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“The Addams Family” – WORD OF MOUTH

The Addams Family can’t rely on the critics, so it’s up to the fans of the show to show their support through WORD OF MOUTH. 

CLICK HERE to visit the WORD OF MOUTH post.  Scroll to the bottom and click “Comments” to share your thoughts or experiences of “The Addams Family” on Broadway, and to read others’ experiences.

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Opening Night of “The Addams Family” Musical

Opening Night … in pictures, courtesy of broadwayworld.com

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Critics Aren’t Raving, but Audiences Love The Addams Family!

Yes, it is every producer’s goal to win the approval of the critics, but ultimately it’s up to the “real” people, the audiences, the ticket purchasing public to make or break a show.  And from what I’ve read, audiences are LOVING the kooky Addams Family musical.  And at the end of the day, isn’t that what makes a successful show - audiences that walk out of the theatre smiling and humming and happy?  So if the creative team of the Addams Family musical can’t rely on the critics, then it’s up to the fans to show their support through WORD OF MOUTH. 

Below is the “Word of Mouth” Review from Broadway.com, where REAL people review the show.

 

If you’ve seen the show, or just want to offer your support of the show, please leave a comment here and let the world know how you feel about The Addams Family on Broadway.  And if you have pictures you’d like to share, please e-mail them to afblog@comcast.net, and I’ll get them put up here.

(Comments are threaded, so you can leave a “stand alone” comment, or reply to someone else’s comment.)

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New And Improved Addams Family Musical Hits Broadway Running

 

photo by Matt Hoyle

photo by Matt Hoyle

The highly anticipated new musical “The Addams Family”, starring Nathan Lane and Bebe Neuwirth,  held its first preview on Broadway last night at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre.  Following an eight week Chicago try-out,  the show has undergone some changes in the last few weeks, thanks in part to the input of  Tony Award winning director Jerry Zaks, who was brought in as a creative consultant.   Time will tell if the changes are enough to quiet the critics, but initial chatter is definitely positive:
 
…the audience responded like it was a rock concert…
 
…not only are there great tunes,  but the lyrics are great…
 
…the laughs were big and constant…
 
…a new song (“Live Before We Die”) and a lovely one at that…
 
the essence of the story is much more focused now…
 
With the collaborative efforts of such a fantastic cast….
Nathan Lane (Gomez); Bebe Neuwirth(Morticia); Kevin Chamberlin (Uncle Fester); Jackie Hoffman (Grandma); Krysta Rodriguez (Wednesday); Wesley Taylor (Lucas Beineke); Zachary James (Lurch); Carolee Carmello(Alice Beineke); Terence Mann (Mal Beineke); and Adam Riegler(Pugsley)…
and a dream creative team …
Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice (Book); Andrew Lippa (Music and Lyrics); Julian Crouch and Phelim McDermott (Direction and Design); Sergio Trujillo (Choreography) and Stuart Oken (Producer)…. 
there’s no way this show won’t just keep getting better and better!
If you have seen the show, or even if you just want to see the show, please feel free to share your thoughts here.  Other readers value your comments! 
  
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The Addams Family Musical Review “Recap”

lane and neuwirth 

Broadway In Chicago’s pre-Broadway world premiere presentation of The Addams Family, a new musical based on the bizarre family of characters created by legendary cartoonist Charles Addams, opened Wednesday, December 9 at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts’ Oriental Theater. The production continues in Chicago through January 10, and will play Broadway’s Lunt-Fontanne Theatre beginning March 4, with an anticipated opening date of April 8.

The musical stars Nathan Lane and Bebe Neuwirth as Gomez and Morticia Adams, with Kevin Chamberlin (Uncle Fester), Jackie Hoffman (Grandmama), Zachary James (Lurch), Adam Riegler (Pugsley), and Krysta Rodriguez (Wednesday) rounding out the “Family”.  Playing the “family who comes to dinner” are  Terrence Mann and Carolee Carmello as Mal and Alice Beineke, and Wesley Taylor as Lucas Beineke, Wednesday’s love interest. 

The production features direction and design by Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch, book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice, music and lyrics by Andrew Lippa, and choreography by Sergio Trujillo.
 

Wednesday night’s performance was attended by many critics whose reactions are mixed, but the consensus is decidedly positive.  Excerpts of some of those reviews follow:

By Hedy Weiss, Theater Critic, The Chicago Sun Times

“…there is rarely a dull moment as each grand shock of the new, each adjustment to change, each recognition of aging and each surprising rebirth wraps its arms itself around the characters of “The Addams Family.”

By Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune

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Scenes From “The Addams Family” Musical

 

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…Sergio Trujillo gives new meaning to multitasking

I found this fantastic article on newcitystage.com and had to share. I knew after seeing Jersey Boys that Sergio Trujillo was special, but I didn’t realize just how amazing he really is.

Broadway Boundless: “Addams Family” choreographer Sergio
Trujillo gives new meaning to multitasking

By Fabrizio O. Almeida

sergiotrujilloSergio Trujillo has a talent for continuing a conversation exactly at the point where he left off, something that serves the choreographer well during an extended interview at the Argo Tea near the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre. It’s where his latest project, the highly anticipated musical version of “The Addams Family,” is in previews for a December 9 world premiere.

It’s the day after Thanksgiving, and he’s in the middle of relating how Debbie Allen (of “Fame” fame) became his sponsor for his Green Card in the early nineties—Trujillo is Canadian by nationality and Colombian by birth—when he leaves briefly to retrieve a tomato-goat-cheese quiche and nonfat latte. He is describing his collaboration with “Addams Family’”s innovative co-directors/designers Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch (“amazing but a new way of working for me”) when he answers his iPhone to clarify a note to an assistant. There is the time Trujillo has to excuse himself for twenty minutes in order to run back to the Oriental to give notes to the cast. Later, at the brand-new Puma flagship store across from the theater (“I’ve been dying to check this place out,” he says), he begins telling me how he had been mugged two weeks earlier on State Street following a late-night production meeting, then stops to admire a pair of black Pumas.  “I love these,” he says.

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