Following in the footsteps of Avenue Q—the other hit musical about disaffected young people struggling to make it in the Big City—Rent, which ran on Broadway for 12 years (how do you measure, measure a year?), reopens Off Broadway, heat and hot water included. Set in NYC's East Village, this rock musical—a modern take on the classic Puccini opera, La Boheme—tells the story of a group of young artists learning to survive, falling in love, finding their voices and living for today.
Rent, by the late Jonathan Larson, is directed by Michael Greif, who directed the show’s original Off-Broadway and Broadway runs. The creative includes choreographer Larry Keigwin, set designer Mark Wendland, costume designer Angela Wendt and lighting designer Kevin Adams.
The musical made its Broadway debut in April 1996. In addition to winning a Pulitizer Prize for drama, Rent won every major best musical award, including the Tony Award, New York Drama Critics Circle Award, Drama Desk Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award.
In December 2011, MJ Rodriguez, who plays Angel in this revival of Rent, has won the prestigious 2011 Clive Barnes Award, which celebrates the work of young actors and dancers.
Constructed on the site of the old Madison Square Garden, New World Stages represents the modern spirit of Off-Broadway theater. The primarily underground facility boasts five theaters of varying size, a gallery, a bar and a common lobby.
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Tues, Sept 13, 2011 – Sun, Jan 6, 2013 The comedic musical Avenue Q uses Muppet-like puppets to portray characters struggling to make it in New York City.
Thurs, July 28, 2011 – Sun, Sept 2, 2012 Million Dollar Quartet is the electrifying new musical inspired by the famed recording session that brought together rock 'n' roll icons Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis for the first and only time. On December 4, 1956, these four young musicians gathered at Sun Records in Memphis for what would be one of the greatest jam sessions ever.
Fri, Oct 7, 2011 – Sun, June 3, 2012 Writer C.S. Lewis is invited to the home of legendary psychoanalyst Dr. Sigmund Freud, where he is expecting he will be called on the carpet for satirizing Freud in a recent book. Lewis soon realizes Freud has a much more significant agenda. On the day England enters World War II, Freud and Lewis clash on the existence of God, love, sex and the meaning of life—only two weeks before Freud chooses to take his own.