electric blues
30 April 2013 @ 5:19 PM

sailforalittle:

2013 Tony Nominations || Best Revival of a Musical

3 weeks ago via newyorkshows (originally sailforalittle)
30 April 2013 @ 5:19 PM

2013 Tony Nominations || Best Musical

3 weeks ago via newyorkshows (originally sailforalittle)
31 December 2012 @ 2:29 PM
outoftheruinsandrubble:


Lin-Manuel Miranda talking about closing night at Bring It On: The Musical. This is why I love theatre.

outoftheruinsandrubble:

Lin-Manuel Miranda talking about closing night at Bring It On: The Musical. This is why I love theatre.

4 months ago via tenminutesago (originally outoftheruinsandrubble)
27 December 2012 @ 10:14 AM
tags:
#broadway
#obama

Broadway’s finest come out for the Broadway4Obama #BroadwayGOTV Event (10.14.2012) 

(Source: benfankhauser)

4 months ago via newyorkshows (originally benfankhauser)
19 October 2012 @ 5:41 PM

letyourfreakflagwave:

twelve terrific musicals (in no particular order) » next to normal

7 months ago via jordansjeremyarchive (originally letyourfreakflagwave)
22 August 2012 @ 1:16 PM
9 months ago via jordansjeremyarchive (originally adamchanlerberat)
20 August 2012 @ 2:40 PM
9 months ago via jordansjeremyarchive (originally brannells-deactivated20121230)
18 August 2012 @ 6:14 AM

This tag is to get to know the person behind the blog better. As with any tagging game there are rules: Rule 1 - Post the rules. Rule 2 - Answer the questions the tagger set for you in their post and then make 11 new ones. Rule 3 - Tag 11 people and link them to your post. Rule 4 - Let them know you’ve tagged them. 


1.) Absolute dream role: Don’t have one, as don’t want to act but if Stage Manager is a dream role then that’s me. 
2.) Pick any Broadway star you want to duet with: Umm… none as I can’t sing anything but alto in a choir. I’d like to work with Jamie Lloyd though. 
3.) Have you seen any show on West End? So many and yet not enough. 
4.) Favorite song that isn’t from a musical: This is so impossible to answer. Anything by Rufus Wainwright. At the moment I’m really digging Glory Hallelujah by Frank Turner. 
5.) Miss Saigon or Les Miserables? I’ve never seen Miss Saigon live, and I’d have to go with Les Mis because I can listen to it in its entirety whereas Miss Saigon I do skip some songs. 
6.) stage!Jacobs Brothers or stage!Delancey Brothers? Since I can’t place the first one, are they Newsies too? I’m going to go with Delanceys.
7.) If I wrote a song for you to sing, what would you want it to be about? Someone else singing it. I dunno.
8.) Favorite composer: Oh god, Adam Guettel, Jason Robert Brown, Sondheim, Lin-Manuel Miranda. So many!!
9.) Favorite decade: I’m not so sure anymore, I guess living now is pretty good. I’d like to have seen the 60s. 
10.) Favorite Jack Kelly: Only seen Jeremy, but I really, really love Mike and Corey as well. Brendon needs more confidence. 
11) Favorite Piece of Literature: Lord of the Rings, Warm Bodies, Nights in the Gardens of Spain, Whale Rider. 

9 months ago
16 August 2012 @ 12:19 PM

(Source: pylades)

9 months ago via jordansjeremyarchive (originally pylades)
14 August 2012 @ 4:10 PM

fuckyeahjeremyjordan:

Jeremy Jordan, left, in "Newsies the Musical"; Corey Cott in rehearsal for the show.Left, Sara Krulwich/The New York Times; Lorenzo BevilaquaJeremy Jordan, left, in “Newsies the Musical”; Corey Cott in rehearsal for the show.

Will the hit Broadway musical “Newsies” continue to flourish without its breakout star, Jeremy Jordan? Disney Theatrical Productions will soon find out. Disney executives said on Tuesday that Mr. Jordan, who has become an audience favorite as the brooding New York City newsboy Jack Kelly, would give his final performance on Sept. 4 so he can concentrate on his new leading role in the NBC series “Smash.” Disney also announced that a 22-year-old unknown, Corey Cott, who graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in May and joined the “Newsies” company last month, would take over the role of Jack on Sept. 5.

Recasting stars can be fraught business on Broadway: Nick Jonas never really caught fire with audiences last spring after replacing Daniel Radcliffe in “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,” and ticket sales to “The Addams Family” fell off considerably when the hugely popular Nathan Lane finished his yearlong contract. But Disney has deep experience with recasting roles in long-running hits like “The Lion King” and “Mary Poppins,” and executives there expressed confidence that Mr. Cott had the tenor, training, and boyish charisma to help coax audience members to return to see “Newsies” over and over again, as Mr. Jordan did.

Thomas Schumacher, president of Disney Theatrical, said in an interview that he was not overly concerned that Mr. Jordan’s departure would hurt ticket sales, and noted that it would be hard to gauge since most Broadway shows have a seasonal dip at the box office in September and October.

“I don’t know if the broadest audience closely follows which actor plays which role, unless it’s a really big-name star,” Mr. Schumacher said. “What’s most important to me is having someone who can play the role beautifully. Jeremy was sensational, and Corey is terrific.”

Mr. Jordan landed the role on “Smash” in late spring, relatively early into his “Newsies” run; most stars stay with new Broadway musicals for a year, but Mr. Jordan said the prime-time television opportunity “seemed too good to pass up.”

At the time he thought he could juggle both jobs, he said – but then came a week this summer when he put in three 14-hour days on the “Smash” set and then four performances of “Newsies” in 48 hours.

“I wasn’t getting enough sleep, I was never home, and I just started to feel the weight of everything,” said Mr. Jordan, who was nominated for a Tony Award this spring for “Newsies.” “I always knew ‘Smash’ would be a full-time job, but I thought – partly because TV is a lot easier than Broadway – that doing both would be manageable for a while. But I needed more balance – I’m getting married in September, too – and I didn’t think it’d be fair to ‘Newsies’ audiences if I started missing a lot of performances because of ‘Smash’ demands.”

Mr. Jordan had not been one to shy away from multitasking; last fall he performed in “Newsies” at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, N.J., while rehearsing for “Bonnie & Clyde” on Broadway; when the latter show flopped, he rejoined the “Newsies” cast for its return to Broadway in the spring.

If the summer has been hectic for Mr. Jordan, it has been head-spinning for Mr. Cott. He quickly began auditioning after graduation, and said he was offered roles in a national tour of the musical “Wicked” and the coming Off Broadway musical “Bare,” while also planning to test for the television series “Glee.” (He is also getting married, in January.) Mr. Cott chose “Newsies,” he said, “because Jack is a great character that I’d be really, really proud to play, and because it’s pretty incredible to make my Broadway debut in a memorable leading role.”

“Newsies” began performances on Broadway in March; the show has been grossing more than $1 million a week since mid-June, around the time “Newsies” performed on the Tony Awards broadcast and won prizes for best score and choreography.

9 months ago via fuckyeahjeremyjordan (originally fuckyeahjeremyjordan)