Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Everyday Rapture

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Music
  
Various Artists

First performance
  
7 April 2009

Lyrics
  
Various Artists

Orchestrator
  
Tom Kitt


Book
  
Dick Scanlan Sherie Rene Scott

Productions
  
2009 Off-Broadway 2010 Broadway

Playwrights
  
Dick Scanlan, Sherie Rene Scott

Similar
  
Come Fly Away, Passing Strange, Promises - Promises, Hallelujah - Baby!, Next to Normal

Interviews with sherie rene scott and the cast of broadway s everyday rapture


Everyday Rapture is a musical with a book written by Sherie Rene Scott and Dick Scanlan and music by various composers. It ran Off-Broadway in 2009 and opened on Broadway in 2010. The musical is a loose autobiography of Scott herself, showing her travels from her half-Mennonite Kansas childhood to a life in show business.

Contents

Everyday rapture trailer second stage theatre 2009


Concept

The show is called a "stage memoir disguised as fiction", and a "mixed jukebox musical". Songs by singers and songwriters include David Byrne, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, and the Johnny Mercer-Harry Warren "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe." The Judy Garland standards "Get Happy" and "You Made Me Love You" are sung, the "latter amusingly illustrated with a series of cheeky images of Jesus." Songs from Mister Rogers' Neighborhood are also sung.

Scanlan described the show as "'a one-person show with four people in it.' The other three, besides Scott, are a younger actor who has an extended YouTube sequence and two women who serve as backup singers—'The Mennonettes'—and share other scenes with her."

Production history

Everyday Rapture debuted Off-Broadway at the Second Stage Theatre on April 7, 2009 in previews, opening officially on May 3, and closed on June 13, 2009. It starred Sherie Rene Scott with direction by Michael Mayer, choreography by Michele Lynch and orchestrations and arrangements by Tom Kitt. Featured in the cast were Eamon Foley, Lindsay Mendez and Betsy Wolfe. Scott was nominated for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Lead Actress, and the show was nominated as Best Musical.

Scott presented an earlier form of the show titled You May Now Worship Me on March 31, 2008 as a one-night benefit for the Phyllis Newman Women’s Health Initiative of The Actors’ Fund.

The show began previews on Broadway at the American Airlines Theatre on April 19, 2010 and officially opened on April 29, 2010. (It was a last-minute replacement for The Roundabout Theatre Company's planned production of Terrance McNally's Lips Together, Teeth Apart, which was canceled when Megan Mullally withdrew after differences with director Joe Mantello.) Following a limited engagement of 85 performances the show closed on July 11, 2010. The original cast reprised their performances in the Broadway production, Lynch returned as choreographer, and Mayer returned as director despite being caught up in rehearsals for the production of Green Day's American Idiot, which he also directed. During its run, Scott was nominated for the 2010 Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in a Musical as well as Best Book of a Musical, the latter with co-writer Dick Scanlan.

In the summer of 2012, the first production of the musical outside of New York City will be in Kansas City, Missouri, at the Unicorn Theatre.

Song list

From the original cast recording:

  • "The Other Side of This Life" (Overture)
  • "Got a Thing on My Mind"
  • "Elevation"
  • "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe"
  • "Get Happy"
  • "You Made Me Love You"
  • Mr. Rogers Medley ("It's Such a Good Feeling", "Everybody's Fancy", "I Like to Be Told")
  • "It's You I Like"
  • "I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City"
  • "Life Line"
  • "The Weight"
  • "Rainbow Sleeves"
  • "Why"
  • "Won't You Be My Neighbor?"
  • "Up the Ladder to the Roof"
  • Bonus Tracks:

  • "Remember"
  • "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)"
  • Recording

    The original cast recording has been released by Sh-K-Boom Records on their Ghostlight label. Scott is a co-founder of Sh-K-Boom/Ghostlight Records with her husband, Kurt Deutsch. The cast album is now available to download on iTunes

    Critical response

    Ben Brantley wrote in his New York Times review of the 2009 off-Broadway production that "it easily qualifies as one of the year’s most extravagantly entertaining new musicals." Eric Grode, in the Village Voice, commented that "Gifts like [Scott's], especially when packaged and delivered this shrewdly, deserve a kind of worship."

    Songs

    1The Other Side of This Life (Overture)
    2Got a Thing on My Mind
    3Elevation

    References

    Everyday Rapture Wikipedia