La vie Boheme (rent), danicing through life (wicked) and Purpose (ave q) and Miz tape (ave q). I am very happy this week but at the same time i am starting to think about what i should do with my life.
"At the opening night party, they had clowns on stilts, jugglers, a chocolate fountain, popcorn, hot dogs. [My son] looked at me like I had been holding back. Like, 'This is what you do?' I had to tell him, 'No, no, darling. Opening nights don't usually look like this.' It's usually a dark bar with a bottle of vodka." ?Chitty Chitty Bang Bang's Jan Maxwell
plus i proudly share the title of the shortest member over the age of 10 with wickedrentq!
Hmmm, lots of different ones that don't have much to do with each other:
"For Now"-Avenue Q "You'll Never Walk Alone"-Carousel "Facade"-Jekyll and Hyde "Seasons of Love"-Rent
"If there was a Mount Rushmore for Broadway scores, "West Side Story" would be front and center. It snaps, it crackles it pops! It surges with a roar, its energy and sheer life undiminished by the years" - NYPost reviewer Elisabeth Vincentelli
Definitely "Purpose", and "What do you do with a BA in English, from Avenue Q" (even though I got a BA in psychology...but it pretty much has the same result)
"Hey Joey McIntyre, is there a balcony in Madison Square Garden? Joey knows his venues a little better than me. That's okay...I have a bigger part on broadway...:)" -Idina Menzel
Grease- Summer Lovin Avenue Q- Sucks to be me, Only for now, Purpose, Fine fine Line Bat Boy- Let me walk amoung you Wicked-Dancing through life, For Good Annie- Tomorrow
"someone tell me, when is it my turn? don't I get a dream for myself? starting now it's gonna be my turn. gangway, world, get off of my runway! starting now I bat a thousand! this time, boys, i'm taking the bows!"
"What Do You Do with a B.A. in English/It Sucks to be Me"
Which is running through my head as I try to write my Hamlet thesis statement. *sigh*
"During this performance, please feel free to let your cell phones and pagers ring willy-nilly. However, do remember that there are heavily-armed knights on stage and you might well be dragged up and impaled."
(Pre-curtain announcement at the new Broadway musical Monty Python's Spamalot)