Fresh Air - ‘Merrily We Roll Along,’ From Flop To Hit
Episode Date: November 27, 2025A filmed version of the live Broadway production of Stephen Sondheim’s ‘Merrily We Roll Along’ will open in theaters on Dec. 5. We listen back to a 2024 interview with revival director Maria Fri...edman and actor Jonathan Groff.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is fresh air. I'm Terry Gross. Happy Thanksgiving. Today's show is about Stephen Sondheim's
1981 musical Merrily We Roll Along. Next week, a filmed version of the hit 2023 Broadway revival
will open in movie theaters for a limited run, and that's great news. The original production
closed after only 16 performances. But over the years, this terrific musical developed a cult
following. There have been several revivals, but there have been several revivals, but there's
the 2023 production was the first to open on Broadway, and it was only a limited engagement.
It received seven Tony nominations and won four Tonys, including Best Revival of a Musical.
Today we'll listen back to my conversation from last year while the show was still on Broadway,
with Jonathan Groff, who won a best performer Tony for his starring role as Frank.
His performance in Hamilton, as King George, earned him a Tony nomination,
and he received another nomination for his current role as Bobby Darren in the musical Just in Time.
Graff has also known for his performances in the movie Frozen and in the TV series Mind Hunter, Looking, and Glee.
My other guest is Maria Friedman, who received a Tony nomination for directing the Merrily Revival.
Friedman had also worked closely with Sondheim in the past.
On stage, she co-starred in a London revival of Merrily in the mid-90s,
under Sondheim's direction.
She also had leading roles in British productions
of the Sondheim musical's passion
and Sunday in the Park with George.
She became good friends with Sondheim
and he became the godfather of one of her children.
People sometimes complain
that Sondheim doesn't write hummable melodies,
which isn't true,
but it's particularly not true of the songs in Merrily,
as you'll hear when we play excerpts from the new cast recording.
The story begins with three old friends,
Jonathan Groff plays Frank, a composer turned film producer.
Daniel Radcliffe plays Charlie, a lyricist and playwright, who wrote songs with Frank, and thinks Frank abandoned his calling as a composer to make money as a crowd-pleasing movie producer.
Lindsay Mendez plays Mary, a best-selling novelist turned theater critic, who's become bitter and drinks way too much.
Charlie and Mary feel abandoned by Frank.
The story spans 20 years, starting in 1976.
Each scene goes further back in time until 1957 when the friends first meet.
Let's start with Jonathan Groff singing Old Friends from the new cast recording.
Hey, old friend, are you okay?
Old friend, what do you say?
Old friend, are we or are we unique?
Time goes by.
Everything else
Keeps changing
You and I
We get continued next week
Most friends fade
Or they don't make the grade
New ones are quickly made
And in a pinch, sure
They'll do
But us, old friend
What's to discuss, old friend?
Here's to us
Who's like us
Damn few
That was old friends
From the new revival
of Stephen Soundtimes
Merrily we roll along
Jonathan Graff
Maria Friedman
Congratulations on the show
Congratulations on your
Tony nominations
I love this revival so much
I'm so happy to have you on the show
Thank you we're happy to be here
Sondheim songs often have a different meaning than you'd think out of context.
And this is sung after a fight between Jonathan's character, the composer, Franklin Shepard,
and Daniel Radcliffe's character, the lyricist, Charlie Kringis,
after their collaboration keeps getting putting on hold because the composer has become a successful film producer
and isn't writing music.
And the lyricist is really frustrated because he thinks that the composer is a genius
and he's not fulfilling his true worth.
It's also very syncopated this song.
And I always think of Merrily as Sondheim's syncopated musical.
So many of these songs are syncopated.
And Maria, I'm wondering if he ever talked to you about that.
No, he'd always taught character and story,
and that's what drove him to write in the rhythms that he did for different people.
It's a very, very good question, by the way,
that you notice that it's quite spiky
and it becomes more rhapsodic and luscious
as we will walk backwards towards the hope
and there was a point where they really have a row
and finally an argument I think you call it
a row in England
and the syncopation is about the edginess of the way they feel
it's not just there as a kind of add-on
it's driven by the narrative
so Jonathan what was it like for you
to sing that song.
And maybe you could clap out or sing out
or point out the syncopation in it.
Is this in the melody?
In the melody, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Even the opening line.
Hey, own friend, are you okay?
Old friend.
One of my favorite ones,
one of my favorite parts, though, is
when I say,
most friends fade or they don't make the grade.
New ones are quickly made.
The spaces are so delicious to play in the writing of the music.
And Maria, oftentimes in rehearsal, would talk with us about how the pauses are just as, if not more important, than the notes.
The pauses in between the notes.
And understanding the life that happens in those pauses are so major.
And in that song, there's a kind of, because the character,
of Frank is trying to persuade, trying to manage Charlie's spikiness.
There's almost like a playfulness, I find in the pauses, particularly in that one line, where I'm
waiting for him to break.
I'm waiting for him to melt a little bit.
And that tension is so fun to play.
The original 1981 production of Merrily We Roll Along was a big flop.
It closed after, I think, 16 performances.
Maria, you were close friends with Sondheim.
You became close friends.
So why did you want to do a production, a new revival of Merley,
knowing that previous attempts also failed?
And I don't think they were necessarily artistic failures.
I've seen a few productions that I thought were great.
Had they tried to diagnose why the show had never succeeded before?
Yeah, yeah.
And what was the diagnosis?
Well, I never knew what their diagnosis was what they put in this show.
So they didn't discuss that with me
I'll tell you one thing they were absolutely adamant about
is that we didn't ever refer back to the old version
that this was the version they wanted done
that they themselves had rejected the old version that they had written
so which was deeply painful for them
but they were starting afresh
you know a couple of people have taken bits from the old one
that was just an absolute no-go with Steve
he did not want his other version ever done again.
This is the first commercially successful production of Merrily.
In the show, when the characters have the first successful production,
they're standing outside the door, listening for the applause.
And when they hear the applause, they're saying, it's a hit, it's a hit.
So where were you on opening night on Broadway for this show?
And I'm also wondering, like, if you all went somewhere,
afterwards and saying it's a hit.
Well, I was in the auditorium.
I can't tell you how much I missed Steve that night.
Because for me, this has been a love letter to him from day one.
Not that he wanted the love letter, may I say.
He always would say, for God's sake, don't do it for me, do it for you.
And I'll come and see it.
And if I like it, I'll let you know.
And if I don't, trust me, I'll let you know.
But I went into this, if it any way sounds arrogant, then I've not made myself clear.
I was really calm on opening night.
I sat in the auditorium.
I watched a whole audience sitting at the front of their seats.
I heard an opening night that was quiet, sort of, I don't know,
it felt like the whole room was pushing as one towards the story.
I felt totally relaxed because I've been with this show now
on and off for 30-something years
and it was what I, everything I wanted on that stage, there it was.
Jonathan, were you listening carefully to the applause
to see which way it was going to go?
It's so funny you asked that because like Maria,
funnily enough, the success you could hear in the silence.
You could.
It's absolutely right, Jonathan.
It's in the silence.
in the breathing as one
when they heard things
that they collected those moments
a bit like a sleuth
they're going it backwards
they're like
you just hear the whole
audience as one
yeah there's some lines that happen
two hours and 40 minutes
into an evening
after an audience
one line that has been laid out
one line that takes over the course
of maybe three seconds to say
and now you've had a whole show
a whole intermission
and this
reappear
several of these lines
reappear at the very end
and when you feel those
land
it's like
whoa this these people
are really
listening and
picking up that
detail that he
that starts with
his writing
are you talking about
lines in the song
Our Time
yes
I'm thinking about
a specific dialogue
line
it's just after
I can't talk about it without crying
It's like so beautiful
The line comes after
The character of Mary
This is in the first scene
Which is chronologically the end of their story
But it's the first scene that the audience is seeing
And Mary
Who's the dearest friend of Frank leaves
And it's like
It's like his heart walks out the door
And just after
that happens, this young, sort of like what would be the young version of Charlie, this young
writer says, how do I get to be you? Devastating line, that's a devastating line. And Frank says to this
young man, don't just write what you know, pointing to his head, write what you know touching
his heart. And some nights, that line gets a bit of a laugh because maybe it's a bit of a
do she thing to say. And it's called upon again at the end of the show in the very final
scene, Charlie says it to Frank. And it starts everything. It starts their collaboration. It
starts their love story. It's the beginning of everything. And it's just thrown away. Yeah.
He says, you really like what I wrote? He says, yeah. He says, you do. You don't just write what you know.
You write what you know. Oh, and that's it. And that's two hours, including an interval. Yeah.
Later, and the whole audience just go, oh, you just feel the pain.
Jonathan, how could you tear up after having done so many performances of this?
How is it that it's still so emotional for you?
It's such a good question.
I think that they wrote something really personal, Stephen Sondheim and George Firth,
feels like just here let me take my heart out of my body and just place it at your feet that is in the energy of the writing
and then maria came in and asked us all to do that they did it they had the bravery to do it and so
everything actually is a word that comes up a lot in the music and in the script this word everything
And in a kind of cosmic sense, Maria gave us the gift of inviting all of us to give everything.
I mean, including off-Broadway, we've done this over 300 times.
Instead of it getting rote or instead of it getting stale, it just goes deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper.
That's a quote. Yeah, yeah, it is.
There's another thing, though, what I find really interesting, both as a performer and watching people like Jonathan, is that we have one tool that is our very, very best friend as an actor, and that's staying present.
The greatest actors are present. They're not doing yesterday's show or a plan in their head.
And because we change and the audience change, you know, we have different days, we're tired, we've had an argument, we've fallen in love, whatever it is, whatever it is, our life is running in town.
alongside the play, that if you are skilled enough and open enough as a performer, the person in
front of you will be changing slightly every day. And when an actor presents you with something
different, you can do two things. You can resent it because it takes you away from what you
plan to do, or you go with it and it makes you richer and deeper. And hopefully, ultimately,
they come back to something that you need and want,
that it's a conversation, it's a constant conversation.
And I don't know if that's right, Jonathan,
that I see you every day, every time I pop in and see you.
It feels fresh because it's now, it's today.
Jonathan, you mentioned that the word everything,
that you were encouraged to give everything,
and the word everything is mentioned in the song Our Time.
so I'd like to play that
and just to set the scene
this is on the rooftop of an apartment building
that both Charlie and Frank are living in
Charlie has been listening to Frank's music
like through the walls
and he had given Frank a copy of his play
to read and they both really admire each other's work
and Frank has this idea we should collaborate
you write words and I write music
we should be a team
and it seems like a new world
because they're on the verge of a new career
it's a new generation, it's a new time,
it's a new world, and he sings our time
and there's such sadness when we hear it in the audience
because we all know how things have turned out
the compromises, the disappointments,
the anger between the two of them, the frustrations.
So anything you want to add to that, Jonathan?
I thought you set it up beautifully.
Yeah, I'm going to write it down and copy it.
And I should also mention it, you know, we know that Frank has lost friends and family
because he stopped paying attention to them to devote all of his time to his career and to success.
So let's hear Jonathan Groff sing Our Time.
Something is stirring, shifting ground, it's just begun.
Edges are blurring all around, and yesterday is done.
Feel the flow, hear what's happening, we're what's happening.
Don't you know, we're the movers, and we're the shapers, and we're the shapers,
the names in tomorrow's papers up to us man to show them it's our time breathe it in worlds to change and worlds to win our turn coming through me and me and you man me and you
Jonathan, when you sing that, what are you thinking about?
I know you're thinking about being frank, but what do you connect it to in your own life?
Because he's thinking about, you know, it's our time, the generation's different.
But there's this line, and yesterday is done.
Can you talk a little bit of, is it too emotional?
No, no, it's okay.
It's great that you bring up that line, too, because that is also the first line of the entire show.
Yesterday is done.
And the special gift of being an actor inside of this piece,
because the show goes backwards,
it forces the actor to be ultra-present.
Because unlike most shows,
where you build over an arc of an evening,
you start at the beginning and go to the end,
and you carry with you the whole show
to the final moment.
In this, you start at the end
and you spend the show shedding your life
until we're at the purest version,
which is on the rooftop singing our time.
And yesterday is done.
To hear that at the top of the show
and to start performing
is such a reminder every day for me to be present.
And when I've made my way through the story
and I get to the end
I feel like I am 18 years old
I feel full of hope
it's funny because it makes me emotional
when I think about it as an adult
but when I'm inside of it I really feel like I'm 18
and then at the same time I feel like I'm talking
to Daniel Radcliffe
and there are moments when I feel like
there is no character there
It is, of course, Frank and Charlie.
That's them.
We're trying to tell the story.
That's the most important thing.
But at the exact same moment, I'm saying these things to Dan into his eyes.
And looking out at this audience on Broadway, like 40 plus years later, on the edge of their seats at this show.
And it feels like anything is possible.
It's like the most inspiring, buoyant, life-affirming, exciting.
vibration to be inside of.
If you're just joining us, my guests are Jonathan Graf, who won a Tony for his starring
performance in the 2023 Broadway revival of Sondheim's musical Merrily Rroll Along, and Maria
Friedman, who was nominated for directing the revival. A filmed version of that revival opens in
movie theaters next week. We'll hear more of the interview after a break. I'm Terry Gross,
and this is fresh air.
This is fresh air. I'm Terry Gross. Today we're talking about the
23 hit Broadway revival of Stephen Soundheim's musical Marily We Roll Along, which won a Tony
for Best Revival of a Musical. The revival ended its limited run last year, but a filmed version
of that production opens in movie theaters next week. My guest are Maria Friedman, who received
a Tony nomination for directing the show, and Jonathan Graff, who won a Tony for his performance.
Graff also earned Tony nominations for his role as King George and
Hamilton, and for his current role as Bobby Darren in the musical Just in Time.
He's also starred in the TV series Mind Hunter, Looking, and Glee.
So, Jonathan, you're tearing up talking about some of these songs and what they mean to you,
but you can't really do that on stage because you have to be in the moment.
How does that work?
How do you get your voice out?
I know when I cry, my voice just kind of quivers and it's hard to speak.
it's interesting right before we started rehearsals
I was obsessively listening to the music
became obsessed with the score
and I was trying to know the music
before the first day of rehearsal
because the music is not changing
because this is a revival of a famous Sondheim show
and I would get to learning our time
and I would just weep
and I was like okay I guess once I'm in rehearsal
I'll stop aggressively weeping
and we'll be able to sing this song
And then our first day of staging this song in the show sat there with Maria and Dan and Lindsay and we're just all weeping and we're just we're crying.
I don't know, we're mourning the inner child, we're the dreams that all of it.
And it wasn't really until we had the audience there that I could actually pull myself together because understanding, okay, this is a story that we're telling for an audience.
And what Maria, especially in the intimacy of the off-Broadway experience at New York Theater Workshop, where we were for three months before moving to Broadway and the audience is really in your lap.
And that, that for me, brings up a lot of self-conscious feelings.
And Maria would help me by saying, the ideas that you're articulating are more important than you're feeling embarrassed that the audience is so close to you.
say what they wrote you have to send these ideas into the audience and out into the street outside
and so connecting to the importance of telling the story and communicating the ideas was essential
in getting me over that kind of crying that makes it unable to speak and so I still feel quite
emotional when I'm singing it and tears do come but the necessity
and the need to articulate the thoughts and the ideas take over.
The same thing, I don't know about you,
but I have cried probably almost as much over joy
and beauty and possibility.
So I say use it.
You know, if it comes because you're excited
and you're sitting with your best friend
and it's possible, I know I have welled up and teared up
with pure joy and hope many times,
a beautiful sunset, a moment where I'm sharing
ecstasy with friends
I don't mean that in the
chemical sense
I mean in the
but that will make me cry
so if that's what Jonathan feels
when he's feeling those things
let it happen why not
Maria how did you cast Jonathan
in the role of Frank
by meeting him
we talked on a Zoom
and then I took him to Steve
Sondheim's house
who had already passed away
because I wanted
I wanted Steve to be
I don't know, somehow part of the decision.
I wanted Steve to meet Jonathan properly, and we sat and we talked in his house for ages.
And then Jonathan drove me to my hotel, and I got out the car just going, well, that's that then.
It did mean that we all had to wait an enormous amount of time for him, but I would do that 10 times over.
How did you cast Daniel Radcliffe?
Did you have any idea that he sang?
Yes, I knew he sang.
He'd come to see the show in London and had photographs with the cast.
And I remember thinking, if I was Daniel and I was watching that show and I was watching that part, I'd think, that's my part.
Because, I mean, he is Charlie.
He's just a walk.
I mean, he's that kind of brilliance.
Anyway, he's Charlie.
And then lists arrived.
he was on the list and he's with my agent and so I think they'd just done availabilities
across a you know a range of people and my agent called me saying we've just had an
availability on Daniel and I just thought well that's that then isn't it if that means he
you know the fact they'd called me meant that there was a big possibility he was at least
interested and then I think I was auditioned I mean I had to go
meet him a couple of times to see whether he would get on with me.
And he's a proper, true, brilliant, brilliant actor.
So we immediately started talking about character and the detail and things that he was concerned about
and asked me as many questions as I asked him.
And that was that.
We're listening to my interview with Maria Friedman,
who directed the 2003 hit Broadway revival of the Sondheim musical,
merrily we roll along, and Jonathan Graff, he starred in the show, along with Daniel Radcliffe and
Lindsay Mendez. A filmed version of that revival opens in movie theaters next week. We'll hear more
after a break. This is fresh air. Maria, you played Mary, one of the three leads in the show
in the mid-90s, and this is the time when Sondheim was rewriting it as you were rehearsing it.
How did he direct you as, well, he wasn't directing the show, but I'm sure he was making suggestions to you?
No, he was directing the show.
He was directing it.
Okay, like literally or actually?
I mean, he's a great collaborator, so he wouldn't step on the toes of the staging, but the staging is only part of directing.
So how did he direct you in that character?
And could you compare that to how you directed Lindsay Mendez, who plays at Mary, in the character?
the new revival. There's a kind of reverence about Steve, which he hated. So they had the
published score, and I was being made to sing like it was Charlie, like down here. Because it was
printed in that score. So I was like, anyway, he came into the rehearsal room and he just
looked at the musical director and Terry said, why is she singing down there? And they said, well, it's in the
score. He said, I write for people. I don't write an idea. So up it went by a fifth. And
suddenly it was, guess what, in my key? And I had been saying to them, he won't mind, but they
were like, he's coming and it's got to be in this thing. So that was the first thing. I tore up
it's got to be in this key. So when an actor arrives with me and it's out of there, we change
the key. We make it fit them. Second thing is, it's all about the detail. So if ever you skimmed
past a thought or an idea or a subtext, he would sit cross-legged looking into my eyes
maybe two foot away and just going, nope, what are you thinking? Nope, what's that? What are you
doing? What are you thinking? And then he would fill you or make you fill up yourself with your
ideas. It's what we're talking about, the pauses, the bits in between, the connective tissue
that allow you to just be full with that part.
That was one thing.
The other thing is I played her incredibly wild the first scene where she's drunk
and I was like screaming and throwing things and falling on the floor and everything.
It was really fierce and always different.
So I would every single day do something different so that the cast would jump out of their skin.
I'd go up to somebody else and whatever.
He said to me, I'm really worried about you.
This comes too easily to you.
And over the years, I was so happy because I thought, oh my God, maybe this is like a premonition.
I'm going to be one of these crazy, angry banshees, alcoholic, whatever.
But because he said that, I promise you, I kept an eye on myself.
Like in real life?
Yeah, because it was easy for me to be that wild.
I didn't have that kind of safety valve that I see a lot of actors have.
It was all out.
Were you letting out your bottled up anger on stage?
That's what he said to me.
He said, there's some massive part of you that's angry, Maria.
And I'd always thought of myself as playful and funny and good to be around.
But then I kind of, I realize, of course, that is the actor I am.
I don't say yesterday is done.
I'm bringing it all with me.
So it's all available. It's all available that stuff. And I had a very complicated childhood. So all those things that were unprocessed find their way into the corners of what I do as a performer. So I hope that's something that I was given to him is kind of to be mindful that there's a separation between acting and your real life. Make sure that you're not bleeding the two into one another. That they are, it's a technical requirement that mustn't cost you so much.
that it makes you sick, because it could do when you're asked to do that much.
Can you think of an example when Sondheim was sitting down, looking into your eyes, and said, nope?
I can tell you a story when I was doing Sunday in the park with George,
where I had cried during when I was playing the old Marie, and is a beautiful song called Children and Art.
And I had got over-emotional about part of that, this little old lady's idea about her grandson's art.
And he came, he came, it was flying in my dressing room, absolutely raging, saying, what was that?
And I was like, oh, I actually thought I'd been quite good that night.
I was like, oh, dear, oh, dear.
And he just said, it's not for you to cry.
It's for the audience to cry.
Now, that I know goes against what I'm saying,
but you have to choose when you cry.
And I'd just become sort of sentimental
with the kind of beauty of the music
and it wasn't specific enough.
And he loved me being specific.
And I'd kind of given it a kind of glow of sentimentality.
And he was just like, fuming with me.
And I remember just sitting there shaking.
It was the first time he's ever really crossed with me, just thinking, oh.
And Jonathan and I share an exact same thing, is that he came in into the rehearsal room and he gave me, and everybody, many, many notes in Sunday in the Park of George.
And I had about 21 different notes where he said, when you do this, do that, when you do that, do that.
I just nodded, nodded, nodded.
And he flew into my dresser room that evening.
And he said, I was ready to be really mad at you.
because I thought, who is this arrogant girl without her notebook and her pencil?
She didn't write down one thing I said, and then you did them all.
And it's exactly the same.
And that's where our friendship started there at that point.
Speaking of Sondheim, as we've discussed, Marily is told in like reverse chronological order.
It starts with the present when expectations have not been fulfilled.
And it ends when they're like 20 years younger, when expectations are so high and they're so excited and so fresh and the world is so new to them.
And several songs are repriezed, but often the second time around when they're younger, the song has a much more optimistic flair than the first time around that we heard the song.
And that's particularly true of a song called Not a Day Goes By.
and the first time we hear it Frank's wife is singing it while they're in the middle of this very acrimonious divorce
and the second time we hear it is at their wedding like years earlier and you know one of the times
I interviewed Sondheim I asked him about that song and about writing things in reverse chronological order
so before we hear both versions of that song I'd like to play what Sondheim had to say about it
So here's Sont, I'm talking about writing the song in reverse chronological order.
Well, I wrote the whole score, knowing that it was going to go backwards in time.
And I thought, what does that imply?
Well, it implies that something that you and I sing today, 20 years from now,
will have a different meaning to both of us.
It doesn't have to be that we get divorced.
Maybe it'll be memories of something.
But everything that happens at a given time in your life has echoes and resonances afterwards,
what I would call like repriezes really
of thoughts of moments in your life
that happen in different contexts
so I thought if I'm going to write the show
that goes backwards in time
we'll start with the repriezes
that is to say start with the variation
on the theme and then go back to the theme
and that's what happens here
it happens with a lot of other songs in the show too
but this one very specifically with the lyric
because it applies to two very distinct
and distinctly defined situations
one of divorce and when they got married.
So you're taking two high spots of their lives,
their marriage and their divorce.
I did that throughout the show.
I still began, as I always do,
writing the score from the first song on,
but knowing, always making notes
as to how I would use it later in the show.
So I never wrote blind, so to speak.
I wrote knowing, okay, this will be useful
when this, because we had plotted out the show
and we knew what was going to happen in the second act.
In other words,
we knew what had happened in the past.
And so, yeah, so I was writing to that kind of plot.
Okay, that was Stephen Sondheim on Fresh Air.
So let's hear that song, Not a Day Goes By.
The first version we'll hear is Katie Rose Clark singing it when Beth and Frank are divorcing.
And it's a very acrimonious divorce.
And the second version is when they're getting married.
And she's just expressing her love for him and Frank, my guest, Jonathan Graeme,
off duets with her. So here we go. Two versions of Not a Day Goes By from Meryly We Roll
Along. Not a day goes by. Not a single day. But you're somewhere a part of my life. And it
looks like you'll stay as the days go by.
I keep thinking when does it end
Where's the day I'll have started forgetting
But I just go on thinking and sweating
And cursing and crying
And turning and reaching and waking
And dying and no
Not a day goes by
Not a blessed day
Not a day
Not a day goes by
Not a single day
But you're somewhere a part of my life
And it looks like you'll stay
As the days go by
I keep thinking when does it end
That it can't get much better, much longer
But it only gets better and stronger
And deeper and nearer and simpler and freer
And richer and clearer
And no
Not a day goes by
That was two versions of Not a Day Goes By
from the new cast recording of Merrily We Roll Along.
We'll talk with the show's star Jonathan Groff
and the director, Maria Friedman.
After a short break, this is fresh air.
Let's get back to my interview with the star
of the 2023 Tony Award-winning revival
of Merrily We Roll Along, Jonathan Groff,
and its director, Maria Friedman.
A filmed version of that revival
opens in movie theaters next week.
Maria, another question for you about Sondheim.
He became the godfather of one of your children.
What did that mean in your life and in his life and your child's life?
Huge amount.
And my other child's mentor, along with, I mean, he mentored a lot of young writers.
It meant everything.
I asked him after I'd had a big health scare.
We were walking along Covent Garden.
We were always held hands or, you know, we were just like just walking.
He loved walking the streets of London.
And he, when I got diagnosed, he said, I'm taking you to the hospital.
I mean, he was, you know, he was very much, you know, he was a great friend to those of us lucky enough.
I don't want to own him, that's the thing.
when I've seen a lot of people come out of the woodwork who claim him as great friends.
So I don't want to own him.
What it meant to me was everything.
I asked him whether he would be, you know, godfather to either one of my children.
Toby was the one he'd known longest.
So he said Toby, but I really wanted to make sure that if I wasn't around,
that they had this sort of, you know, contact with them.
man that meant so much to me in my life. So that's how that happened. Had you asked Sondheim to
be the godfather of one of your children, afraid that you might not live very long? Yeah. Yeah. And he was
very happy to accept. He had no choice, really, did he? No, thanks. No, it was lovely. Really, really
lovely yeah outrageous of me to ask but um he he was he was happy he was happy jonathan a question for you
a lot of people know you from hamilton where you were king george and so hamilton is such an
ensemble cast but you're always on stage alone like you're the king you're the british one and everybody
in the cast is fighting like the revolutionary war they want to be done with you and so in this
great ensemble show like you're alone on stage singing your king george stuff whereas in merrily you're the
central figure in an ensemble cast you're the figure that everybody else revolves around um and so it seems so
different to me can you just compare those two experiences when i said yes to to signing on to hamilton
for a year i said yes of course because i loved the nine minutes
that I got to be on stage as King George.
But really the yes was to be inside of that brilliant material eight times a week.
Theater for me is, it's almost religious.
You know, they say you are what you repeatedly do.
And when you're doing a show, you show up to the theater eight times a week
and you repeat the same words over and over.
again. And so I take it really seriously what I, you're fortunate enough to be in the position where I can
in certain ways choose the things that I get to spend the eight show a week, the material that I get to
spend doing that. And with Hamilton, I would stand in the king costume, in the box, and I would
peek through the curtain, and I would watch the entire show. Performing wise, it's so much more difficult
for me to do those nine minutes than it is to play Frank because to come out cold and sing
and leave and like you said Terry not interact with anyone is is not my personal dream of acting
I love interacting while acting with merrily getting to to hear this incredible material
and get to have this incredible material inside of my body eight times a week
is literally life-changing.
Like the cells in your body, the music, the vibration.
I feel like I'm 18 when the show is over.
And to be inside of something where you can play everything,
like the therapy?
Can you imagine the therapy of that that we get every night?
to scream and show every dark, repressed corner of myself
and then lean into the joy.
I mean, it really is the gift of gifts.
Thank you both so much.
And thank you for this production.
I just enjoyed it so much.
Thank you so much.
It's been a real pleasure.
Thank you for the great questions and the great time.
Maria Friedman directed the 2023 revival of San Francisco.
Mary We Roll Along.
Jonathan Groff starred in the production
in the role of Frank.
I spoke with them last year
when the show was still on Broadway.
A filmed version of that production
will open in movie theaters next week.
How's it going?
Good, you?
Fair.
Yeah, tell me.
Russian tea room.
Hi.
Mary!
Say hello.
I think I got a job.
Where?
True romances.
Posing.
Thank you.
Writing captions.
What about the book?
What about the book?
Nothing.
Are you working on the book?
Yes.
No.
Mary?
Right, I know.
Yes, me and Balzac.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne Rae Bledonato,
Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monick Nazareth, Thea Chaliner, Susan Yikindi, and Anna Bauman.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nestor.
Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson.
Roberta Shorock directs the show
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley
I'm Tiri Gross
and all of us at Fresh Air
wish you a happy Thanksgiving
How's it coming?
Good, you?
Done!
One minute!
Helper coming!
Hi!
Mary!
Say hello!
I got another job.
Where?
What's that?
A brand new concept.
Pop-up pictures.
What about the book?
What about the book?
Did you give the publisher the book?
Yes.
No.
Look, I never...
Finished!
Let me call you back.
Right.
This is just a draft.
Probably it stinks.
Right.
I haven't had the time to do a polish.
Would you say...
Right. Who wants to live in New York?
Who wants to worry, the noise, the dirt, the heat?
Who wants the garbage cans clanging in the streets?
Suddenly I do.
They're always popping their cork.
I'll fix that line.
The cops, the cabbies, the sales girls up at sacks.
You got to have a real taste for a maniac.
Suddenly I do.
That's great.
That's swell.
The other stuff as well.
It isn't every day you hear a score this strong.
But fellas, if I'm me, there's only one thing wrong
There's not a tune you can hum
There's not a tune you go bum, bum, bum, bum, didum
You need a tune you go bum, bum, bum, bum, dim
Give me a melody
Why can't you throw him a crumb
What's wrong with letting him tap that toes a bit
I'll let you know when Stravinsky has a hit
Give me a melody
