Creating the Completely New Broadway Musical “Something Rotten!’

 

Sneak Peek compiled by Liz Eichler of Broadway in Cincinnati’s Something Rotten, from their press kit.

Most Broadway newcomers don“™t get their first show produced by Tony Award-winner Kevin McCollum, and they don“™t typically land Tony-winner Casey Nicholaw as their director-choreographer. But brothers Karey and Wayne Kirkpatrick and British comedy writer John O“™Farrell, the creators of the Tony Award-nominated Something Rotten!, aren“™t like most Broadway first-timers.

Growing up in Louisiana, the Kirkpatrick brothers fell in love with musical theater, appearing in high school shows and going to what“™s now the Baton Rouge River Center to see touring productions of Broadway hits.  In 1983, Karey Kirkpatrick saw his first show on Broadway, My One and Only, starring Tommy Tune and Twiggy, at the St. James Theatre ““ the theater that“™s now home to Something Rotten!.

Careers took the brothers and their Something Rotten! collaborator O“™Farrell in different creative directions ““ Karey to success as a screenwriter, songwriter and director, with credits including The Rescuers Down Under, James and the Giant Peach and Chicken Run; Wayne to acclaim as a Grammy Award-winning songwriter (Eric Clapton“™s Song of the Year “œChange the World“ and Garth Brooks“™ “œWrapped Up in You“ are his); O“™Farrell to multifaceted success in the UK as a comic novelist, columnist and TV/film writer.

The seeds of Something Rotten! were sewn in the mid-1990s when Karey, who now lives in Los Angeles, and Wayne, who calls Nashville home, would get together for holidays or catch up by phone.

“œWe were big history buffs.  It started with, “˜Wouldn“™t it be funny if Shakespeare“™s London were a lot like what Broadway was in the 1930s?“™“ Karey says. “œThen it was, “˜What would it be like to be writing plays in the shadow of William Shakespeare, after Romeo and Juliet just opened?“™“

“œWe thought of two writers,“ Wayne says. “œWhat if one went to a soothsayer? Then somewhere along the way it was, “˜What if the two writers were brothers? What if the soothsayer“™s name was Nostradamus, but he wasn“™t the Nostradamus? What if he was a senile, bad soothsayer, his nephew?“™ Eventually it was, “˜If we“™re going to do this, we should really get serious about it.“™“

The brothers buckled down, and in 2010, Karey reached out to his friend Kevin McCollum, producer of original hits like Rent and Avenue Q.

“œWe called Kevin and said, “˜What do you need?“™ He said that Avenue Q was three songs and an idea,“ Karey says. “œHe came to my house and we pitched him five songs and the idea. He said, “˜I think you“™ve got something here.“™“

Karey brought in O“™Farrell, whom he“™d met on Chicken Run, to help write the show“™s story. The brothers crafted the music and lyrics, eventually writing more than 50 songs. What they had, after plenty of revisions and a multi-year developmental process, is a buoyant musical set in Shakespeare“™s day that imagines the creation of the very first musical.

Something Rotten! centers around Nick and Nigel Bottom (the last name comes from A Midsummer Night“™s Dream), brothers desperate for a hit in Elizabethan London, where William Shakespeare is a rock star-like god of the stage lately given to cribbing plots.

Nick“™s wife Bea, a can-do gal in the style of Shakespearean heroines who cross-dress to get things done, tries to help. Nigel falls for a pretty Puritan named Portia, whose daddy strongly disapproves. Unreliable soothsayer Thomas Nostradamus, nephew of the Nostradamus, looks into the future and tells Nick that theater“™s next big thing will be ““ tahdah! ““ “œmusicals“, where people sing, dance and act all at the same time!

Something Rotten! is laced throughout with humor for Shakespeare aficionados and musical theater geeks.

But as O“™Farrell observes, “œIf it works as a musical for people who don“™t know musicals or Shakespeare, then I“™m happy.  It“™s about show business and putting on a show. Just doing that in Tudor times gives it an extra spin.“

“œI think it doesn“™t matter how much you know,“ says director-choreographer Nicholaw, whose other current Broadway shows are Aladdin and The Book of Mormon. “œMy nieces and nephews say it“™s their favorite show that I“™ve done, and they don“™t know any of the references.“

For the no-longer-green creative team, Something Rotten! has been a challenge, an education and a joy, an experience they still savor as the touring production plays cities all over the United States.

“œThis was by far the hardest thing I“™ve ever done, but [it was] so rewarding to sit in a theater and watch all these amazing contributions from people who took it beyond our idea to create this magical, happy experience,“ Wayne says.