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2月16日 Something’s ComingSomething’s ComingFirst Spring Awakening, now In the Heights: Could musicals actually be adapting to a new century’s audience?
If you can imagine Do the Right Thing mellowing out, learning Spanish, and bursting frequently into song, you’d get near In the Heights. Like Spike Lee’s joint, this musical is a fond portrait of a New York neighborhood, in this case a Latino corner of Washington Heights bounded by the 181st Street A-train stop (downstage left) and the G.W. Bridge (upstage center). Stories in such communities have been very good to American theater (Puerto Ricans, West Side—ring a bell?), but no one’s going to mistake this show for its celebrated predecessor. Delightfully enough, here’s a musical that owes more to Big Pun than to Bernstein.
Lin-Manuel Miranda has real affection for Broadway, shouting out to Cole Porter in one early number. Yet like the creators of Spring Awakening, he and librettist Quiara Alegría Hudes don’t try to ape Broadway’s old orchestral sound, or the corny bombast that a million failed jukebox musicals seem unable to kill. Just weeks after Duncan Sheik dragged Broadway screaming into the world of indie rock, they’ve claimed another swath of new sonic terrain for theater.
The most obvious of the show’s many virtues is that it doesn’t sound like the half-assed pseudo-pop that clutters up Broadway. Miranda’s score is rich and kaleidoscopic, as it needs to be. People on the block hail from all over: Cuba, the D.R., Mexico, Puerto Rico (which the owners of O’Hanrahan’s car service call home). As these immigrants and children of immigrants dream about returning to distant lands, or just going to the East Village, Miranda fills the stage with salsa and merengue. He also makes one of the most sophisticated theatrical forays yet into that untapped lyrical gold mine, hip-hop. Usnavi (played with charm and humor by Miranda himself) runs a beaten-down bodega, dishing out café con leche, a very lucrative lottery ticket, and sinuous, propulsive rhymes about wanting to go “from poverty to stock options.”
When the show does borrow from Broadway tradition, it avoids dopey clichés. The dances feel like they really might have come off the street. (Look, Ma, no jazz hands.) When young Nina (Mandy Gonzalez) returned from Stanford, I braced for the awkward switch from speech to song. Instead, a street vendor struck up a little melody in Spanish, then she began to translate it, then she took it over on her own, slipping past the most cringe-inducing of all musical moments.
That clever craftsmanship shapes many of the numbers. Songs slip into one another, advancing plot and shifting mood. Their sharp comedy is one reason why Miranda’s lyrics are some of the best that New York has heard from a young songwriter since Avenue Q. Yes, yes, he only rarely comes up with perfect rhymes; his pairing of “hipsters” and “business” would make Oscar Hammerstein’s pen explode. But his messy words are deeply evocative. Any quotes would wither on the page, so you’ll have to trust me that when Abuela Claudia sings about the open Cuban sky, or Vanessa describes a train rumbling by her apartment, or Nina remembers feeling that she lived at the top of the world when the world was just a subway map, the images stick with you.
Daily reviewers granted the show an entertaining quality, though many were critical of its pat and sentimental second act. It needs work, no doubt. Still, I’ll forgive a show some cut corners when it so clearly has an idea in its head. This story could have been a simple screed against gentrification, but it’s not: Miranda and Hudes dramatize why some people fight it, some are driven off by it, and some decide it’s best to go along—an unusually subtle treatment of the force that’s remaking 21st-century New York. This is where the show most resembles Lee’s movie and least resembles the usual Broadway fare: In the way it thinks and the way it sounds, it could only have been written right here and now. In the Heights February 26, 2007 issue of New York Magazine
If you have trouble reading this email, go to http://www.nochelatina.com/mailer/2007/02/intheheights/
2月8日 Opening Night!Opening Night!!!!
After a month of performing and hard work, Today our show Opens! It is set and the tickets will be at $35 until Sunday. If you get a chance come and see us!
Love;
Luis Salgado
Nueva York, Nueva York: New Musical In The Heights Opens Off-Broadway
By Ernio Hernandez
Priscilla Lopez, Mandy Gonzalez, Olga Merediz, Karen Olivo and more star in the new musical In the Heights, which officially opens Feb. 8 Off-Broadway at 37 Arts. Thomas Kail directs and Andy Blankenbuehler choreographs the original work that began previews Jan. 9. Kevin McCollum, Jeffrey Seller and Jill Furman produce. Tickets are currently on sale through April 1. With a book by Quiara Alegria Hudes and a score by Lin-Manuel Miranda, In the Heights is set over a Fourth of July weekend "in the life of Washington Heights, a vibrant and tight-knit neighborhood at the top of Manhattan," according show materials. "From the vantage point of Usnavi's corner bodega, we experience the joys, heartbreaks and bonds of a Latino community struggling to redefine home." Mandy Gonzalez (Aida, Dance of the Vampires), Priscilla Lopez (Anna in the Tropics, A Chorus Line), Olga Merediz (Mamma Mia!, Reckless) and composer Miranda in the role of Usnavi are featured in a cast with Andrea Burns (Beauty and the Beast), Janet Dacal (Good Vibrations), John Herrera (The Mystery of Edwin Drood), Christopher Jackson (The Lion King), Robin de Jesus (Rent) and Karen Olivo (Brooklyn, Rent) The ensemble also includes Rosie Fiedelman, Asmeret Ghebremichael, Joshua Henry, Nina Lafarga, Doreen Montalvo, Javier Munoz, Eliseo Roman, Luis Salgado, Seth Stewart, Rickey Tripp, Michael Balderrama and Stephanie Klemons. The musical features a mix of hip-hop, salsa, merengue music mixed with a little of Miranda's other influence: Broadway. The song list includes "In the Heights," "Breathe," "Benny's Dispatch," "It Won't Be Long Now," "Plan B," "Inútil (Useless)", "No Me Diga," "96,000," "Paciencia Y Fe (Patience and Faith)," "When You're Home," "Piragua," "Siempre (Always)," "The Club/Fireworks," "Sunrise," "Hundreds of Stories," "Carnaval del Barrio," "Atención," "Alabanza," "Everything I Know," "Hear Me Out," "Goodbye" and "Finale." Director Kail also helmed a developmental run of the show at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's 2005 Music Theater Conference. Music director Alex Lacamoire provides music arrangements and orchestrations with Bill Sherman. The design team for In the Heights includes Anna Louizos (scenic), Paul Tazewell (costumes), Jason Lyons (lighting) and Acme Sound Partners (sound). Tickets for In the Heights at 37 Arts, 450 West 37th Street, are available by calling (212) 307-4100. For more information visit the website at intheheightsthemusical.com.
2月1日 The Invitation
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