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February 2, 2012
Review: JRB & Shoshana Bean: Broadway stars shine with poignance and wit (The Oregonian, 1/30/12)
Marty Hughley's review posted here.

Jason Robert Brown & Shoshana Bean review: Broadway stars shine with poignance and wit
By Marty Hughley, The Oregonian
Monday, January 30, 2012

Midway through the second set of his Saturday-night concert, Jason Robert Brown apologized for interrupting the flow of the music, but said that he simply had to comment on what had just happened. “You know it, I know it, it’s just the way it is: You will never hear ‘Still Hurting’ sung so beautifully again in your life!”

The song in question is from Brown’s 2002 Off-Broadway musical “The Last Five Years,” and it’s a piercingly poignant expression of emotional fragility following a heartbreaking divorce. But Brown wasn’t bragging, he was reflecting the glory back onto his guest star for the evening, Shoshana Bean, who just had made Brown’s song, already a finely crafted gem, into something truly sublime.

The two were in town together to perform and to work with local youth performers -- especially those preparing a production of the Brown musical "13."

Bean’s voice -- a marvel of pure power, refined technique and judicious emotional expression -- was the rich icing on the cake in the two-hour show at downtown’s First Congregational United Church of Christ. The cake -- a varied program of songs by the Tony winning composer Brown, served up with sharp and engaging wit in both his singing and his between-song banter -- would have plenty on its own.

The hometown favorite, Bean (a Beaverton High grad turned Broadway star of “Wicked”) sang about a half-dozen of Brown’s affecting tunes, including “Stars and the Moon,” which has become a cabaret classic since it first appeared in his 1995 show “Songs for a New World.”

Brown himself, though, sang with comfort and assurance, played piano with crisp rhythmic drive and harmonic clarity. And as artful as he is at mapping the tricky terrain of romantic emotions, he also can be hilarious, as he was in a song from his upcoming musical adaptation of “Honeymoon in Vegas,” turning on the campy lounge-lizard theatrics to sing “Thank the stars you’re in V-E-G-A-S -- and that spells love!”

For fans of Brown and Bean, lots of moments on Saturday spelled love.

-- Marty Hughley

January 29, 2012
Tony-winning composer Jason Robert Brown and Beaverton High grad turned Broadway star Shoshana Bean come to Portland (The Oregonian, 1/27/12)
Marty Hughley's article here.

A really fantastic photo gallery is here.

Tony-winning composer Jason Robert Brown and Beaverton High grad turned Broadway star Shoshana Bean come to Portland
By Marty Hughley, The Oregonian
January 27, 2012

Arts and education walk hand in hand in many ways. Sometimes it's a serendipitous stroll.

Take, for example, the string of connections that led to a Saturday night concert in Portland featuring Tony-winning composer Jason Robert Brown and Beaverton High grad turned Broadway star Shoshana Bean.

It started with the small Portland theater company Staged! and its plans to produce "13," an engaging Brown musical about the social-psychological minefield of adolescence. Having presented Brown's work before and hosted his 2010 Portland appearance as a singer/pianist, Staged! leveraged its relationship with the composer to get him to come to Portland to work with the young cast of "13."

And since his previous concert here had been such a hit, another one seemed only natural. And since Staged! founder Chanda Hall knew that Brown and Bean both live in Los Angeles and had performed together, why not ask if Bean wanted to make a hometown visit, too? And while she was here to perform, she'd be great teaching a master class for young singers and actors.

"Education has always been a part of what we do," Hall says. "To me that is part of being a true artist: nurturing the next generation."

The general public won't get to watch Brown coaching, but tickets are available to watch Bean's master class and all can soak in their artistry at Saturday's concert at the First Congregational United Church of Christ and then see further fruits of their expertise when the Staged! production of "13" opens Feb. 9.

JASON ROBERT BROWN

Composer/lyricist Jason Robert Brown hasn't had a show on Broadway since his "13" played for a few months in 2008. But that hardly means he's been taking it easy.

Among the writing projects he has in the pipeline are musical adaptations of "Honeymoon in Vegas" and "The Bridges of Madison County." As a performer he has an upcoming PBS special with fellow Tony Award winner Anika Noni Rose. He'll direct the West End premiere of "13" in London this summer, and he's the music supervisor on "The Prince of Broadway," set to open in November, a high-profile musical celebrating legendary producer/director Harold Prince, who hired Brown to write music for the 1999 Tony winner "Parade."

Amid all this, though, Brown finds time for visits such as the one he'll make to Portland this weekend, where he'll perform Saturday evening at First Congregational United Church of Christ, after working with the cast of an upcoming local production of "13."

The combination of concerts and workshops on his material is something Brown does around the country when his schedule permits. "It does my heart good to know that the work is out there," he says by phone recently from his home in Los Angeles. "And '13' in particular needs love, because it's hard to make a show work well when there are only kids in it."

Brown, who also has a band called the Caucasian Rhythm Kings, fits in 15-20 concerts a year, either as a solo performer -- as he did in a rapturously received show in 2010 at Miracle Theatre -- or with guest singers such as Shoshana Bean, who will join him here Saturday.

"I love doing the concerts," he says. "I feel like it drives my writing if I'm out there embodying the work. When I'm onstage, I sometimes think 'I'm missing something here. I need a song about X' -- and then I can go write it."

Brown's deft, rhythmically driving piano playing and assured, flexible baritone can make you overlook how technically demanding his music can be. "I tend to believe that everyone's going to come up to the level that you ask of them," he says. "Besides, it's only adults who will complain about the material being difficult. I've never had a child performer say 'I can't do this.' They say, 'Let me work on this some more.'"

There's a lot of talk these days about a resurgence of interest in musical theater among American youth. And Brown -- who was inspired early by such composers as Stephen Schwartz ("Pippin," "Godspell") and Stephen Sondheim ("Sweeney Todd") and now also teaches at the University of Southern California -- is in a position to see that fresh interest firsthand.

"I still wish there were more boys into it," he says. "But musical theater always was seen as weird and outsidery, and it still seems weird and outsidery.

"It's just that now we're celebrating its weird outsideriness."

SHOSHANA BEAN

Shoshana Bean moves easily between the worlds of pop music and musical theater. And if, for the moment, her heart belongs more to the former, she's not about to disavow the latter.

When she speaks to The Oregonian in a recent phone interview from her current home in Los Angeles, she's on her way to an afternoon yoga class but is still abuzz with the excitement of the previous night's performance.

"There's nothing like last night, being in a packed club and playing my music with people screaming," she says. "But then, there's nothing like a Broadway musical either."

It was the Broadway musical "Wicked" that made the Beaverton High grad a star when she took over for Idina Menzel in the featured role of Elphaba during the original production.

These days, however, her focus is on furthering -- and redirecting -- the pop career she launched with 2008's "Superhero," an album of slickly produced R&B.;

"My sound now is so vastly different," she says. "It's a lot more authentic, throwback, vintage soul music. We've spent a lot of time over the past couple of years redirecting my audience about what to expect."

But musical theater still can draw her back into its fold. She spent much of last year on "a sort of 'Funny Girl' update" called "Dear John Mayer," a show she co-wrote with Eydie Faye and starred in at Los Angeles' Open Fist Theatre Company. And this weekend in Portland she'll share her musical theater expertise, with both a Saturday night concert and a sold-out Sunday afternoon master class.

Of Saturday's performance with composer/pianist/singer Jason Robert Brown, Bean says, "He's the star, I'm the guest." Even so, Brown is unstinting in his praise of Bean, calling her voice "the most technically proficient and musical vocal instrument I've found in -- almost forever" and describing singing with her as "one of the great joys of my life."

"We have a really special connection musically," Bean confirms. "He's such a brilliant writer for women. Everyone's drawn to his songs because the lyrics are so easy to relate to -- raw and gut-wrenchingly honest -- and the arrangements are stunning. He's incredibly soulful and influenced by rock and soul in a way that most theatrical composers and players aren't. But his music is deceptively difficult; it's always a challenge.

"Jason's one of the few composers who move me deeply. Whenever he calls, I bend over backwards to work with him."

STAGED! AND THE MUSICAL "13"

Packed into a cramped second-floor rehearsal room at Southeast Portland's Theater! Theatre!, the cast of "13" runs through the song "Brand New You," singing and dancing the show's spirited finale.

"That, to me, looks like a bunch of focused professionals," director Paul Angelo says, as the performers catch their breath afterward. "You've been doing some homework. Really nice."

Angelo's comment comes as high praise especially because the show is about middle-school students and cast with appropriately young performers. And those performers will get an extra boost this weekend when Jason Robert Brown, who wrote the music and lyrics for "13," comes to Portland to help get them ready for the show's Feb. 9 opening.

"My job is to encourage them and to give them the tools and permission to unlock themselves to explore, to feel free to make big stupid choices, or little delicate choices that no one may notice," Brown says about advising young performers. "I find myself saying, 'Look, it's just better when you're you.' It's like watching them blossom by rolling the boulder away from where they're growing."

Brown also has been a boon to the growth of Staged!, the musical theater company that's producing "13" here. In the summer of 2010, Staged! (with help from Miracle Theatre Group) presented a series of performances and educational workshops focused on Brown's writing, including a production of his 1995 revue "Songs for a New World" that won four Drammy Awards. The theaters also brought Brown to town for a sold-out solo performance that showcased his captivating skills as pianist and raconteur.

But it might be "13," which played on Broadway in 2008, that fits best with the evolving identity of Staged!.

Founded in 2005 by Chanda Hall, the company has made a subspecialty out of its work with and for students. In addition to youth summer camps in musical theater, Staged! has performed an all-student version of "Les Misérables" and cast mostly teenagers in its spring production of "Big River."

"'We grow artists' is our motto," Hall says. "And you have all these hugely talented kids in this area who don't want to be doing children's theater. We've had a lot of feedback that (material for a teen sensibility is) something that's needed."

"She's so mission driven about what she's putting on stage," says Oregon Children's Theatre artistic director Stan Foote, whom Hall credits as a valued mentor. "And she loves the kids and wants them to succeed."

Brown's "13" provides lots of opportunities for success, with a story about the challenges of growing up and fitting in, and a range of roles representing the complex social strata of an American school. "We realized something was connecting with kids and parents when we offered it as a summer camp show," says Hall. "It's the thinking kid's 'High School Musical.' It's not sanitized -- you hear Brown's snarky, dry wit come through. And we've all been 13, so everybody relates to at least one of the characters."

The show also keeps alive a fruitful relationship with Brown, among the most respected of younger Broadway composers.

"I think we're still trying to figure out who we are as a company," Hall says. "And one thing that sparks my imagination is connecting with living writers and composers. I want to keep my finger on the pulse of what's coming next in musical theater."

© 2012 OregonLive.com. All rights reserved.
December 2, 2011
"BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY" Workshop News
Kelli O’Hara to Star in ‘Bridges of Madison County’ Musical Workshop
By PATRICK HEALY

The director Bartlett Sher and the actress Kelli O’Hara, who collaborated previously on the Tony Award-winning revival of “South Pacific” and the musical “Light in the Piazza,” will reunite for a developmental workshop in New York this month of their latest project, “The Bridges of Madison County,” a musical adaptation of the best-selling novel and hit film. The Broadway producers Jeffrey Richards, Stacey Mindich and Jerry Frankel confirmed on Thursday that they were holding the workshop; no plans for a full production have been announced.

Ms. O’Hara, a Tony nominee for both shows with Mr. Sher as well as for “The Pajama Game,” will star as Francesca Johnson, an Iowa farm wife who has a brief love affair with a roaming photographer, Robert Kincaid. Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood played those roles in the 1995 film version of the 1992 novel by Robert James Waller. No other casting for the workshop was disclosed.

The composer Jason Robert Brown, a Tony winner for “Parade,” has written the score, and the Tony- and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Marsha Norman (“The Secret Garden,” “ ‘night, Mother”) has written the book.

Mr. Sher’s latest New York production, “Blood and Gifts,” opened Off Broadway to critical acclaim last week; he won the Tony for best director of a musical in 2008 for “South Pacific,” and he also directed the Broadway musical “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.”

His last Broadway-bound project, a revival of “Funny Girl,” fell apart in November due to financing problems.

November 1, 2011
Investors Check Out "Honeymoon In Vegas" Workshop (NY Times, 11/1/11)
Patrick Healy's article here.

Investors Check Out 'Honeymoon In Vegas' Workshop
November 1, 2011, 12:50 PM, New York Times

A long-gestating musical adaptation of the 1992 movie “Honeymoon in Vegas,” which is perhaps best remembered for its skydiving team of Flying Elvises, was staged in a private workshop last week for theater investors with an eye toward a future production in New York or regionally, according to one of its producers.

The film starred Nicolas Cage and Sarah Jessica Parker as a couple whose wedding plans in Las Vegas go awry at the hands of a lovesick gambler played by James Caan. Their roles in the workshop were played by T.R. Knight (formerly of “Grey’s Anatomy”), Mary Faber (the current Broadway revival of “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying”) and Tony Danza (“Who’s the Boss,” a replacement Max Bialystock in “The Producers” on Broadway).

The theater producers Dena Hammerstein (the widow of James Hammerstein, a son of Oscar Hammerstein II) and Roy Gabay held the workshop after recently acquiring the rights to the musical, which has music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown (a Tony Award winner for the score of “Parade”) and a book by Andrew Bergman, who wrote and directed the movie. An earlier team of producers aimed the work at Broadway in 2007, when it had a reading that included Norbert Leo Butz and Terrence Mann, but that show never came together.

Mr. Gabay said in an interview on Tuesday that there were no immediate plans for a production but that he and Ms. Hammerstein were considering options ranging from an out-of-town run at a nonprofit theater to a commercial run on Broadway. Gary Griffin (“The Color Purple”) directed the workshop.

“The show is in good shape, and we’re really happy with the cast that we have, so now we’re going to try to figure out next steps,” Mr. Gabay said. “We received a really good response from our audience at the workshop, so we’re encouraged.” Among those invited to attend was the Broadway producer Barry Weissler, who said in a separate interview that the musical was “very well crafted” with an “enjoyable score.”

As for the comic talents of the Flying Elvises – a group of Elvis impersonators who take Mr. Knight’s character for a dive – Mr. Gabay said that they do indeed take to the air in the musical, though there was no time or money for aerial effects in the stripped-down workshop.

“We sort of hoped the audience would imagine what the flying would look like,” Mr. Gabay said, “but we kept it to some parachutes and choreography.”

October 19, 2011
Concert review: "'Spielberg of musical theater' rocks Cabaret" (Indianapolis Examiner, 10/18/11)
Tom Alvarez's review here.

‘Spielberg of musical theater’ rocks Cabaret
By Tom Alvarez, Indianapolis Performing Arts Examiner
October 18, 2011

“He’s the Spielberg of musical theater,” said managing and artistic director Shannon Forsell when she introduced composer, lyricist and playwright Jason Robert Brown at Friday’s opening night of a two-day run of The Jason Robert Brown Songbook at the Cabaret at the Columbia Club in downtown Indianapolis.

Forsell was quoting one of the many young people present who came to see Brown, who also is often compared to the man who inspired him, Broadway icon Stephen Sondheim.

Brown also is a gifted pianist and has served as a conductor, musical director and orchestrator of his own productions. Appearing with him was special guest Shoshana Bean, best known for replacing Idina Menzel in Wicked and performing in Hairspray on Broadway.

Songs for a New World, Parade (which earned him the 1999 Tony Award for best original musical score), The Last Five Years and 13 are some of Brown’s best-known musical-theater works. He also is in a band called The Caucasian Rhythm Kings.

Feted for his originality in combining pop-rock flavored music with theatrical lyrics, Brown is currently working on several new projects. They include a musical version of the 1992 comedy film Honeymoon in Vegas and a musical adaptation of the 1995 film The Bridges of Madison County.

Brown’s Cabaret program consisted of songs from his previous works (including his 2005 album Wearing Someone Else’s Clothes), as well as material from the aforementioned new ones. Often referring to his performance as a “concert,” he projected a forceful intensity, both when he sang and when he played the piano. It was a powerful presence he joked about when he said, “I wonder if it will go with the steak,” a reference to meals eaten by patrons during Cabaret shows in the Columbia Club’s elegant Crystal Terrace Room.

"I Could Be in Love With Someone Like You", "Long Long Road", "Being a Geek", "The Old Red Hills of Home" and "Caravan of Angels" (a moving song about family and friends who love and support him) were just a few of his songs that Brown sang solo.

They reflected his genius at composing music with a contemporary sound and fusing it with lyrics that are striking in their sophisticated originality.

Brown’s banter with the audience was rapidly delivered in an nearly unfiltered stream-of-consciousness manner. It added to the high entertainment value of a stage persona influenced by Brown’s New York roots and Jewish sensibilities. In the end, his self-deprecating humor brought a vitality to a room that often features acts that are perhaps more conventional and far less edgy.

Bean, who has originality stamped all over her as well, demonstrated her distinctive voice, range and idiosyncrasies in her uncommon song styling. Her solos included "All Things in Time", "Another Life" (from The Bridges of Madison County) and "Anywhere But Here" (from Honeymoon in Vegas). Matching one another in vocal power and strength, Bean and Brown sang a duet of "I’d Give It All for You."

For tickets and information about the remainder of the Cabaret at the Columbia Club 2011 season, call (317) 275-1169 or visit www.thecabaret.org.

September 29, 2011
JRB Directs "13" in London 2012!
Jason Robert Brown Directs West End Premiere of 13 in 2012
Date: 28 September 2011

The National Youth Music Theatre (NYMT) will return to the West End next year presenting two shows by Tony Award-winning composer Jason Robert Brown who will cross the Atlantic to direct his 2008 Broadway musical 13.

Producer Jeremy Walker told Whatsonstage.com he had original approached Brown to host a master class for members of NYMT, many of whom perform Brown's songs at the company's auditions.

When Walker said he had hoped to produce 13 with NYMT's younger performers, aged 11 to 16, Brown signed on to direct.

Premiered in Los Angeles in 2007, 13 transferring to Broadway for a short-lived run in October 2008. The show has music and lyrics by Brown and book by Dan Elish and Robert Horn. The story centres on 13-year-old Evan Goldman as he moves from New York City to Indiana, and how the move conflicts with his Bar Mitzvah.

Billed as a "hilarious, high-energy musical for all ages", the show played 105 performances and 22 previews at New York's Bernard B Jacobs Theatre closing on 4 January 2009.

NYMT, which counts Hannah Jane Fox, Matt Lucas, Jonny Lee Miller and Gina Beck among its alumni and has Tom Chambers and Jude Law as patrons, will take over the Apollo Theatre from 22 to 25 August 2011 to stage 13.

The company will also stage Brown's 1995 off-Broadway song cycle Songs for a New World with direction by Sarah Redmond and choreography by Cristian Valle. That production, which will be cast with performers ages 16 to 23, will run from 1 to 4 August with venue still to be confirmed.

Founded in 1976, NYMT were last seen in the West End with their surprise hit production of Bugsy Malone which played an 11-week run at the Queen's Theatre in 1997. That production had a cast which included Whatsonstage.com Award-winner Sheridan Smith.

Jason Robert Brown's other major works include The Last 5 Years, which was produced on the West End as part of Notes from New York, held on three consecutive Sundays at the Theatre Royal Haymarket and starring Julie Atherton; Parade, which premiered at Lincoln Center Theatre in 1998 directed by Harold Prince for which Brown won the Tony Award for Best Original Score. Rob Ashford directed the Donmar Warehouse's 2008 production and the musical was recently revived at Southwark Playhouse.

July 24, 2011
More great "Trumpet of the Swan" reviews!
Peter Filichia in TheaterMania.com writes:

Trumpet of the Swan is a collaboration between bookwriter Marsha Norman and composer Jason Robert Brown. The piece called “a novel symphony for actors and orchestra” shouldn’t be sampled piecemeal, for it’s a sweeping work that offers commentary with music, but no songs per se. Brown has written some astonishing songs in his time, but he’s never written more beautiful and haunting music. Trumpet of the Swan is certainly no ugly duckling.

Drew Lane writes on AussieTheatre.com:

To tell you the honest truth, I didn’t really know what to expect from JRB’s newest recording. With the tag of “a novel symphony for actors and orchestra”, it certainly doesn’t fit with his more well-known fare of musicals. However, I was pleasantly surprised and captivated.

Jason Robert Brown has created a masterpiece with The Trumpet Of The Swan, based on the classic E.B. White tale of a trumpeter swan who cannot make a sound. His parents are concerned for his welfare, but the little swan is determined to view his lack of voice not as a plight, but as an opportunity to grow in other areas. He befriends a young boy (the narrator) along the way, and together they develop a friendship that helps the swan through the challenges in his life.

The recording is beautifully narrated by John Lithgow, and is voiced by an equally talented cast including Kathy Bates, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Martin Short, Mandy Moore and James Naughton. With such a pedigree of talent, JRB has created a truly wondrous orchestral recording. The music soars like a trumpeter swan, ducking and weaving through the storyline. Some composers would miss the opportunities for subtlety and calm, but not here (“Returns”). Robert Brown has an intrinsic understanding of the text he has composed to, and it is obvious through the recording that he has a sincere love for the story, and the entire project.

There are moments when JRB’s musical theatre composer persona creeps through - as you would expect (“The Pond”, “The Eggs and the Fox”, “Philadelphia Swing”), but rather than ever detracting from the piece, it adds dynamic and texture, while also informing any fan that this certainly the work of Jason Robert Brown. You can visualize in your imagination the action as it occurs. The scenes are musically painted and crafted, and the humour of piece remains firmly intact also. There is no sense during The Trumpet Of The Swan of the music being out of step with the text. Every second of the score floats perfectly in conjunction with the events; the music informing the dialogue and the dialogue responding to or anticipating the musical rise and fall (“Camp”, “Courtship”).

While the story is known to many adults and children alike, this is not just a recording for children (they will love listening to it!), but for any person who appreciates excellent composing, brilliant composers, and a heartwarming love story.

And finally, Alan in the Red Curtain Review has this to say:

Jason Robert Brown's most recent piece is The Trumpet of the Swan, based on the book written by E. B. White. It is described as 'a novel symphony for actors and orchestra', with music by JRB (who also conducts); the adaptation is written by Marsha Norman ('night Mother; The Secret Garden). It is a fun, lovely piece, with the music acting as a soundtrack and as an aid to the story telling, with some lovely trumpet playing by Christopher Michael Venditti (what's with the triple barrel names!!). It shows a different side of JRB and for me it soars, being reminiscent of John Williams, with a great prelude, but it is the jazzy pieces that really stayed with me, especially "High Fashion & Low Prices."

The story is about Louis the swan who is not able to speak. Instead he learns other skills, such as the trumpet, in order to woo the swan of his dreams. The story is read by Sam, the narrator, in this recording played by John Lithgow. The other actors play the different parts, and here we have Kathy Bates, Mandy Moore, even Martin Short joining in. James Naughton and Jesse Tyler Ferguson finish the acting troupe.

There is a little bit of everything with some nice jokes and touches thrown in. It would be great to see it performed live. This is a great addition to the JRB collection, and shows how diverse he can be, as if his choice of musicals weren't enough to gauge that by. So go check it out now.

The Trumpet Of The Swan is highly recommended. Congratulations to all involved, and to Jason Robert Brown for this passionate and inspired work of musical art.

Thanks for all the fantastic reviews! And if you haven't picked up your copy yet, you can do so at Amazon.com or download it directly from the iTunes Music Store right now!

 
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