Mouth.

Bradley Whitford as Stephen Sondheim
What you know him from: The West Wing, being Bradley Whitford, aging amazingly.

Hilarious music video
H.A.W.K. Smooth: Tariq Trotter
What you know him from: He’s Black Thought from The Roots. Yes Philly!

Sunday number at the diner
This is the part where musical theatre lovers wept tears of pure joy, and where everyone else became a musical theatre lover. This. Was. EVERYTHING. Everyone in that diner is a theatre legend. LEDGE.

Line cook: Lin-Manuel Miranda
Yes, the director himself. My husband heard his voice to start the scene and said ‘oh that’s Lin!’ before they showed his face. So proud, so lucky. Can you IMAGINE being in the audience of Les Mis when he did the voice at the barricade that one time?

Patrons:
Joel Grey
What you know him from: originating the emcee role in Cabaret on Broadway and recreating it for the movie, and winning an Oscar for it. The original wizard in Wicked, Moonface Martin in the unmatched 2011 Anything Goes! revival. That one amazing episode of Star Trek Voyager that made me cry.

Howard McGillin
What you know him from: the longest running Phantom in Phantom of the Opera

Chuck Cooper
What you know him from: winning a Tony for The Life. MY SISTER WAS A PROS…

Phylicia Rashad
What you know her from: I mean…do I have to say it.

Beth Malone
What you know her from: originating the role of Big Alison in Fun Home on Broadway — the costume from which she is wearing in this scene!!!! best! You may also know her from the best Best Actress in a Musical announcement at the Tonys that year, when Kelli O’Hara finally won and all the other nominees, shown in their little boxes, were clearly so happy for her, it was the sweetest ever.

Andre de Shields
What you know him from: Hermes in Broadway’s Hadestown, giving one of the best Tony acceptance speeches ever, talking to me about sweet potatoes after one of the London performances and I wish we were best friends.

Brian Stokes Mitchell. STOKES.
What you know him from: having wheels of a dream in Ragtime; Tony Award for Kiss Me, Kate; Man of La Mancha; having THAT FUCKING VOICE.

Bebe Neuwirth
What you know her from: Cheers/Frasier, revival of Chicago. That incredible episode of Will & Grace playing herself.

Renee Elise Goldsberry
What you know her from: Angelica Schuyler in Hamilton; original Nettie in The Color Purple; the final Mimi in Rent on Broadway, so she’s the one in the Rent Live filmed production, which I was in the audience for!!! It was THE BEST! We went nuts after the finale and ovated for like 30 minutes and then they were like ‘we have to do it again!’

Phillipa Soo
What you know her from: breaking Lin’s heart so good in Natasha, Pierre, & the Great Comet of 1812 off-Broadway that he cast her as Elizabeth Schuyler in Hamilton.

Bernadette Peters
What you know her from: Sunday in the Park with George (I mean, if you are IN THE SHOW that the characters are watching in this movie reverently that’s just…everything); Song & Dance; Into the Woods; A Little Night Music; Follies; Hello, Dolly!; being in the best film version of Annie; being Sondheim’s muse? being so lucky? having the best hair? Broadway Barks?

Chita Rivera: I mean, it’s Chita Rivera. Original stage Anita in West Side Story; the chief cook and bottle washer in The Rink; Kiss of the Spider Woman; original Velma Kelly in Chicago; original Rosie in Bye Bye Birdie; scary scary sexy robot lady in the musical adaptation of The Visit; Fosse’s film version of Sweet Charity. Ledge.

The 3 bums:
Daphne Rubin-Vega, Adam Pascal, Wilson Jermaine Heredia, from the original cast of Rent

Jonathan’s workshop cast

Aneesa Folds
What you know her from: another Freestyle Love Supremer! they are so talented I wanna barf.

Kate Rockwell
What you know her from: the best part of Mean Girls the musical (‘My name is Karen. I may not be smart…that’s it.’)

Gizel Jimenez
What you know her from: has been in Wicked, Avenue Q. Really enjoyed her in this I want to see her onstage!

Joel Perez
What you know him from: the original cast of Fun Home. So many of them in this!

In the extended workshop cast shown in the Sextet

Janet Dacal
What you know her from: original Carla in In the Heights! long as he keeps it clean! ay dios mio!

Kenita R. Miller
What you know her from: the best part of the flawless Once on this Island Tony-winning revival. HOT HOLY GODDAMN that show was incredible and she revolutionized her track.

The woman who buys Jonathan’s records for $50 and makes hilarious Godspell jokes

Joanna Adler
What you know her from: lots of off-Broadway work but probably most recognizable as Summer’s mother in School of Rock

The hilarious focus group
Leader: Laura Benanti
What you know her from: Gypsy, My Fair Lady, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, stealing scenes in Sound of Music Live, being hilarious, the name my dad guesses every time a song starts on Sirius Broadway.

Micaela Diamond
What you know her from: The Cher Show on Broadway, playing the youngest Cher

Danielle Ferland
What you know her from: OG Little Red in Into the Woods!!! omg she grew up

Utkarsh Ambudkar
What you know him from: Freestyle Love Supreme, the rapper in the boy group in Pitch Perfect (hey you! with the eeeyes), Mindy’s brother on The Mindy Project

Jonathan’s parents

Danny Burstein
What you know him from: consistently gifting us amazing performances on Broadway. The Drowsy Chaperone, Luther Billis in the Kelli/Szot South Pacific, heartbreaking in Follies, Cabaret, a wonderful Tevye in 2016. Recently winning a Tony for Moulin Rouge. Being king of the adorables.

Judy Kuhn
What you know her from: original Broadway Cosette in Les Mis, Chess, singing voice of Pocahontas so the version of ‘Colors of the Wind’ that isn’t Vanessa Williams, Alison’s mom in Fun Home, Golde in Fiddler last year on the West End.

Jonathan’s agent: Judith Light
What you know her from: You know her from Who’s the Boss?, I know her from spending one summer when I lived in NYC somehow being on the exact same theatre schedule as her with seats always near each other and after a few weeks we were like wtf??? who is stalking who?

Louder than Words cameos
Jelani Alladin, when they cut to Michael the Jesus in the audience at “why so many people bleed”
What you know him from: originating Kristoff in Frozen on Broadway

Chris Jackson making SERIOUS FACE and sitting in front of Sondheim Whitford
What you know him from: original Benny in In the Heights, original George Washington in Hamilton
What my baby nephew knows him from: Mr Softee in the In the Heights movie, whose ‘tuck is boken downnn’; video upon request.

Extra treat: When Jonathan sings “what does it take to wake up a generation/how can you make someone take off and fly’, they show a split-second black & white image of the original cast of Rent. Just in case you weren’t sobbing uncontrollably already.

Obviously I didn’t get everyone and I have poor vision so shout out those I missed in the comments! and your favorite part of the movie!

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Yo, Adrian: “Rocky” the Musical is Actually Ya Know Great

May 22, 2014
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PictureYes this is in a Broadway theatre

    Yo, Adrian, I dunno why but I had so much fun ya know like so much at “Rocky” on Broadway. It gets shaky reviews from highbrow critics (not like me tee-hee) and people who fancy themselves theatre aficionados (well that is me), but the audiences, and seemingly everyone on Twitter, love it like it’s the city of brotherly love. For shows I don’t like, I’m the first person to discount audience adoration (THOSE IGNORANT PLEBEIANS) but for shows I enjoy, like this one, come on look the audience loves it! That means it’s worth seeing!


But truly it is worth seeing. The music isn’t consistent (I found myself thinking, “Wait this is Flaherty & Aherns? The geniuses who wrote “Anastasia”???), yet even with several weak songs, the show proved that it deserved the musical treatment. It’s the only show now on Broadway that takes actual risks, many of them, and makes it pay off with a tremendously enjoyable experience. With Broadway moving towards complete takeover by jukebox musicals, revues, and over-the-top spectacles, risky and innovative musicals like this should be celebrated.

So about the actual show. Everyone knows the story, right? About the lovable down-on-his-luck boxer living in South Philadelphia (heyooo) who gets a chance at fighting in the biggest fight there is and loves a girl named Adrian? If you don’t you should go watch the movie. There’s a movie. Actually several.

My perception may have been colored because I had the best seat I’ve ever had for a show (thanks lottery! And the gods of fortune that day!). I won the cheap ticket lottery a few months ago (the show has since switched to a general rush policy with worse seats, which I think means it’s doing well) and got the seat right next to the conductor, front row center. Being that close to anything may help (but then again I had front row at “Bullets Over Broadway” and that’s not getting away with anything). The front rows are also part of the ridiculously fun Golden Circle, which we’ll get to later. Regardless, the entire audience at my performance seemed to love it, and I barely stopped smiling.

This is due mostly to Andy Karl, who plays Rocky Balboa and was deservedly nominated for a Tony Award. He is spectacular. He’s understated, super charming, funny and he works his ass off. He also drinks 3 raw eggs every performance, which is disgusting and awful but like that is commitment. Karl has a great singing voice but for this role his speaking voice was even more effective, though his (and everyone’s) accent veers more towards Brooklyn than Philly. It happens. But every time he says “Yo Adrian” – which is basically every time he opens his mouth – somehow it’s perfect and adorable and made me laugh, in the best way. Thankfully, his solo numbers were among the best songs of the show, as it should be. He has some rousing I-believe-in-me-oh-yes-you-just-watch songs, some nice ones about or with Adrian, and one really silly one to open with (“My Nose Ain’t Broken”) that establishes his character and his charm despite some cringeworthy lyrics. Also he has pet turtles. I don’t know if they are real, but he’s adorable with them. As all people are when they treat animals nicely.

Speaking of Adrian, she is a revelation. Margo Seibert’s acting is subtle and natural, and she hides this lovely voice that she expertly wields at the right moments. At several moments I had the urge to give her a hug, which was dangerous because I was close enough to actually do that. She has the most beautiful song in the show, “Raining”, which will likely become a staple performance piece of college girls trying to major in theatre. She also wears the famous red hat and white coat at the end, so nice job all around.

The lackluster songs come when other characters, like Apollo Creed, random scantily clad women, and Headmaster Charleston, were given songs that didn’t do anything to drive the plot forward. This show had enough happening; side characters didn’t need songs just to reinforce that this was a musical. They didn’t further develop the characters, but they bored the audience.

But yes so Headmaster Charleston (Dakin Matthews) is in this, playing Rocky’s coach. When I first saw him onstage I got real scared that he was going to yell at me for breaking into the school at midnight to ring a bell. Thankfully, he didn’t. He’s well cast, but he should not have a song, especially one that is lame and at the top of Act II. The beginning of Act II in any musical needs to be energetic and interesting, because a) you have to bring the audience back into the story and b) second acts are notoriously worse than first acts so why not try to fight that? This ill-planned song about how the coach used to fight or something was like RoadRunner falling off a cliff like beeeyoooahhhhhhhhhbummmmmm (#soundeffects). Filler and dead filler at best. That’s the director’s fault.

After that, the first half of the second act is pretty much training montages set to “Eye of the Tiger”, and damn if they aren’t incredibly fun. That’s how the act should have begun. I’m pretty sure Karl works out like 18 hours a day, but the workout he gets in this show would be enough for a normal person. He jogs back and forth across the stage as digital backgrounds show parts of Philly (that no sane person would run through without a vest), he does push-ups and pull-ups, he drinks the raw eggs (ew), he punches the sides of beef hanging in his friend’s meat locker (ahhhh), and yes he runs up the Art Museum steps (woooo!). I was exhausted just watching it. Hell I’m exhausted just writing about it.               
Picture

All of this leads to the crux of the show, and the #1 reason to see it: The Fight. Everyone who assumed that this epic battle between Rocky and Apollo Creed could not be performed well on a stage is proved wrong. So…everyone. This is when it pays to pay more for good seats up front, because the first 8 or so rows of the center orchestra, called the “Golden Circle”, are taken up on stage ON A BROADWAY STAGE OMG to act as the arena’s audience to the fight. The big boxing ring comes front and center on the stage, and the lucky audience members sit behind this on bleachers, looking out onto the rest of the audience (chumps). Then, the entire set – the bleachers holding these audience members and the ring – moves out into the orchestra, where people had just been sitting! So the people sitting in the side orchestra seats are now sitting along the sides of the ring. It’s all pretty awesome, and then the fighting begins and it’s ridiculous. I don’t know how they do it other than assuming that they are actually beating the shit out of each other for like 20 minutes. Punches fly and, as far as I could tell, land. Sweat and blood drip off their faces, and in the light you can see whatever other substance flies off boxers when they get hit. It’s insane, and intense. HOW IS THIS HAPPENING? Seriously? I met Andy Karl after the show and he looked pretty and not dead, so it’s pure stage magic happening up there. It’s one of the coolest sequences to occur on a Broadway stage, and how great that it relies solely on two actors and not on crazy technology. In this way, the show is kind of old-fashioned, yet the show as a whole – in my view the first to handle sports successfully – is modern, risky, and a must-see.       

Old Stock at Wilton’s Music Hall: An Important, Relevant Work of Musical Brilliance

September 26, 2019
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It’s Theatre Thursday! Today’s show is Old Stock at Wilton’s Music Hall until Saturday.

Man alive what an amazing month of theatre it’s been! Last week I was blown away by the one-woman show Shida, and I felt rejuvenated in my love of musical theatre and its ability to tell stories on a superhuman level. Well it happened again literally five days later, when I saw Old Stock at Wilton’s Music Hall. I didn’t expect this one-act musical to crush my soul and break my heart and make me laugh hysterically and then cry hysterically, but it did, and I cannot recommend enough that you race to Tower Hill to see it in the next few days. RACE.

Okay, maybe I would have expected it if I knew at all going in what it was about, but as usual we heard “at Wilton’s” and said “we’ll be there” without needing another word. It’s about immigrants, specifically Jewish immigrants to Canada about 100 years ago and the trials they faced…so yeah, we should have been ready for our EYES TO DROWN but that’s all in the past now. And we all wish we could say the hardships, bigotry, and turmoil these immigrants portrayed faced is all in the past too, but the beauty, the heart-breaking beauty of this staggering work, is that the story describes the plight of immigrants today just as powerfully as it does those of the past. Like the pinnacle of Jewish musical theatre, Fiddler on the Roof, Old Stock tells an important Jewish story that really can be adopted by any minority group, anyone who has ever been ostracized or persecuted, with just as much power and meaning. That’s the beauty of musical theatre, its ability to transcend demographics and time and specifics and speak right to the human heart. And that’s especially the beauty and power of superb musical theatre like this.

The show, by Ben Caplan, Hannah Moscovitch, and her husband Christian Barry (who also directs), tells of Chaya (Mary Fay Coady) and Chaim (Eric Da Costa), two Jewish refugees from Old Country who meet en route to the safe harbors, so they hope, of Canada. I mean sure people will still be racist but they’ll be polite about it. And sure they’ll be told they aren’t real Canadians, not ‘old stock’ (drink!), but at least they’ll have health care AM I RIGHT. They fall in love, one first then the other, and navigate their past trauma, their uncertain place in a new country, and their open future. All the while, a wild, fantastic troubadour in the form of Caplan’s narrator called The Wanderer takes us through the story with a score that explodes with emotion, with wit, with wildness and disobedience as much as it exudes tenderness, thoughtfulness, and real invention. You clutch your stomach laughing early on and then by the second half you’re wondering when exactly you starting weeping, all the while immersed in a storytelling that I cannot commend enough.

Da Costa’s open, vulnerable, joyous face instantly wins you over, as Chaim should. With Chaya’s more reserved nature, Coady has a harder job of winning you over in spite of herself, and they are both flawless. If they are the heart, Caplan is the lifeblood of the production. He’s like if Harold Zidler and Cabaret’s Emcee played together in an acid trip in Dr Frank-n-Furter’s mind but with real grit and heart. It’s a wild and crazy explosion of a performance…and then it’s reverent and quietly gorgeous, in an instant. His impressive ability to shift between raucousness and emotional truth, between booming anarchist anthems and Yiddish folk songs and then sweet lullabies, is a precise and powerful instrument, and a rare one at that.

The fact that Caplan wrote these songs, these incredible songs that play with genre and emotional beats in a magnificent way, and has that versatile, booming, unstoppable voice is one of those things where you’re like ‘god, ffs, that’s not fair to give all that to one person.’ Like when I went to law school with an actual model – was not cool. The score’s versatility – while still seeming generally cohesive – reminded me of the best of Dave Malloy’s work, weaving in and out of genres yet retaining a true voice and always holding firm to emotional truth. And that emotional truth is what rings out even more than the superb score and the flawless performances, a message that despite being ostensibly about a story from 100 years ago is as relevant today as ever.

 

INFORMATION

The show is just under an hour and a half and you’re going to savor every single minute. I LOVE EFFICIENT SHOWS THAT CAN’T BE EDITED ANY FURTHER. Info leaflets with all the good info a programme would have are free, and there are CDs (HIGH RECOMMEND) on sale for 20 pounds (WORTH IT) as well as Caplan’s other albums. The night we saw the show, the entire cast + crew + Barry held a post-show Q&A that was wonderful. They all have impressive insight into their characters and the role the show plays in telling the story of today’s immigrants as well, which obviously shone through the work. Did I say you should go? You should go. Man that post-show reveal of where Chaya and Chaim’s bloodline led to I CANNOT.

Seating at Wilton’s is in single rows (no breaks) in the stalls, with the house right aisle the one closest to the exit/bathrooms. Upstairs there is a ring I think 2-3 rows deep. Ladies are downstairs, mens are upstairs.

Tickets are available on TodayTix if you are after a good deal, although this show is worth more than I’ve paid for a lot of West End drivel.

1 Comment
    Cheryl says: Reply
    November 23rd 2021, 11:48 am

    Wow this makes me want to watch again . Especially for Luis who I missed DARN
    BRAVO RANDI 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

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