The New Yorker Radio Hour - Alicia Keys’s New York Musical Goes on National Tour
Episode Date: July 3, 2026The unofficial anthem of New York City is “Empire State of Mind,” the Jay-Z song with that unforgettable hook, sung by Alicia Keys. So it was only fitting that when New York celebrated the Knicks�...�� N.B.A. Finals victory, Keys took the stage at City Hall to sing it. It was a classic New York moment, for an artist who is herself a true New Yorker. In her musical, “Hell’s Kitchen,” Keys uses her songs to tell the story of a teen-ager growing up, like Keys, in the titular Manhattan neighborhood, near Times Square—a “place of the have-nots,” as she told David Remnick, with “this unique balance between that grime, and the potential of Broadway.” They spoke when “Hell’s Kitchen” was in previews; it went on to win two Tony Awards, and recently began a national tour. This segment originally aired on March 29, 2024. Further reading: “‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Brings Alicia Keys’s Musical Power to the Public,” by Helen Shaw New episodes of The New Yorker Radio Hour drop every Tuesday and Friday. Join host David Remnick as he discusses the latest in politics, news, and current events in conversation with political leaders, newsmakers, innovators, New Yorker staff writers, authors, actors, and musicians. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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The New Yorker Radio Hour is a co-production of WNYC and The New Yorker.
Welcome to The New Yorker Radio Hour.
I'm Adam Howard sitting in today for David Remnick.
There's no doubt the unofficial anthem of New York City is Empire State of Mind.
The Jay-Z song with that unforgettable hook sung by Alicia Keys.
So it was only fitting that when New York celebrated the Nix with a triumphant parade,
Alicia Keys took the stage at City Hall.
You could see Nick's captain, Jalen Brunson, and New York City Mayor Zonemar, Zonarong, Mamdani,
grooving along in the background.
It was a classic New York moment for an artist who is herself classic New York.
Alicia Keys' musical, Hell's Kitchen, uses her songs to tell a story about a teenager growing up in Manhattan, right near Times Square.
It won two Tony Awards, including Best Actress in a Musical, for Malia Joy Moon,
in her first appearance on Broadway.
Alicia Keys talked with David Remnick
when the show was still in previews in 2024.
We're recording and he said that the level looks fantastic.
It's going to be the most phenomenal level you ever had.
Hell's Kitchen just started a national tour,
starting in Las Vegas and going all over the country.
Here's David Remnick with Alicia Keys.
Can you pin down how long it's been in the making
in your mind from, from,
First conception to right now delivering the baby?
I'm going for 13 years because I know it was before my first son was born.
And then I know that Chris and I, the book writer, Chris Diaz, we talk often about that.
Even when Egypt was very, very little, like just born, we were talking through the concepts
and how we want to develop the characters and all of these things.
And what was the original idea?
What was the original impetus to do that?
You had to have a huge career as a singer, as a songwriter, as a performer.
And this is something entirely different, even though I know you love musicals in general.
But for you to do this on an autobiographical basis, to make your life the centerpiece of this work, how did that begin?
Well, first, I do want to say that this isn't autobiographical.
I think that's important to say,
because I think a lot of people think
autobiographical and they think quite literal,
like every single piece,
but is definitely based on the experiences
that I had growing up in New York.
And so in that way, it's very, very real,
it's very authentic,
it's very genuine.
And so that was a bit of the impetus
of like, why is this important to me
and why I felt motivated and eager
to create something that really reflected
the level of diversity
that I've been blessed to grow up with
and for also to be set in Manhattan Plaza,
which is the building that I grew up in
and is a quite unique building
because it's a subsidized rent-controlled living for artists
who, as we know, oftentimes there's months
they go without work,
or there's times when you have more work,
and it's a fluctuating lifestyle.
And my mother would have never been able to raise me in the city
if we hadn't lived there.
Did you find the three, the four-minute record,
the song form limiting in some way and you wanted to break out of it and do something larger on the
screen. Did you see things on stage that you thought, oh, this, I like this form. This could
really fit for me. This could work for something called Hell's Kitchen and based, based at least on
my own story. I love songwriting and it's such a beautiful way to capture a moment and a motion,
a special, you know, a special feeling. But, you know, I do also love performing.
And my mother, she was born in Toledo, Ohio.
She's the quintessential New York story I like to say.
She was born in Toledo, Ohio, and moved to New York City to follow her dreams of dancing and acting.
She went to NYU, and that was how she got here.
That was why I was born here.
That's the reason why, la, la, la.
So I think that because of that, because of her love of acting and her love of theater specifically,
I was really introduced to the theater world from a very young.
age. You know, I remember we would stand on the, like, lower price ticket line, the TKS line,
and everybody be there and you get your tickets and you go to the show. And I was able to really
see different worlds, different creative experiences from a young age. And like, I'll never forget
seeing bringing the noise, bringing the funk. There was the first time I felt, whoa, one, I see
myself up there, or I feel rhythm, I feel dance, I feel power, I feel street, I feel, you know,
these different New York experiences. And so I was very attrown.
attracted to that. And so now as I look back at it, it's so thrilling to be able to merge two worlds
together, this kind of contemporary music world with this musical theater world. Talk to me about
the neighborhood. The show is called Hell's Kitchen. And of course, it's cheek by jow with what we
think of in our imagination and in reality of the Great White Way, Broadway. Right. Exactly.
So talk to me about that side-by-sidness that you grew up with. You grew up in the middle of.
You're growing up in Manhattan Plaza in Hell's Kitchen.
What was the Hell's Kitchen of your childhood and adolescence?
And how did it coexist with this street of dreams, this Broadway that you were so taken with
and that becomes the subject also of your show?
You're so right.
And, you know, Hell's Kitchen when I was growing up was literally, perfectly described in that name.
Like, you know, and those who,
lived or walked to the streets of Hell's Kitchen, I always like to say that it was the place of the
have-nots. Like it was it was the place where everyone who kind of didn't belong anywhere
accumulated prostitutes, drug dealers, pimps, you know, ex-rated theaters, you know,
all kinds of grimy, Hell's Kitchen-esque vibe was was all up in there. And so I think that
in a lot of ways being so close to that reality all the time,
It really hardened me.
It really kind of gave me a certain grit
and definitely a certain way to protect myself.
And I also think, to your point,
there was this unique balance between that grime
and then the potential of Broadway.
You started playing the piano, I think, at seven years old.
When did the dream of doing it as a real performer,
as a professional, enter into your mind?
Seven and a half?
probably four because even before you sat down at the keys yeah because i remember really being
introduced to music through my very first kindergarten teacher she was one of those people that
even to this day she's still alive and you know she always had some scheme up her sleeve she was
going to get us to sing at this place and get us to perform at that place and you know we always kind
of had to okay and and i think that that was a wonderful experience for me to to try things that was
quite nerve-wracking. But the minute I open my mouth, I learned this song and I sang,
I just felt something that I was like, this is something that takes away all the nerves,
all the fear, all the things that get in our way. Do you remember what you were singing at that point?
I do. It was somewhere over the rainbow. It was for the Wizard of Oz. It was like the quintessential
song that would open your mind like that. You know, the song we just released for Hell's Kitchen
called kaleidoscope is very much this somewhere over the rainbow kind of feeling of, you know,
your mind opening and realizing that there's more for you out there in the world.
This is really about a light, light, light of light.
Tonight is shining bright, you know.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, no.
Delight of light.
Put it in the air and let it go.
This is really about a life of a young girl in her 17th year.
and how she is trying to find her way out from under everybody's expectations,
everybody's demands, everybody's, you know, weighted things that end up on all of our shoulders
because people really, they want to protect us, but they, in a lot of ways, stifle us.
And so she's in that very critical time in her life.
She's looking for more.
She's feeling quite rebellious.
She doesn't want to just be told what to do and just, you know, be treated as a little girl.
She really is looking for her muse.
So your main character is 17 years old, and she's named.
Allie.
She's named Allie.
And some people call me Ali, but not many.
Not even then?
Nope.
That's a very special reserved name for only the very, very, very, very most intimate to me.
So people really didn't call me that.
They called me Alicia.
They called me Lelo.
I had another nickname Lelo.
So her name is Ali
And she's 17
And she's really looking for her muse
And she finds a woman
Who is named Miss Liza Jane
And she ends up being quite
The mentor for her
She opens her universe
To the craft of piano playing, actually
And so she's a skilled beautiful classical pianist
And so when she hears her in the Ellington room
which is this kind of multi-purpose room in Manhattan Plaza that really exists.
She's blown away and she feels like she was potential.
She's found what maybe's been calling her.
Her mother's raising her as a single mother and she is really doing everything she possibly can
to hope that she could escape all the traps her mom, Jersey, has had to endure.
Has your mom been able to see the show?
Yes, she has.
I want to hear all about that.
How did she, how did you react moment by moment?
Do you sit with her?
Of course.
First of all, she's at the public.
While Hell's Kitchen was at the public, she went at least two times a week.
And she is the world's best audience member.
No question.
She's going to scream.
She's going to yell.
She's going to, ooh, she's going to ah, she's going to sing, as if she never saw it before.
It must also have been a.
deeply emotional, fascinating thing to cast someone to play the character that is essentially
you.
You're going to stop that.
I told you was not autobiographical, and you're not going to keep saying that.
Yeah, I know.
But on the other hand, you keep giving it away, say how autobiographical it is, but we won't
argue.
Tell me about casting this young actress.
Was it an audition process, or did you go to see?
see people perform around town? How did it work?
Yeah, it was an audition process. We have a tremendous casting agency, and they were able to bring
forth a lot of different, you know, different options. I've definitely been notoriously hard on
everybody because it really has to resonate and feel pure. And so we auditioned a couple of
different people, and then all of a sudden Malia kind of showed up. And we were like,
Hmm.
She would have this tenderness and this ability to tap into these emotional places that felt really sincere.
No, any number of the songs in the show are songs that you've recorded and made hits, gigantic hits in the past, but there's also, I think, four new songs?
Yes, there are new songs, and it's been really, it's been great to kind of see what works in regards to the songs that you might be familiar with.
It's also been wonderful to see what works with songs that have been in my catalog
but are not the quote-unquote gigantic hints and there's a really special way to connect with them
and in some ways I feel, man, these songs must have been written for this.
Talk to me a little bit about songwriting, something that you've been doing since you're
quite, quite young. I think maybe 11 years old was the first time you're writing songs.
Yeah, I think you're right. Eleven, yes.
How has that process changed for you over time? Surely, I've definitely gotten more accustomed to
how it kind of happens. At first, mostly I was writing out of pain or passion or
inexperience or things like that. And that's really how I always write. So that hasn't changed
too much, but I do think that with growing, I learned how to create, how to just create the
container for what wants to be held, and then also recognizing that through that creation,
sometimes there's different ways it comes about. If anything has changed, it's that I realize
that I never know how it's going to happen, ever, never. Well, take a song, an early song like
Fallen, which I think is also in the show. It is. It is. It's really cool. The way we
put it in there, it's totally unexpected. You've never heard it sung like this before.
How did it come about? Like the song itself. Yeah. The song itself was really written.
I remember writing it while I, in my first car, which was a Mazza 626. And at the time,
at the time I was living between, in Harlem, and I was also going back to my mother's house
because she had the piano. And I would go to my mother's house to play the piano, but I
wasn't really living there anymore. And I remember feeling kind of frustrated about,
a very early relationship I was in.
And it was like, sometimes it was so good.
And then we'd be like arguing and it'd be frustrated and it was annoying.
And then I didn't get it.
And then we were like, what was happening?
And I remember being in my car, like feeling that back and forth and back and forth.
And I remember singing this kind of hook thingy.
Something.
I was doing something.
You know, something.
And I was recording it in my phone or my voice notes.
And then I got to my mother's house.
and I sat at the piano and I kind of played these basic chords.
And somehow, between there and there and there,
all of that emotion and feeling kind of revealed itself in this song.
I'm talking with Alicia Keys, the songwriter and performer,
and we'll continue in a moment.
This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. More to come.
This is the New Yorker Radio Hour.
I'm Adam Howard.
We've been hearing from Alicia Keys,
one of the top R&B singers of our time,
with a huge string of hits and Grammy Awards.
Her musical Hell's Kitchen, which opened on Broadway, is now touring the country.
It's loosely based on Key's own experiences.
The main character is a teenage girl named Allie, growing up in the gritty New York of the 1980s,
falling in love with music and wanting to get out into the world.
She has a love interest, but the crucial relationship in the show is really between the girl and her protective mother.
Keys herself grew up early.
She had a record deal and was struggling with the music industry while she was in her
teens. Here's David Remnick talking with Alicia Keys in 2024. Now, you are so committed. You've been so
devoted to this pursuit for such a long time. And at the same time, I think I'm getting this
right, you really seriously considered getting out of the music business. There was a time that
you were burned out. You booked a trip to Egypt, I think it was, only after you'd run a full
marathon in Greece. What was happening with you? You would, God only knows, you had made it.
Now you're trying to think about going out the back door. You know, I don't know if I ever felt like
I was going to not be a part of music, but I definitely for sure experienced a very, you know,
critical time to recognize how much you have to protect your spirit.
And whether you're in music or whether you're a doctor or whether you're a hedge fund person,
it doesn't matter who you are.
If you're in college, you have to protect your spirit.
And the world won't do it for you.
They really won't.
And a lot of times we're out here chasing what we think is success or what we think is a dream or whatever it is that we want to achieve.
And oftentimes we're forgetting about how to continue to be a whole human being and a whole person.
And at the time that you're referring to, I was so eager.
to be successful. I was so eager to, you know, you only get one shot at a dream. So here it is. And you see it right in front of you and you get all these opportunities and you're running after them and you're saying, I could do this and I could do that and I can also do that. And sure I can do that. But I didn't really get any sleep. But I could still do it because maybe tomorrow they won't ask me again. And you have all these feelings of like fear and lack that you won't ever have the chance to do these things again. And so it depletes you. And so at that point,
I was realizing that I just, I lost a part of myself or I had never found it yet, and I needed to
slow down. Since then, I've messed it up 100,000 times more. I had no boundaries. I still didn't
create space. I had people that didn't have my best interest in my world. But slowly but surely,
you start to realize, you know, you have to take control of your life. But you've talked sometimes
about the loss of what you've called sweet anonymity.
And yet there you are, half time with the Super Bowl, you're on concert stages, you're about
to open a big show.
What is that like to lose the gray zone pretty much forever?
I don't know how you get that back.
Hmm.
You know, I feel like I have found a good balance.
you know, I think that a lot of times I realize that it's also where you go, you know,
when I, if I go upstate and take a height among the trees, you know, there's a few other people on a trail,
and I'm just doing my thing, and nobody's, everybody's just trying to get to the top of the mountain.
So you're a New York girl who believes in trees?
I do.
Oh, man.
Not in the beginning.
I was like, I was like, what?
What do you mean trees?
I don't need no cement, concrete.
And I hated camp.
My mother would send me to camp, and I'd be like, ugh.
Trees.
I'm like the bug, the trees, the grass.
I'm with you.
But now I realize, wow, you know what?
You're missing out if you're not touching the grass or seeing some trees or seeing some nature.
Like, that's part of how you keep on, hold on to your soul and your spirit, too.
I have to ask you about this.
There was a song that came out called Thunder on the Mountain by Mr. Dillon,
And all of a sudden, the lyrics are, I was thinking about Alicia Keys, I won't do the voice, I'll spare you.
I was thinking about Alicia Keys, couldn't keep from crying when she was born in Hell's Kitchen and so on and so forth.
I was thinking about Lisa Keys.
Couldn't keep him cried, but she was born in Hill's kitchen.
I was living down a lot.
I'm wondering where in the world is a key.
How did you hear that?
And how did you react?
You know the craziest part is that the person who told me about Bob Dylan writing a song with my name in it and Hell's Kitchen, he was had a premonition of this musical that was John Mayer.
And he was like, did you know that Bob Dylan wrote a song with your name and it about you?
And I was like, what?
What are you talking about?
I had no idea because he was so early.
early, you know, to it that I just hadn't made its way to me yet.
And so, of course, then I'm in shock.
Did you meet?
I'm like, I felt like we couldn't meet.
I was like, there's no way we can meet.
Like, if you wrote that amazing song and put me in it, I just feel like I need to,
I just need to forever see you from afar and just be in awe of the greatness.
So we actually didn't. We didn't.
Now, it's a good thing you really stuck through that hard time that you were describing earlier
because Fast on its heels came tracks on Jay-Z's album, Empire State of Mind, which came out in 2009.
Tell me a little bit about that collaboration.
You've had so many amazing collaborations.
That may be the most famous single to come out of a collaboration.
What was that like?
What's that working process like?
I think what was unique about that process is I was right at the precipice of making a lot of changes in my life.
And, you know, sometimes there's different relationships that you have and you hold on to.
And, you know, you don't know how to move from them.
But during this process, I remember hearing from somebody else that Jay-Z was really trying to make sure I heard this song.
And I'm like, what song?
I never heard the song.
And so he was saying that he was going through all the channels, all the professional
channels and all the things to get me the song.
And like, nobody was answering him back.
Like, nobody was getting back to him.
And so he started to think of like, well, who else can I call?
Like, maybe I should call.
Nobody was returning his calls.
For what?
I don't know why.
What's that about?
What was just have no idea.
But like I said, there were some, there were some needs for some change.
And I was just on the precipice of kind of learning that.
Heads were going to roll.
I mean, shouldn't I at least know about something coming from an esteemed friend?
You know what I mean?
So anyway, of course, then I was like, are you kidding me?
Let me come see you and let me listen to what it is.
And I remember sitting in the room with him and he had kind of the very bare bone.
of the song.
But immediately, you could feel this energy
and this great, like, uplifting triumph in the music
and the song and, of course, about our city, you know.
But funny enough, creating that song was definitely not kind of normal.
Normal to me, because I'm kind of a true school creator
where I really like to be in the room with people that I'm creating with.
that I'm cutting the bass lines and the I'm playing the mood parts and I'm you know we're putting it
all together and we're together.
Old school.
Yeah, we're going to write together.
We're going to be in the same room.
We're going to be like feeling the whatever and we're going to like create it.
I really like that the best.
And in this case, he was kind of on one side of planet.
I was on another side of planet and we had to get done.
And you're sending files back and forth.
Sharing across files.
And that was one of my first experiences kind of doing it like that, which is why there's also a quite a,
funny story that came from it that I cut the first vocals in L.A. and I sent it to him,
and he asked me to redo it.
Excuse me?
It was a good idea because I was sick. I was trying to get it done because he was on deadline.
Did you have laryngitis or something?
I didn't have laryngitis, but I had like a cold and so you could hear it in my nose.
It sounded a little nasally, and it was just like, it just wasn't exactly right.
just wanted to deliver.
Now, we've all seen red books, seen movies, heard about the bad old days of the music business.
And musicians take piano lessons. They take singing lessons. They have all kinds of apprenticeships.
But usually they're not trained in business. But sooner or later, if you get as big as you are or Jay-Z or whoever, you encounter business and the stakes are high.
What's the music business like now and what do you have to watch out for?
Man, the music business.
Let the record show, Alicia Keys, just went.
The music business is one of the most corrupt businesses, period.
It's been that way since it started, since inception.
You know, it's like it's definitely, you know, you'll go, you'll see Fortune 500 companies
and, you know, really experience different, different.
businesses that are set up as businesses should be. And you can see plainly the difference in
the music business and those businesses are baffling. Like if I have my music lawyer look at
something and then I have a traditional business lawyer look at it, they will not understand
why the deal is done the way it's done. They're like, why? This doesn't make any sense. So still to
this day, it's a pennies business. You know, people, people get pennies on the dollar.
From streaming, especially. From everything. From, you know, yes, is it now even more of a smaller
division? Yes, but even when records or CDs or, you know, things like that were more popular,
you're still getting only a small percentage on the dollar. You're going to get maybe 17%. Even as an artist,
when you have managers or business managers or, you know, all of them, they try to take 20% and 15% and
25% and they'll take it on gross, not even on net.
Right.
So it's like, it's dangerous.
And you don't know these things at first, right?
You're just coming off of the street and you, this is an opportunity and somebody offered
you whatever, 100,000, 200,000.
And you're like, yes, this is great.
and you don't realize you're going to spend your whole life trying to get it back.
You feel like you've gotten screwed over time?
You know, I feel that I have definitely had my share of screwings, for sure.
But I also feel like I have also been able to, because I'm the writer and because I'm the producer
and because I'm also, you know, because I do so many sides of the creative process,
it's definitely been more favorable for me.
And because I've fortunately learned relatively quickly
that a lot of these deals are what you create.
You don't have to take a standard deal from anybody.
And so I feel like I've ended up in a place
that actually is where it should be.
A lot has changed because of streaming.
We've long ago, for the most part,
the album unit has shifted over to the song unit
in the way people consume music.
Do you feel that influence yourself about the way you listen or the way you create?
Hmm. I mean, I still really love creating whole projects, which is another reason why I think maybe Hell's Kitchen feels so good is because it gets to really be a whole project.
That's a little bit different now in the music industry.
You know, before we had a Stevie Wonder that could create a songs in the key of life that would have so much storytelling and it would all be.
united altogether and you cohesive yeah you had to you had to listen to the entire thing and to
really get the whole message now there is much more of a of a short-term mentality and people are
kind of you know they don't even really want to hear a song longer than two minutes at this point
because we're in a TikTok generation and we're in a we're in a really a really more short content
they call it snackable content and people want that right now I believe that your husband is not a fan
musicals and that your goal was to create a musical that even he would like. So has he seen it? And have you, have you gone over the bar?
He gives his thumbs up. He, I have to say, he, you know, he's, there's been times in the past where I say, baby, let's go to Broadway and let's watch X show, X musical or whatever. And he's kind of like, I mean, I'll go with you because I love you, but I have to be shaking him the whole time. Are you paying attention? Are you listening?
He's falling asleep?
He's falling asleep?
I'm like, wake up.
So he really loves this piece, and not just because he's my husband,
but because he really feels like there's a place of connection,
no matter what age you are, no matter what style of music you like,
there's something here that really engages you and captures you.
And he says, man, you did it.
Like, how did you do it?
You did it.
I wouldn't put that on the marquee.
My husband even likes this.
And your husband might too.
There you go. There you go.
Alicia Keys, thank you so much.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you so much, David.
Great talking to you.
Thank you for some very thought-provoking questions.
I appreciate it.
R&B superstar Alicia Keys.
She created the musical, Hell's Kitchen, with a book by Christopher Diaz.
The show is making a national tour, and it's in Reno, Nevada, this weekend.
This is The New Yorker Radio Hour.
Stick around.
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