THEATRE PREVIEW
MICHAEL GREIF AND “RENT” AT LA JOLLA
PLAYHOUSE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine July 1997
“Let he among us without sin
Be the first to condemn
La vie boheme”
As the East Village artists and bohemians sang their hearts out,
not many stepped forward to condemn “Rent”, which glorified La vie boheme, the
bohemian life. Loosely based on the
Puccini opera, "La Boheme," the musical was set in Greenwich Village
in the '90s, amid sex, drugs, love, anguish, AIDS, and as always among artists,
unpaid rent. As the lyric goes,
"We're not gonna pay/ Last year's rent/ This year's rent/ Next year's rent
/ 'Cause everything is rent."
Well, everything is “Rent” at La Jolla Playhouse this year.
It was a major coup for the theatre to score the West coast
premiere, which serves as the centerpiece of the 50/15 anniversary season of
the Playhouse (50 years since its inception; 15 since its 1982
revitalization).
But of course, San Diego had a foot in the door. Playhouse artistic director Michael Greif
directed the original production of “Rent” at New York Theatre Workshop (which
opened February 13, 1996) and shepherded the move to Broadway's Nederlander
Theatre (on April 29, 1996). He won a
Tony nomination and an Obie Award for Best Direction. The joyous, scrappy, hip, tough and turbulent rock opera roped in
every Best Musical award of the year, including the Tony, Obie, Drama Desk, New
York Drama Critics' Circle and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
Not only was it called the "breakthrough musical of the
nineties" (Newsweek). It was
hailed as the best musical since “A Chorus Line” in the seventies, the most
innovative since “Hair” in the sixties, and even "the best new musical
since the 1950s" (Wall Street Journal).
The triumph was bittersweet.
Jonathan Larson, the much-heralded creator of “Rent's” book, music and
lyrics, died suddenly of an aortic aneurysm, ten days before his 36th birthday
and two days before the play's world premiere previews began.
"It was unbelievable sorrow in the midst of great
celebration," says Greif, still obviously feeling the pain. "It was always dual, yin and
yang." But the outcome was
singular.
"I feel very happy with the hybrid form we wound up
with," explains Grief, who worked with Larson on the piece for two years.
"And I think Jonathan would be happy, too... It's a musical theater event which tries to be as direct and
theatrical as possible... Sure, we had
MTV kids in mind. We wed storytelling
styles with a rock concert. People sing
right out to the audience [wearing or holding microphones]. It was a very deliberate choice.
"But what really makes it work is the characters. They're extraordinarily compelling and
likable. Their needs are set up
clearly, urgently and originally. And
the audience gives them their heart.
"The 13 to 18 year-old group is the one most affected; they
just go mad. They see their own
problems [sex, drugs, AIDS, parents, heartbreak], and their enormous ability to
fall in love, be crushed and fall in love again. For a lot of the older people, it's a bit of nostalgia for the
time in their lives when they loved that way. People recognize and
remember. And the music grabs them...
One of the most rewarding parts of all this is getting kids into the
theater. Young lives have been
changed. But it transcends
generations."
San Diegans of all ages are going gaga. All 70 performances of the original nine-week “Rent” run were
sold out within a week. Standing room
is still in great demand. In April, two
additional weeks of performance were added (total run is July 1-September 14). With all this excitement and activity, and
some successful management and creative decisions, the Playhouse projects that
by the end of 1997, it will be able to retire the nearly $2 million debt that
stood on its books just four years ago. The company entered its anniversary
season with a record-breaking 14,000+ subscribers.
Meanwhile, “Rent” is going strong in New York, and the Boston
company tours the East and Midwest. The
La Jolla production will move to L.A. for an extended stay, and then go on
tour. Grief looks forward to a Toronto
run in the fall, London in the winter and Australia, probably Fall 1998.
Despite his high national profile, Greif remains loyal and
committed to the Playhouse, which won the 1993 Tony Award as Outstanding
Regional Theatre. His three-year
contract is up in December, but he's definitely renewing (for an undisclosed
term).
"I feel really good about where we're going [with the
Playhouse]," he says. "I'm
very happy to say we'll have more active commissions of new work, and a fat
production budget this year because of two musicals, (“Rent” and “Harmony”, the upcoming Barry Manilow/Bruce
Sussman world premiere (October 7-November 23), inspired by the true story of
The Comedian Harmonists in 1920's Germany.
This season is very lush."
Right now, Greif is happy to be bringing his New York baby
[“Rent”) to his San Diego home. "I
think everyone is really looking forward to the benefit of its sitting here and
my being able to look after it and check up on it and stay with it." Spoken like a proud papa.
But then he adds, with a twinkle in his eye, "I always like it
to have something of a reckless spirit.
Some things need to be wild."
©1997 Patté Productions Inc.