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Watch: Broadway Stars Join Playbill in Supporting the National Endowment for the Arts
Reblog this post 100 times to unveil ticket information about LeakyCon 2017!
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Chita Rivera, Darren Criss, Megan Hilty and More Perform at Voices For The Voiceless Benefit
Watch Hamilton’s Award-Winning Easter Bonnet Presentation
Elsinore Trailer - 2016
Happy Friday!~ To celebrate, we have a brand new Elsinore trailer. Give us a hand by reblogging!
Watch: George Takei has a vital message for those misusing and misremembering Japanese internment.
Donald Trump recently said he might have supported the internment camps of WWII. I felt I had to respond, and in the best way I could.
SEEING ‘HAMILTON’
*
Can an essay capture an event so completely life-changing? Probably not. Where to begin? What clumsy collection of words would ever suffice?
Still, if this can convey even an echo of what I have witnessed, it will be worth it. Otherwise, you might never know.
It came at a time when I had resigned myself to never seeing Hamilton. At some point, the odds become too steep and you convince yourself that it wasn’t meant to be. I could survive without it; I would have to.
But one morning there it lay on my doorstep, a rolled-up parchment tied with pale lavender ribbon. My lottery number had been chosen. The committee had reviewed my essay, the first check in the payment plan had cleared. I was going.
In the weeks that followed, I took time to prepare. I scheduled hearing and vision exams and began meditating to ensure my attention span was in top condition. I read the book, of course. In retrospect, nothing would have prepared me for what was ahead.
The day arrived. I called my parents in the morning and told them I loved them. My wife accompanied me to the theater and hugged me goodbye as I passed from her arms into the lobby. My paperwork was approved and I was shown to my seat. All around me sat celebrities, foreign dignitaries, high-ranking military personnel. No attention was given to them: we were in the presence of something greater.
There was a brief pre-show announcement. I couldn’t afford to take chances: I wrapped my phone in a scarf and crushed it. The glass shattered in my hand with a satisfying muffled crunch. Everyone else had done the same and ushers moved through the aisles holding wastepaper baskets to collect the debris.
The lights dimmed and a great hush fell over the crowd.
The curtain slowly rose to reveal the entire cast, all of them looking towards a single figure downstage center. It was him: Lin-Manuel Miranda. It hurt to look directly at him; The air around him was blurry with waves of humble creative genius. While the overture played, he scribbled in a notebook and jotted down lyrics for three songs in his next project.
Finally he tossed the notebook aside and spoke.
The words. The words were everywhere, Lin-Manuel’s genius words. They filled the theater, they ignited my time-dulled sense of what was possible on Broadway. The words caressed my brain and flowed over my face like hot, relevant syrup. Subtle changes in tempo gave us words slow and sensual, words urgent and unstoppable, all filtered through the amplifying prism of America. The crowd was mesmerized. Rhymes came with such speed and dexterity that I can only describe it as being spanked raw with a dictionary. My previous understanding of cadence and sentence structure were gone, replaced with Lin’s truth. All language was one, all things had become possible. Lin rhymed ‘Constitution’ with 'door’ and we cheered.
[For the record, I’m not some mindless sheep jumping onto the hip-hop train along with public opinion. I saw Into The Heights.]
Intermission arrived. We all sat stunned in our seats, unable to move, unable to leave the temple that this theater had become. Many were rocking and weeping; others soiled themselves. I tried to recall the details of my life before this moment, but nothing came: All I was, all I ever would be, was a person seeing Hamilton.
The second act roared to life and made a mockery of all we had seen before. Miranda was using words that didn’t exist; He was rewriting the rules of the spoken word before our eyes and we loved him for it. At one point he sang:
LOTSA DIFF'RENT PATHS TO FAME AND POSTERITY,
BLAFFA DIGGUM PLANTS IN A CAMEL MOCKUMENTARY.
I wrenched my eyes from the mesmerizing action to consider the set itself, made entirely of Tony awards. Thousands of them, glued together to form chairs, pubs, an island in the Caribbean, the White House. The reflected light was nearly blinding, but not as blinding as the words rawdogging my brain at every turn.
The show rocketed towards its conclusion and employed every possible theatrical device, boldly reimagined. Lyrics spoken faster than the human brain could comprehend. A flurry of costume changes for both cast and audience. Fireworks shot from the mouths of enormous papier-mâché founding fathers. A storm of eagles circled overhead and a cyclone made of tattered American flags lifted Lin-Manuel, screaming the alphabet, into the air before us. With the vocal power of an army of angels, the entire 500-person cast sang with one voice:
IT’S NO FUN TO HAVE A BULLET IN YOUR ABDOMEN,
THIS WAS THE STORY OF ALEXANDER HAMILTON.
A blinding light, a roaring wind, and then darkness.
The audience exploded into applause. We were screaming. We were crying. I was spent; It was like America had taken physical form and made three hours of crazed, carefully-researched love to me. The stage lights returned for the cast to take their bows, shiny with sweat and the sheen of revolutionary theater. People applauded until their hands were bloody and ruined; I saw bone poking through the palms of the older woman next to me.
The last bow came from Lin-Manuel himself, exhausted and radiant. People threw flowers, gold, undergarments, infants. He caught them all, freestyling about each as it flew towards him.
Long wooden tables were brought onstage and all were invited to sit. A colonial-style feast was served while Lin-Manuel led a discussion of the greater lessons and themes of the show. A bonfire was built in one corner; We were encouraged to add the soundtracks of other, lesser shows, rendered irrelevant. I tossed in Company. I hated it now.
As we finished the last of our tankards of ale, the house lights came on. Lin-Manuel hugged each of us and thanked us for bearing witness to his work. Grief counselors waited in the lobby to assist those grappling with the reality that nothing after tonight would hold any significance.
I stood before the theater a long time, then began the journey home.
I approached my house. I could see my wife’s familiar silhouette in the window, waiting. But that woman was a stranger. She hadn’t seen Hamilton. I walked away.
I roam the earth now, reflecting on what I’ve experienced. Yes, I miss the cast of my former life. I hope to see them again someday and find some common ground, especially if tickets open up in 2017 or the national tour begins.
Until then, there is only the rare glimpse of a familiar face within the crowd. Were they a few aisles back? In the balcony? It doesn’t matter. We approach each other and share a smile or a firm hand on the shoulder. We flash our torn ticket stubs, quietly nod, and walk away.
*
Yes, this is exactly what you experience when seeing Hamilton.
The lyrics for all 8 Hamilton Children (as seen at today’s #Ham4Ham show) lyrics by Morgan Marcell & Lin-Manuel Miranda
https://youtu.be/Yx98h6rqC6w
ANGELICA:
My name is Angie, you wouldn’t know it
Unless you listened to my brother, he’s a poet. Even tho, he’s older at the time, I can play piano better plus I can rhyme! Of course, I have a nervous breakdown when he dies!
I play piano and everybody cries!
A sister sibling seems pretty great
When you find out our parents had 8!
ALEX JR:
I’m Alex Junior, I’m on a journey
I grow up to be a famous attorney But revenge is a sweet final course
I rep Aaron Burr’s second wife when they divorce!
JAMES ALEXANDER:
The name’s James Alexander, I’m a lawyer too!
I had five kids like Tevye, with a boy or two!
No time for relaxin,
Cuz I’m secretary of state for Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson!
JOHN CHURCH:
Yo I’m John Church, I win the pennant!
Fought the war of eighteen twelve, second lieutenant!
And I’m the one who brought us glory!
I kept my mother’s promise and I wrote Dad’s story!
WILLIAM STEPHEN:
Hey, the name’s William Stephen and I COLD CRUSH!
I moved to California for the gold rush!
I’m a screamer, I’m a shouter, I’m a hollerer!
I died in Sacramento, most likely of CHOLERA!
ELIZABETH HOLLY:
My name’s Eliza Holly, please follow!
You can see my tombstone in Sleepy Hollow!
I lived with my mom while she was dying
In DC. I’M NOT CRYING YOU’RE CRYING!
PHILIP HAMILTON
The sun has gone To bed and so must I
My name is Philip I’m the second try
I am the youngest Child in our line
Don’t worry I Will live a nice long time
Goodbyyyyyyyyyye
Goodbyyyyyyyyeee
Goodbyyyyyyyyeee
Since we seem to be on the topic of HP houses... what founding father would be a ravenclaw?
Thomas Jefferson, of the asshole variety. Though that one is another very close call between that and Slytherin.
I promise you this: If JK Rowling comes to the show, I PROMISE I will ask her to sort our characters. This is my vow as your friend and total Slytherin Lin-Manuel Miranda (You thought I was a Hufflepuff YOU DON’T KNOW ME HOMEY)
If Burr and Hamilton were wizards
Hamilton : Expelliarmus! Burr : Avada kadabra!
I just wanted you to know that this is my Facebook longways picture. Not the profile one, the HD one that goes across the top. I love it. -Old Man Miranda
The John Adams rap that was cut from Hamilton. This is so great.
Lionsgate Grants Permission for “Perks of Being a Wallflower” Stage Adaptation