Bright Star (musical)

Bright Star is a musical written and composed by Steve Martin and Edie Brickell. It is set in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina in 1945-46 with flashbacks to 1923. The musical is inspired by their Grammy-winning collaboration on the 2013 bluegrass album Love Has Come for You[1] and, in turn, the folk story of the Iron Mountain Baby.

Bright Star
Playbill cover of the original Broadway production
MusicSteve Martin
Edie Brickell
LyricsEdie Brickell
BookSteve Martin
Productions2014 San Diego
2015 Washington, D.C.
2016 Broadway
2017 US tour
2018 Long Beach, California Musical Theatre West
Awards2016 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music
2016 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Score
2016 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Broadway Musical

Productions

Bright Star was workshopped by the New York Stage and Film at the Powerhouse Theater at Vassar College in July 2013.[2][3] It had its world premiere at the Old Globe Theatre (San Diego) on September 28, 2014 and ran to November 2, 2014.[4]

The musical opened at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. on December 2, 2015.[5]

The show began previews at the Cort Theatre on Broadway on February 25, 2016 before officially opening on March 24.[6] Directed by Walter Bobbie, the cast features Carmen Cusack as Alice Murphy, Paul Alexander Nolan as Jimmy Ray Dobbs, A.J. Shively as Billy Cane, Hannah Elless as Margo Crawford, Emily Padgett as Lucy Grant, Jeff Blumenkrantz as Daryl Ames, Michael Mulheren as Mayor Dobbs, Stephen Bogardus as Billy's father, Dee Hoty as Alice's mother, and Stephen Lee Anderson as Alice's father. Sound design is by Nevin Steinberg, choreography by Josh Rhodes, scenic design by Eugene Lee, costume design by Jane Greenwood and lighting design by Japhy Weideman.[7][8]

Despite support by Martin and Brickell,[9] and occasional appearances by Martin, the musical closed on June 26, 2016 after 30 previews and 109 regular performances.[10]

A reunion concert was held on December 12, 2016 at Town Hall, New York City. Members of the original Broadway cast participated, with Steve Martin and Edie Brickell both hosting and performing.[11]

A US national tour was announced in January 2017 for the 2017-2018 touring season, with casting and route to be announced later.[12]

The national tour launched on October 11, 2017 at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California, with Carmen Cusack, A.J. Shively, Jeff Blumenkrantz, and Stephen Lee Anderson all reprising their original Broadway roles. Subsequent cities scheduled are San Francisco, CA; Salt Lake City, UT; Houston, TX; Worcester, MA; Raleigh, NC; New Haven, CT; Dallas, TX; and Charlotte, NC, through July 1, 2018.[13][14]

In 2017, West Orange High School in Winter Garden, Florida, was the high school premiere of the show. Under the direction of Tara Whitman, the school submitted the show to the International Thespian Society's "Mainstage" competition. This led to West Orange being one of eight schools invited to perform at the Florida State Thespian Festival, and one of eleven schools invited to perform at the 2018 International Thespian Festival in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Following the completion of the national tour, Musical Theatre West in Long Beach, California, bought the rights along with the original sets and costumes. They presented the show in October of 2018 and made the sets and costumes available for other theater companies to lease for their own productions of Bright Star.[15]

In March 2019, Bright Star received its Canadian premiere at Rosebud Theatre in Rosebud Alberta, under the direction of Morris Ertman.[16][17]

Plot

Act I

In 1946, editor Alice Murphy greets the audience and tells them that, instead of overseeing other people's stories, she is going to tell her own ("If You Knew My Story"). One year earlier, in the town of Hayes Creek, serviceman and aspiring writer Billy Cane returns home after serving in World War II. He reunites with his father and his childhood friend Margo before learning that his mother has died ("She's Gone"). Several weeks later, Billy visits Margo and tells her he is going to submit his stories to The Asheville Southern Journal ("Bright Star").

Upon arriving at the offices of the Journal, he finds himself rebuffed by employees Daryl and Lucy. However, Alice finds herself charmed by a brazen lie that Billy tells and considers accepting his stories. She later declines Lucy's invitation to a dance, but privately reflects on a time when she would have gone to a dance ("Way Back in the Day").

Flashing back to 1923, a sixteen-year-old Alice flirts with Jimmy Ray Dobbs in her hometown of Zebulon, North Carolina ("Whoa, Mama") When Alice returns home later that night, her parents reprimand her while pondering her unfortunate future. ("Firmer Hand/Do Right") Meanwhile, Jimmy Ray returns home only to be lectured by his father, Mayor Josiah Dobbs, on what the future holds for him ("A Man's Gotta Do").

In 1945, upon receiving encouragement from Alice in the form of a ten dollar check, Billy decides to settle down in Asheville and dedicate his time to writing. Margo reflects that she had other hopes for her future with Billy, but she decides to put her hopes aside and be supportive of his dreams. ("Asheville")

In 1923, Alice and Jimmy Ray make their way to the riverbank and make love ("What Could Be Better"). Sometime later, Alice goes to see the town physician after feeling ill only to learn she is pregnant. Mayor Dobbs arranges for Alice to stay in a remote cabin for the duration of her pregnancy. She divides her time in isolation by knitting a sweater for the baby and talking about their child with Jimmy Ray when he visits ("I Can't Wait").

Shortly after giving birth to a baby son, Alice and her parents learn that Mayor Dobbs has secretly put the child up for adoption. Alice tries to make him change his mind, but loses the argument ("Please, Don't Take Him"). He departs with the baby in a valise and boards the train to Hayes Creek before throwing the valise into the river when no one is looking ("A Man's Gotta Do [Reprise]").

Act II

In 1924, Alice prepares to attend college in Chapel Hill and privately yearns to find her son. Meanwhile, in 1945, Margo talks with her friends about how she misses Billy ("Sun Is Gonna Shine"). Back in 1924, Jimmy Ray tells his ailing father that he is going to meet Alice in Chapel Hill. When Mayor Dobbs confesses what happened to the baby, Jimmy Ray decides to stay with his father after realizing he can't possibly tell Alice the truth ("Heartbreaker").

In 1946, Daryl and Lucy encounter a creatively frustrated Billy while sharing an after-work drink and try to cheer him up, culminating in Lucy and Billy sharing a drunken kiss ("Another Round"). The next day, Alice tells Billy that one of his stories is set to be published in the Journal. He confesses that he has been writing about Hayes Creek before inviting her to see where his stories take place. She agrees to do so after a planned visit to Raleigh to complete some unfinished business.

In Raleigh, Alice requests permission to look through adoption papers drafted during the period when her son would have been registered. After failing to find what she is looking for, Alice encounters Jimmy Ray and learns about Josiah's actions ("I Had a Vision"). Back in Hayes Creek, Billy tells Margo that he's moving back home before realizing that she's the girl for him ("Always Will").

In Zebulon, Alice reconciles with her father after he apologizes for allowing Josiah to take the baby away from her. Not wanting to continue his distress any longer, she tells him the child was adopted by a good family and is living a successful life. She makes her way to Hayes Creek and sees Billy's childhood home where she discovers the baby sweater she sent with her son, discovering that she is Billy's birth mother as his father explains how he found Billy as a baby in the river, but Billy is too shocked to process it and runs off ("So Familiar/At Long Last"). A few weeks later, after Alice has told Jimmy Ray that their child is still alive, Billy and Margo approach them in Asheville and Billy apologizes to Alice, accepting her as his mother and meeting Jimmy Ray for the first time. In order to run off a flirtatious Lucy, Margo introduces herself as Billy's fiancée, much to Billy's pleasant shock, followed by Jimmy Ray proposing to Alice. ("Finale").

Songs

All songs contain music by Martin and Brickell with lyrics by Brickell except "Way Back in the Day" and "At Long Last" by Edie Brickell and "Bright Star" with ensemble lyrics by Martin. "Way Back in the Day", "I Can't Wait", "Heartbreaker", "Another Round", "I Had a Vision", "Always Will" and "So Familiar" all were included on the album "So Familiar". "Asheville" and "Sun's Gonna Shine" both originated from the album "Love Has Come for You".

Principal roles and original cast

Character Old Globe San Diego cast Kennedy Center cast Original Broadway cast US tour cast
Alice Murphy Carmen Cusack
Jimmy Ray Dobbs Wayne Alan Wilcox Paul Alexander Nolan Patrick Cummings
Billy Cane A.J. Shively
Margo Crawford Hannah Elless Maddie Shea Baldwin
Mayor Josiah Dobbs Wayne Duvall Michael Mulheren Jeff Austin
Daddy Cane Stephen Bogardus David Atkinson
Daddy Murphy Stephen Lee Anderson
Mama Murphy Patti Cohenour Dee Hoty Allison Briner-Dardenne
Lucy Grant Kate Loprest Emily Padgett Kaitlyn Davidson
Darryl Ames Jeff Hiller Jeff Blumenkrantz
Dora Murphy Libby Winters Does not appear

Reception

Charles Isherwood of The New York Times wrote that,

"The shining achievement of the musical is its winsome country and bluegrass score, with music by Mr. Martin and Ms. Brickell, and lyrics by Ms. Brickell. The complicated plot, divided between two love stories that turn out to have an unusual connection, threatens to get a little too diffuse and unravel like a ball of yarn rolling off a knitter’s lap. But the songs — yearning ballads and square-dance romps rich with fiddle, piano and banjo, beautifully played by a nine-person band — provide a buoyancy that keeps the momentum from stalling."[18]

Bob Verini of Variety praised the music, but felt that, "characterizations are distinctly undercooked. Guileless Billy seems untouched by wartime service, too callow to craft greeting cards let alone the 'sweeping tale of pain and redemption' Alice unaccountably expects of him", and that the show could benefit with higher stakes in its drama.[19]

Kai Elijah Hamilton of Mountain Xpress wrote that,

"While Martin and singer-songwriter Brickell’s passion is evident, this is not the most authentic representation of life in North Carolina. Incorporating a deeply rooted Southern writer would have made the journey more rewarding. Most of the characters are not well sculpted, and although the script certainly has its moments, it is largely predictable. However, the music here is truly masterful and becomes a prominent storytelling device."[20]

Broadway

The Broadway production received fairly positive reviews. For instance, Elysa Gardner, in her review in USA Today, wrote:

"...Martin, a master ironist, captures some of that old-school spirit with a book that's as forthright as it is smart, funny and charming....Martin and Brickell refuse to condescend to their own characters, from the small-townspeople Billy grows up with to the wry, knowing employees at Alice's highly regarded journal in the city of Asheville....The tone in which that story is delivered can also wobble a bit, especially later on, when what seems destined to be a majestic, Hammerstein-esque resolution is mitigated by zany musical-comedy flourishes. Still, in what may well prove to be the richest Broadway season for new musicals in decades, this gently shining Star holds its own."[21]

Recording

The original Broadway cast album, produced by Ghostlight Records, was recorded in March 2016 and released in May 2016 in stores. It was released in digital format on April 29, 2016.[22] The album peaked at number two on the US Cast albums chart and topped the US Bluegrass and Americana/Folk Albums charts, the first cast recording to enter either of the latter two chart.[23] In its review of the recording, NPR said that the " interlocking narrative can't help but lose some of its detail", but that " 'Bright Star' 's best moments shine, well, brightly....the net result is a set of songs in which lavish stage settings and broad flourishes can't obscure the simple warmth and lovely instrumentation at their core."[24] The recording received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Musical Theater Album. (The 59th Annual award ceremony was held on February 12, 2017.)[25]

Awards and nominations

The original Broadway cast album was nominated for the 2017 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album.[26]

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2016 Tony Award[27] Best Musical Nominated
Best Book of a Musical Steve Martin Nominated
Best Original Score Steve Martin and Edie Brickell Nominated
Best Actress in a Musical Carmen Cusack Nominated
Best Orchestrations August Eriksmoen Nominated
Drama Desk Award[28] Outstanding Actress in a Musical Carmen Cusack Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Paul Alexander Nolan Nominated
A.J. Shively Nominated
Outstanding Music Steve Martin and Edie Brickell Won
Outstanding Orchestrations August Eriksmoen Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design for a Musical Jane Greenwood Nominated
Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical Nevin Steinberg Nominated
Drama League Award Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical Nominated
Distinguished Performance Carmen Cusack Nominated
Theatre World Awards Outstanding Debut Performance Won
Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding New Broadway Musical Won
Outstanding Book of a Musical Steve Martin Nominated
Outstanding New Score Steve Martin and Edie Brickell Won
Outstanding Choreographer Josh Rhodes Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Carmen Cusack Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design Jane Greenwood Nominated
Outstanding Director of a Musical Walter Bobbie Nominated
Fred and Adele Astaire Awards Best Choreographer Josh Rhodes Nominated
Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show Nominated
2017 Grammy Award[29] Best Musical Theater Album Nominated

References

  1. Pearson, Vince. "Edie Brickell, Steve Martin Broadway Bound With 'Bright Star'". NPR. NPR. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  2. "'Bright Star' Program" Archived December 12, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, TheOldGlobe.org, accessed February 26, 2016
  3. Hetrick, Adam. "Steve Martin-Edie Brickell Musical 'Bright Star' Premieres at Vassar", Playbill, July 12, 2013
  4. Purcell, Carey. "World Premiere of 'Bright Star' Musical, by Steve Martin and Edie Brickell, Opens at Old Globe Tonight", Playbill, September 28, 2014
  5. Pierpont, Katie. "Bright Star Begins Limited Pre-Broadway Engagement". Theater Mania. Theater Mania. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  6. Gans, Andrew. "Steve Martin's 'Bright Star' Begins Broadway Previews Today", Playbill, February 25, 2016
  7. "'Bright Star' Broadway", Playbill, accessed February 26, 2016
  8. Viagas, Robert. "The Verdict: Did the Sun Shine on Steve Martin's Bright Star's Broadway Opening?", Playbill, March 24, 2016
  9. Riedel, Michael (31 March 2016). "Steve Martin is spending his own money to save 'Bright Star'". New York Post. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  10. Gans, Andrew. " 'Bright Star' Plays Final Broadway Performance Today" Playbill, June 26, 2016
  11. Viagas, Robert. "Steve Martin and Edie Brickell Host Bright Star Reunion Concert December 12" Playbill, December 12, 2016
  12. Gans, Andrew (23 January 2017). "Steve Martin and Edie Brickell's Bright Star Will Launch National Tour". PlayBill. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  13. BWW News Desk. "Carmen Cusack to Return for 'Bright Star' at the Ahmanson This Fall" broadwayworld.com, July 24, 2017
  14. BWW News Desk. "Carmen Cusack to Reprise Role in 'Bright Star' at the Curran" broadwayworld.com, September 14, 2017
  15. Buenneke, Katie (22 October 2018). "'Bright Star' a big Broadway get for Musical Theatre West • Long Beach Post". Long Beach Post. Retrieved 9 November 2018.
  16. "Bright Star". www.rosebudtheatre.com. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  17. Hobson, Louis. "Review: Nostalgic musical shines bright out at Rosebud" Calgary Herald, April 3, 2019
  18. Isherwood, Charles. "Review", The New York Times, September 30, 2014
  19. Verini, Bob. "San Diego Theater Review: Steve Martin and Edie Brickell’s ‘Bright Star’, Variety, September 29, 2014
  20. Elijah Hamilton, Kai. ,
  21. Gardner, Elysa. "Steve Martin and Edie Brickell's 'Bright Star' shimmers on Broadway" USA Today, March 24, 2016
  22. Viagas, Robert. "Steve Martin's Broadway 'Bright Star' Recording Cast Album" Playbill, March 14, 2016
  23. "Original Broadway Cast Recording: Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  24. Thompson, Stephen. "Review: Original Broadway Cast Recording, 'Bright Star'" npr.org, April 21, 2016
  25. " 'The Color Purple', 'Waitress', 'Bright Star' & More Nab Grammy Nominations" broadway.com, December 6, 2016
  26. Viagas, Robert. " 'Waitress' and 'Bright Star' Cast Albums Among Grammy Award Nominees" Playbill, December 6, 2016
  27. "See Full List of 2016 Tony Award Nominations", Playbill, May 3, 2016
  28. Viagas, Robert. "'She Loves Me' Leads Drama Desk Nominations, Playbill, April 28, 2016
  29. "2017 Grammy Awards: Complete list of nominees". Los Angeles Times. December 6, 2016. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
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