American History Tellers - History Daily: Rock Musical Rent Debuts on Broadway
Episode Date: April 29, 2024April 29, 1996. New musical Rent premieres on Broadway, only a few months after the death of the show’s creator.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all that an...d more, go to IntoHistory.com.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's the evening of April 29th, 1996, backstage at the Nederlander Theater in New York City.
24-year-old actor Anthony Rapp strides through the warren of dressing rooms and production offices that's nestled beneath the theater.
Backstage crew clear a path for Anthony down
a narrow hallway, wishing him luck as he goes, or as they say in theater land, break a leg.
A voice crackles through speakers on the wall. It's the stage manager calling for places. All
actors for the first number must make their way to the stage at once. Tonight's production is about
to begin, so Anthony picks up the pace. Tonight marks a milestone in Anthony's show business career.
He's spent more than a decade trying to become a star,
but so far has only acted in a series of smaller roles in television, film, and theater.
Eighteen months ago, though, he was cast as Mark Cohen,
one of the lead roles in Rent, an off-Broadway musical that was then still in development.
The show finally
premiered several weeks ago, and after wowing audiences, it's transferred to the larger
Nederlander Theater for its debut in the most famous theater district in the world, Broadway.
Anthony heads up a narrow flight of stairs to a door marked Stage. He gently pushes through
into the cool, still darkness beyond. You can hear the chatter of the waiting
audience. A dresser adjusts Anthony's scarf, making sure that his costume is just right.
The dresser then offers a silent thumbs up and leaves Anthony to find his position next to his
castmates for the opening number. In the darkness, he shares a quick smile with the other actors.
This is the moment they've all been waiting for.
The audience grows quiet as the lights in the theater dim.
Anthony takes one long final breath
and takes his first step on stage.
The Broadway debut of Rent will win critical acclaim
for its story of race, queerness, and perseverance
in the face of strife.
It's a triumph for its creator, 35-year-old Jonathan Larson. But Jonathan will not witness
his musical success. His unexpected death on the eve of his show's debut will cast a poignant
shadow over Rent, even as it becomes a modern classic after its first spectacular performance on Broadway on April 29, 1996.
You're listening ad-free on Wondery+.
I'm Sachi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Hagee.
And we're the hosts of Scamfluencers, a weekly podcast from Wondery
that takes you along the twists and turns of the most infamous scams of all time,
the impact on victims, and what's left once the facade falls away.
Follow Scamfluencers on the Wondery app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
From Noiser and Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham,
and this is History Daily. history is made every day on this podcast every day we tell the true stories of the people and
events that shaped our world today is april 29, 1996. Rock musical Rent debuts on Broadway.
It's a sweltering summer's day in 1989 in Greenwich Village, New York, seven years before
Rent's first Broadway performance. Twenty-nine-year-old composer Jonathan Larson takes a sip of cheap
lemonade and suns himself in a folding chair on the roof of his apartment building.
Next to Jonathan, playwright Billy Aronson fans himself with a newspaper.
There's not much that can be done to beat the searing heat, but their conversation serves as a distraction.
The pair talk about their shared passion, theater.
Jonathan complains about the lack of interest producers have shown in a futuristic musical he's written, loosely based on George Orwell's 1984. With that show stuck in development,
Jonathan's itching for a new project to sink his teeth into, one that he hopes will finally make
it to the stage. Billy groans in understanding and says that he's actually tinkering with a new
idea himself, an adaptation of Puccini's opera La Boheme. The original story
follows a group of creatives living in Paris, struggling to find meaning in a world that's
ambivalent to their plight. It's a predicament that feels familiar to both Billy and Jonathan
as young artists, and Billy explains that he's considering reimagining this story with the
streets of modern New York City replacing Paris. The local neighborhood of Greenwich Village is an
epicenter of counterculture. Struggling artists, wannabe poets, and cultural outcasts have all
carved community for themselves here. In other words, it's the perfect modern equivalent to
Puccini's Paris. Hearing the pitch, Jonathan is transfixed and immediately wants to turn it into
a musical, which Jonathan feels could shine a spotlight on the colorful lives of people like himself. So soon, Jonathan and Billy agree on a name for the new show,
Rent. It's partly a reference to the stress of dealing with New York's extortionate housing
costs. But Jonathan also likes the more dramatic meaning of the word, to be torn apart. Jonathan
envisions the people in the play as being split between different ideas, feelings, and paths rent asunder.
Billy and Jonathan work out a basic outline of the plot.
Then Billy sets about writing lyrics, and Jonathan scores them.
Slowly, a few songs start to form.
I Should Tell You, a love song about jumping into the unknown against one's better judgment.
And Santa Fe, a pop song fantasizing about leaving the difficult New York life behind for something simpler. But though Jonathan and Billy are close friends,
they find collaborating a struggle. Each of them has their own idea for why that is.
Jonathan claims that when they demo new songs, the response to Billy's lyrics isn't as positive
as the reaction to Jonathan's score. But Billy simply says it's a matter of creative differences.
He prefers a more
acerbic and witty tone, while Jonathan wants to approach the themes in the play in a more sincere
and passionate way. Regardless of the reasons, the duo eventually agree to amicably separate,
and Billy gives full creative control of the project to Jonathan. As a show of gratitude,
Jonathan promises to credit Billy for the original idea of the show, if it ever debuts. So now, on his own, Jonathan continues working on Rent, weaving in more of his own
struggles as a creative. But as he writes, he has to deal with numerous tragedies in his personal
life. Deaths from HIV and AIDS are common in this part of New York. AIDS was first identified in the
United States only seven years ago,
but since then it has spread across the country and hitting neighborhoods like Jonathan's especially hard. People suffering from the disease must cope not only with a frightening illness,
but with a society that has turned its back on them. Many Americans seem indifferent to the
growing death toll and view the AIDS epidemic as a problem that doesn't affect them. Jonathan is
sickened by that attitude.
During the process of working out his new musical,
three of Jonathan's friends die due to complications with HIV and AIDS.
And after these deaths, the approach that Jonathan is taking with Rent
feels increasingly self-centered and shallow.
He decides that the story should not focus on his own struggles as a composer and playwright,
and instead it should focus on the lives of people like his recently deceased friends. So between funerals,
Jonathan rewrites the story. Slowly but surely over the course of the next year, Jonathan will
fine-tune Rent into a full script with a catalog of songs. All he will need to do then is find
someone to take a chance on him, and somewhere to give rent a home.
In the Pacific Ocean, halfway between Peru and New Zealand, lies a tiny volcanic island.
It's a little-known British territory called Pitcairn, and it harboured a deep dark scandal. There wouldn't be a girl on Pitcairn once they reach the age of 10 that would still a virgin. It just happens to all of us. I'm
journalist Luke Jones and for almost two years I've been investigating a shocking story that
has left deep scars on generations of women and girls from Pitcairn. When there's nobody watching
nobody going to report it people will get away with what they can get away with. girls from Pitcairn. When there's nobody watching, nobody going to report it,
people will get away with what they can get away with.
In the Pitcairn Trials, I'll be uncovering a story of abuse
and the fight for justice that has brought a unique, lonely Pacific island
to the brink of extinction.
Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery+.
Join Wondery in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Are you in trouble with the law?
Need a lawyer who will fight like hell to keep you out of jail?
We defend and we fight just like you'd want your own children defended.
Whether you're facing a drug charge, caught up on a murder rap,
accused of committing war crimes, look no further than Paul Bergeron.
All the big guys go to Bergeron because he gets everybody off.
You name it, Paul can do it.
Need to launder some money? Broker a deal with a drug cartel?
Take out a witness?
From Wondery, the makers of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body,
comes a new series about a lawyer who broke all the rules.
Isn't it funny how witnesses disappear or how evidence doesn't show up or
somebody doesn't testify correctly? In order to win at all costs. If Paul asked you to do something,
it wasn't a request. It was an order. I'm your host, Brandon James Jenkins. Follow Criminal
Attorney on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Criminal Attorney
early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
It's the fall of 1992 in East Village, New York, two years after Jonathan Larson and Billy
Aronson came up with the concept for Rent.
Jonathan cycles down the street, glancing around at the goings-on in the neighborhood.
It's a peaceful day, with young people lounging outside cafes and apartment buildings smoking cigarettes.
But soon, Jonathan spots a small hive of activity in the otherwise quiet streets.
Builders are hard at work outside the New York Theater Workshop,
a small venue in the very neighborhood in which Rent is set. Suddenly, Jonathan realizes that the perfect home for his musical is right under his nose. Walking inside, he spots a friend who works in the theater. Jonathan tells him about
the new show he's been working on and how the New York Theater Workshop would be the ideal place for
it to premiere. All it takes is a single read-through of the script for the theater's
artistic director to agree, and Jonathan's vision has taken a step closer to the stage.
With a venue secure, Jonathan's next challenge is to find a cast. Over the following weeks,
he selects a group of talented young actors, many of whom live in the same East Village streets that
Rent portrays. As rehearsals begin, Jonathan continues to tinker
with the script, though, adding, rewriting, and removing songs as he goes. But this constant
change slows down production. Still, with each passing day, the musical inches closer and closer
to its final form. But in the midst of this exciting chapter of his life, Jonathan's health
declines. The first warning sign occurs when he collapses in the middle
of rehearsal. After he recovers, Jonathan laughs off the episode. He thinks it's ironic that he
fainted while the cast was singing the phrase, Dying in America, from his song, What You Own.
But despite playing down his collapse, Jonathan undergoes medical tests. They offer no definitive
diagnosis. Determined to see his play through to the end, Jonathan returns to rehearsals.
But it doesn't take long for his ailments to get in the way again.
In January 1996, only a few days before opening night, Jonathan complains of chest pains.
But a further raft of tests in the emergency room still prove inconclusive.
Then on January 24th, Jonathan returns to the set to watch the final
dress rehearsal. He's clearly tired, but nothing could keep him away from the theater at such a
crucial stage. The rehearsal goes well, and the cast and crew leave the venue excited for the
next day's performance. After seven years of planning, Rent is finally ready to hit the stage.
But Jonathan does not live to see it.
Upon returning home from the dress rehearsal,
Jonathan collapses.
His roommate finds him dead in the kitchen a few hours later.
Subsequent investigations will reveal
that Jonathan suffered an aortic dissection,
possibly the result of an undiagnosed genetic disorder.
One by one, the cast and crew of Rent
hear the terrible news.
Shocked and grieving,
they meet at the New York Theater workshop to decide what to do. Rent is set to premiere that evening, and Jonathan's parents have flown to New York for the performance. So after discussing it
among themselves, the cast decides to continue with the premiere and dedicate it to Jonathan's
memory. In front of an emotional audience of friends and family,
the cast of Rent performs the show as a table read,
without costumes or set decoration.
At least, that's how it starts.
But as they go through the script,
the actors find they can't help but stand up and move around,
bringing Jonathan's writing to life.
By act two, the table read is scrapped. The cast returns to the stage after the interval in full costume,
performing the show as it was intended. At the end of the premiere, the audience erupts into cheers.
Tears stream down many people's faces. Jonathan's absence is most keenly felt during the curtain
call, when the show's creator would usually take the applause at a premiere. But a single audience
member breaks the tension, crying out, thank you, Jonathan Larson, as the applause fades.
After the success of this emotional first performance,
Rent will become a runaway hit at the New York Theatre Workshop
and quickly prove itself worthy of a larger stage.
And once it opens at the Nederlander Theatre on Broadway,
three months later,
Rent will reach even greater heights.
It will become a worldwide sensation,
making overnight stars out of its cast,
and it will ensure that the memory of the show's founder,
Jonathan Larson, will remain very much alive.
In November 1991,
media tycoon Robert Maxwell mysteriously vanished
from his luxury yacht in the Canary Islands.
But it wasn't just his body that would come to the surface in the days that followed. It soon emerged that Robert's business was on
the brink of collapse, and behind his facade of wealth and success was a litany of bad investments,
mounting debt, and multi-million dollar fraud. Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondery Show
Business Movers. We tell the true stories of business leaders who risked it all, the critical
moments that defined their journey, and the ideas that transform the way we live our lives. In our
latest series, a young refugee fleeing the Nazis arrives in Britain determined to make something
of his life. Taking the name Robert Maxwell, he builds a publishing and newspaper empire that
spans the globe. But ambition eventually curdles into desperation, and Robert's determination to succeed turns into a willingness to do anything to get ahead.
Follow Business Movers wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app.
This is the emergency broadcast system. A ballistic missile threat has been detected inbound to your area.
Your phone buzzes and you look down to find this alert.
What do you do next? Maybe you're at
the grocery store, or maybe you're with your secret lover, or maybe you're robbing a bank.
Based on the real-life false alarm that terrified Hawaii in 2018, Incoming, a brand new fiction
podcast exclusively on Wondery Plus, follows the journey of a variety of characters as they
confront the unimaginable. The missiles are coming. What am I supposed to do? Featuring Thank you. You can binge incoming exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+, in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
It's June 2nd, 1996, at the Majestic Theater in New York,
six months after Jonathan Larson's death.
To loud applause,
British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber
walks on stage holding an envelope
and takes his place in front of a podium.
This is the Tony Awards,
a ceremony recognizing the best of Broadway theatre.
Andrew is here to present the evening's
most coveted prize, Best Musical.
He pauses, opens the envelope,
looks out at the audience, and then
announces the name of the winner, Rent. The room explodes in cheers. Four producers jump out of
their seats and hug each other before rushing to the stage. Taking turns, they thank the show's
director, the company, the audience, and finally, the man more responsible than anyone else for the musical's success, the much-missed writer and composer Jonathan Larson.
Rent had ten nominations at this ceremony,
and the award for Best Musical is its fourth win.
But although there are no more trophies to be handed out at this year's Tonys,
Rent has more honors to come.
Over the course of the next few months, it wins the Pulitzer Prize for Drama,
six different Theater Desk Awards, and two Theater World Awards.
The accolades ensure that Rent sells out night after night for years.
In 2006, ten years after Rent's debut,
the original Broadway cast reunites for a benefit performance.
Together, they help raise over $2 million for good causes
close to Jonathan Larson's heart,
the local performing arts industry and HIV and AIDS charities.
The final performance of Rent on Broadway comes in 2008. By then, the show has been performed to
more than 5,000 audiences and grossed over $280 million. But the musical's legacy extends far
beyond the money it made or the crowds it entertained. Rent shone a spotlight on an often discriminated-against community,
and through the unforgettable words and music of Jonathan Larson,
it has changed hearts and minds from the moment it debuted on Broadway, April 29, 1996.
Next on History Daily, April 30th, 1963.
A boycott protesting a bus company's hiring policies draws national attention to racial discrimination in the United Kingdom.
From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily.
Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham.
Audio editing by Molly Bond.
Sound design by Molly Bond.
Music by Thrum.
This episode is written and researched by Georgia Hampton.
Edited by Scott Reeves.
Managing producer, Emily Byrne.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.