It’s official! Rock of Ages has a Broadway Cast Recording! You can pre-order it on iTunes. We were able to get in there while they were recording and tape the event and do a Live Tweet. The entire cast was at Legends studio (Whitney Houston, Mary J Blige, Kanye, Foreigner, etc) and the band KILLED it.
I’m with Hillary on this, “I can’t wait to have this in my house! I CAN’T WAIT!”
It’s awards season, in case you haven’t noticed, and we can’t tell you how proud we are of our wonderful clients!
Winner 2009 Lortel Awards
Outstanding Musical
Outstanding Choregrapher: Bill T. Jones
Outstanding Costume Design: Marina Draghici
Drama Desk Award Nominations
Outstanding Musical
Outstanding Actor in a Musical: Sahr Ngaujah
Outstanding Choreographer: Bill T. Jones
Outstanding Orchestrations: Aaron Johnson and Antibalas
Drama League Nominations
Distinguished Production of a Musical
Distinguished Performance: Sahr Ngaujah
New York Magazine: Best Play 2008
TONY Award Nominations Best Musical
Best Actor in a Musical: Constantine Maroulis
Best Direction of a Musical: Kristin Hanggi
Best Costume Design: Gregory Gale Best Sound Design: Peter Hylenski
Outer Critics Circle Award Nominations Outstanding New Broadway Musical
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical: Wesley Taylor
Drama League Nominations Distinguished Production of a Musical
Distinguished Performance: Constantine Maroulis
We are so excited that the sold-out Broadway run of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is headed to London. We’ll be handling internet marketing and spreading the word to fans that the show is coming to the UK. This marks AMC’s first West End show, and we couldn’t be more thrilled! Check out the website and join the email list!
Zowie—the Rock of Ages opening night was amazing! The crazy energy that is blowing the roof off the Brooks Atkinson eight times a week followed the crowd down the block to the Edison Ballroom which quickly became bobbing, throbbing, dancing, drinking, singing, clapping sea of merrymakers. Early word about the fantastic reviews swept the room, which only added to the air of incandescent intoxication.
Night Ranger (yes, THE Night Ranger!) played a smokin’ all-acoustic set, Survivor’s Jim Peterik gave a the whole crowd a Rocky (III) moment when he had us belting out Eye of the Tiger, and the girls swooned en masse when Constantine and his band took the stage.
It was, to date, the best opening night party anyone at AMC has ever attended. And the stupendous reaction from the critics was the chocolate on the cherry on the top!
Rock of Ages has the first preview tonight! As I sit here listening to the face-melting hits of the 80s, I realized how much fun I am having while working on this show. We just ran a marathon launching the new website and creating a flurry of new videos all while humming along to I Can’t Fight This Feelin’ Anymore.
Check out this great 80s video we created and go see the show. See it’s not work! It’s fun:
Have you been following the tale of Patti Lupone’s shouty episode with a picture-taking audience member? Here’s the audio clip (which is on Youtube, which seems sort of ironic, but whatever):
Obviously this begs the question about questionable behavior during live performances, doesn’t it? That “no photography of any kind” rule includes “no recording devices,” so unless the person who captured this is exceptionally quick to recognize a newsworthy moment, he or she was flouting the very same rules as the snapper. Both are wrong, true, and listening in like this does make us culpable in the act, but it’s still pretty fun to hear La Lupone going off on this lout, isn’t it?
Here’s the interesting thing: Take a look at some of the comments from this blog post about the incident on the Gay TV blog.
First of all, wow, these are some vituperative people, some of whom clearly have no understanding of what they were even listening to, but sure are ready to sling some serious smack about a famous person.
Second, boy, do theatre folk get sanctimonious, particularly about their sacred cows (no insult to the lady in question intended).
Third, I just don’t understand the urge to snap photos–or make recordings–of entertainment events. For what? Was that guy going to try to sell crappy cell phone pictures of Lupone on Ebay? Was the recorder planning to make a cd of the show? (Before he realized he could post the show-stopping episode on Youtube, naturally.) Is there really a market for this kind of thing, or are they planning to gaze/listen to their blurry/mostly inaudible contraband in the privacy of their lonely rooms? Whichever, it’s just kind of sad.
Fourth, full disclosure, I detest people who do stuff like this and have been known to personally, publicly and not-very-nicely request them to desist, so I’m pretty much on Patty’s page here (ha).
The Broadway League has launched a new “economic stimulus” campaign via its website ILoveNYTheatre.com to help bring the butts to the seats. It’s a hip program that stresses the the fun, immediacy and affordability of seeing a show. There are ads running in the NYT print, TV spots on WCBS and WABC, online and phone kiosks around the city. You can also see banner ads on NYT.com as well as the Times Square Alliance, NYC & Co sites. Here’s the tv commercial on Youtube, check it out–and while you’re at it, why not buy a ticket for something?