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LOVE AMONG THE RUINS
'Rent' broke its lease and moved uptown. Now this show about young
artists on the edge is the hottest ticket in New York. And Hollywood
is coming to call.
Originally from Newsweek, issue May 13, '96
Written by Jack Kroll
Found at EBSCO.com
 
THERE'S A SCENE IN THE NEW MUSICAL "Rent" that may be the quintessential romantic 
moment of the '90s. Roger, a struggling rock musician, and Mimi, a junkie who's a dancer
at an S/M club, are having a lovers' quarrel when their beepers go off and each takes out a 
bottle of pills. It's the signal for an "AZT break," and suddenly they realize that they're 
both HIV-positive. Clinch. Love duet. If you don't think this is romantic, consider that 
Jonathan Larson's sensational musical is inspired by Puccini's opera "La Boheme," in
which the lovers Mimi and Rodolfo are tragically separated by her death from tuberculosis. 
Different age, different plague. Larson has updated Puccini's end-of-19th-century Left Bank 
bohemians to end-of-20th-century struggling artists in New York's East Village. His rousing,
moving, scathingly funny show, performed by a cast of youthful unknowns with explosive 
talent and staggering energy, has brought a shocking jolt of creative juice to Broadway.
 
A far greater shock was the sudden death of 35-year-old Larson from an aortic aneurysm 
just before his show opened. His death just before his breakthrough success is the stuff of 
both tragedy and tabloids. Such is our culture. Now Larson's work, along with "Bring in 'Da 
Noise, Bring in 'Da Funk," the tap-dance musical starring the marvelous young dancer 
Savion Glover, is mounting a commando assault on Broadway from the downtown redoubts
of off-Broadway. Both are now encamped amid the revivals ("The King and I") and movie 
adaptations ("Big") that have made Broadway such a creatively fallow field in recent 
seasons. And both are oriented to an audience younger than Broadway usually attracts. If 
both, or either, settle in for a successful run, the door may open for new talent to 
reinvigorate the once dominant American musical theater.
 
"Rent" so far has the sweet smell of success, marked not only by its $6 million advance 
sale (solid, but no guarantee) but also by the swarm of celebrities who have clamored for 
tickets: Michelle Pfeiffer, Sylvester Stallone, Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise, Mel Gibson, 
Ralph Fiennes ... name your own biggie. Last week, on opening night, 21 TV crews, many 
from overseas, swarmed the Nederlander Theatre to shoot the 15 youthful cast members in 
euphoric shock under salvos of cheers. Supermogul David Geffen of the new DreamWorks 
team paid just under a million dollars to record the original-cast album. Pop artists who've 
expressed interest in recording songs from the 33-number score include Whitney Houston, 
Toni Braxton and Boyz II Men. A bidding scrimmage has started for the movie rights among 
such Hollywood heavies as Warner Brothers, Danny DeVito's Jersey Films, Fox 2000 and 
Columbia. The asking price is $3 million, but bonuses for length of run, the Pulitzer Prize 
(which "Rent" has already won), various Tony and critics' awards could jack the price up to 
$3.75 million. Despite these stupefying numbers, the young producers, Jeffrey Seller, 31, 
and Kevin McCollum, 34, and their associate, moneyman Allan S. Gordon, know that they're 
not home free. "There's no such thing in New York," says Seller. "Our company has mostly 
done tours. If you sell 8,000 seats a week in Cleveland, you did a great job. Never having 
done a Broadway show, the idea that you have to sell 450,000 seats a year is daunting."
 
Major Broadway players like the Shubert Organization and Jujamcyn Theaters, which lost 
out to the Nederlanders in the feverish grab for "Rent," would love to be daunted like these 
Broadway tyros. Rocco Landesman, Jujamcyn's president, says he's "crushed" at not getting
"Rent." He predicts the show will be a "crossover success; it will attract an ethnically 
diverse audience, people who are not normally theatergoers." "Rent" has a $67.50 top 
ticket price, but the producers have reserved the first two rows at $20 and are tagging 
mezzanine seats at a "bargain" $30.
 
" 'Rent' has a lot riding on its shoulders," says producer Jim Freydberg, whose "Big" has 
just opened. "I desperately hope it works. If it's successful, we're going to get more daring 
shows on Broadway. If it's not, we're going to get more revivals." This is interesting, 
coming from a competitor whose own show, based on the popular Tom Hanks movie about 
a 13-year-old boy who wakes up one day in the body of a 30-year-old man, could be said to 
represent the less daring sector of Broadway.
 
"If I really wanted to make money I'd go to Wall Street and invent money," says Seller. "I 
came to Broadway because I was excited by the question 'Can you challenge the 
mainstream? Can you reinvent the mainstream from inside the mainstream?'" Says 
McCollum: "It would be disingenuous to say we don't hope to make money with 'Rent.' But 
I'm here because I love the living theater." As Gordon puts it, "We're trying to reinvent how 
you spend money on Broadway. We have no limos. They don't know us at any glitzy 
restaurants." The weird thing is that when these hyped-up, fresh-faced guys say these 
things, you find yourself believing them.
 
"Rent" completes a fortuitous trilogy begun by "Hair" in 1967 and continued by "A Chorus 
Line" in 1975. These breakthrough musicals deal with "marginal" Americans'60s flower 
children, the blue-collar gypsy dancers of Broadway, and now in "Rent" the young people 
who follow a dream of art in a cold time for spirit and body. Larson, who was a denizen of 
New York's down under, evokes in swirling detail the downtown scene that is a paradoxical
mix of wasteland and community. The homeless, the addicts and alkies move like oracular 
nomads among the "artistes" (as a homeless woman scornfully calls them), who don't know 
where their next rent check is coming from, or their next inspiration for a song or a picture, 
or the next lethal raid by the specter of AIDS. Yet "Rent" is a thrilling, positive show. In a 
rich stream of memorable songs, Larson makes true theater music from the eclectic 
energies of today's poprock, gospel, reggae, salsa, even a tango.
 
The "Rent" story began in the summer of 1992, when Larson, riding his bike down Fourth 
Street in the East Village, passed the New York Theatre Workshop, which was in a mess 
with a major renovation. "He stuck his head in the door," says James Nicola, the artistic 
director of NYTW. "He looked in and thought, 'This is perfect'." What was perfect was the 
extraordinary NYTW stage, 40 feet wide and 30 feet deep in a house that had 150 seats. 
It's actually a larger stage than the Nederlander's. "Jonathan always wanted to walk a fine 
line between being the iconoclast and the person that descends from the tradition and 
reinvents it," says Nicola. "Our space brought together all those things. It was a great 
physical expression of what he wanted."
 
The next day Larson cycled back and dropped off a tape of songs he had written for "Rent,"
all sung by him. "I listened to a couple of songs and immediately knew this was a rare and 
gifted songwriter," says Nicola. The four-year process of creating "Rent" had begun. A
director, Michael Greif, was brought in, a crucial step in the shaping of what was more of a 
collage than a play. "I was anxious to neutralize Jonathan's emotionalism and bring in 
some irony," says Greif, a 36-year-old who is now the artistic director of the La Jolla
Playhouse in California. "Jonathan was such a wet guy emotionally," says Greif with a 
laugh. "He was exuberant, childish in all the good and bad ways. He had this enormous 
capacity for joy. He'd write a song and say 'I love it!' And I'd say, 'Guess what? I don't'." 
The process continued, helped by a Richard Rodgers Award of $50,000 (for which Stephen 
Sondheim, Larson's idol and inspiration, was a judge). At a workshop production seen by 
Broadway producers, Seller and McCollum were blown away by what they saw and heard.
 
It was a work that took Larson's "wet" emotionalism and turned it into a fountain of 
unchecked melody and rhythm. Although he called "Rent" a rock opera, it has a much wider 
range than rock, and the score is not a series of discrete bursts of music. From the title 
number, a fierce outcry in a world where "Strangers, landlords, lovers/Your own bloodcells 
betray," the music sweeps Larson's characters—the principals and a wonderful ensemble of 
shifting figures--into a living tapestry of hope, loss, striving, death and a climactic 
resurrection. Larson takes Puccini's young bohemians and refashions them into Roger 
(Adam Pascal), a pretty-boy rocker desperate to write one great song before AIDS kills him; Mimi (Daphne Rubin-Vega), a dancer doomed by drugs; Maureen, a performance artist 
(Idina Menzel), and her lesbian lover Joanne (Fredi Walker); Angel (Wilson Jermaine 
Heredia), a drag queen also doomed by AIDS, and his lover Tom (Jesse L. Martin), a 
computer genius who fears the cyberfuture; Ben (Taye Diggs), the landlord in a world 
where lords shouldn't land; and Mark (Anthony Rapp), a nerdy video artist (and Larson's 
surrogate) who narrates all the interweaving stories to the audience.
 
In songs like Angel and Tom's "I'll Cover You" and Mimi and Roger's "Without You," Larson 
exalts love as the force that binds his characters into an extended family who care for each 
other with all the many varieties of love, from sex to friendship to compassion."Take
Me or Leave Me" is a fiery and funny duet for Maureen and Joanne, each insisting on her 
fierce individuality. The onstage band led by Tim Weil drives not only the irresistibly 
singable score but the explosively witty choreography of Marlies Yearby, who makes every 
move a flesh-riff of the life force itself. Like all the best popular art, "Rent" dares you to 
feel sentimental, showing how sentimentality can be turned into an exultant sweetness 
without which life is a grim mechanism. Puccini had his Mimi die. Larson sends his Mimi to 
the point of extinction and brings her back. There are deaths in "Rent," but Larson needed 
to balance that with a rebirth. His own death before he could really see how well he had 
done is an unbearable irony. He left us singing. "Rent" is his song.
 
 

 

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