So how do you measure ten years? You celebrate. Ten years ago
this week, RENT
opened on Broadway, and last night, we’re standing, again, on 41st
Street, in front of the Nederlander, a block where we’ve spent
perhaps more time than any other singular block in this city,
and we’re watching the crowds walk the red carpet. The films
crews are out, all the nightly celebrity news magazines, and the
block is closed off to all vehicular traffic. The original cast
is back, performing together again for the first time in ten
years, and RENTheads
are out in full force, and so is the celebrity machine which
helped generate such immediate enthusiasm for this show which is
now the seventh longest-running show in Broadway history. A man
comes and stands alongside us, and asks, “What’s going on?” Ten
years of RENT, we
tell him. “Ten years?” he repeats. “Ten years already.”
Ten years ago this week, it
was April 1996. Times Square was just becoming again the
massive entertainment complex it had been back before the
Depression, back before the sex palaces took over the Deuce.
New York still had rough edges, even in Manhattan, and 41st
Street, home of the Nederlander Theatre, where
RENT was about to
open was one of the less-polished blocks in town, with an SRO
right next door. And now, ten years later, that SRO hotel is
the little boutique hotel, Hotel 41, which has been pulled into
service for this evening’s gala, serving as the Green Room for
all the cast, a cast of dozens which will join the original
cast, for the final number.
Years ago, when Michael
Bennett’s A Chorus Line
became the longest-running show in Broadway history, Bennett
staged a celebration which brought together hundreds of all the
dancers who had graced stages around the world in productions of
Chorus Line – and
he put them all onstage, and up and down the aisles of the
Shubert Theatre. Hundreds and hundreds of dancers in those
silver lamé pantsuits and all of them singing “One Singular
Sensation.” And I thought then, “This is it. It don’t get
better than this.”
So we’re kind of wondering
what might happen at the Nederlander as we join the block-long
line of double-air-kissing ticketholders. People we haven’t
seen in so long, such as Brig Berney, who was for so long the
cast manager of RENT,
and is now managing Festen.
It’s an alumni reunion. We walk into the enclosed tent and onto
the Target red carpet, Target being the primary sponsor for the
evening, and therefore, we’re expecting totally stylish swag in
the stylish gift bag at evening’s end. We linger outside and
and watch the flashes flash and there goes Bill Clegg, minus
Ira. And Raul Esparza who we last saw sing Elvis Costello’s
“God Give Me Strength” at the Friends in Deed Benefit on
Halloween night, and when we remind him how incredible that
performance was that evening, he says, “Yeah, and I was a wreck,
with Elvis Costello standing and watching right there.”
Inside the Nederlander, it’s
open bar and so sipping champagne splits with straws, we do the
schmooze and troll the real estate we know so well from so many
nights in the theatre’s warm embrace. How many times have we
seen RENT? More
than seventy-five, which is a lot to many people, but not so
many to many more. Our favorite usher, Angel, he of the mighty
body and beautiful head, is still passing out programs, same
aisle, same side. And how right is it that his name is Angel,
passing out Playbills for a show where Angel is the linchpin for
all the characters? And there’s Ryan Davis, whom we know from
the lottery lines, and who’s now a director in his own right.
And then the house lights
flicker – and the audience cheers. The energy is crazy
palpable, the house sold-out. And across the stage strides
Mayor Bloomberg with Senator Schumer and Allan Gordon and
Jonathan Tisch and Jimmy Nederlander. The audience cheers some
more. And the speechifying commences and mercifully is brief –
because everyone knows why we’re here.
And then, there they are: the
Original Broadway Cast. The audience is on its feet, as one.
And the OBC is singing “Seasons of Love,” and already, people
are crying around us. Ten years have passed, not just in the
life of this show, and the life of the original cast, but also
in the life of New York, and all of us as New Yorkers. The
fifth-year RENT
anniversary was in April of 2001, a party at BB King’s on 42nd
Street, five months before 9/11, and now it’s April 2006. So
much change in everyone’s life, and we’re all looking at the
original cast and remembering how it was, back then, and who we
were, back then, and where we lived and with whom and who were
our friends and where are they now and what we were working on
way back in 1996, five years before 9/11, when the brand-new
RENT was reminding
us of a time back in 1989, when our friends were getting sick,
and dying, and there was only one pill available and ACT-UP was
the radical activist counterpart to the more procedural GMHC,
and sickness and struggle were all around, in the neighborhoods
where we lived, seeing young men struggle to walk with canes,
and rent ate up our paltry income, and Disneyland was in
Orlando, and nowhere near New York.
A cascade of memories, they
come washing over us as the OBC runs through the oh-so-familiar
numbers. the lyrics a litany we recall better than any creeds
learned from church, they formed our own personal dialect, bits
and pieces of Jonathan Larson’s libretto, which we co-opted to
form our own RENT
vernacular. Every time one of the ensemble’s primary characters
steps forward to sing his or her signature song, the audience
goes wild – and particularly when Wilson Jermaine Heredia comes
out in his candy-apple red Santa Baby suit. As Angel, Heredia
stands there in his Evita pose, arms outstretched, drumsticks in
hand, and receives the crowd’s adulation. Without a doubt, it’s
Angel who lives inside the memory banks of so many of us in the
audience: the person who loved us unconditionally, the
firecracker partygirl, the loyal and loving friend, the one
who’s gone on.
Like a day in the life with
its markers of passing time, the songs come and go, one after
another, their lyrics and melodies as familiar as the hours and
places and friends with which we fill our lives. And though
they’ve sung these songs and said these words 525,600 times, the
OBC riffs on the familiar. Instead of asking “Got a dollar?”
Gwen Stewart as the homeless woman asks “Got a thousand
dollars?”, a reference to the price for a seat at this night’s
performance. And Idina Menzel bares a black thong, and Adam
Pascal gets phallic with his guitar – and whenever one of them
goes up on a line, the audience throws it right back at them.
And so does another night of
RENT pass, from
Christmas Eve last year, to Christmas Eve next, and then, there
they all are again, seated and standing on the table, calling
Angel in from the wings for a final “no day but today.”
Except – on this night, it
ain’t yet over. Suddenly, the OBC races backstage and up the
fire escape, while the current
RENT cast takes the
front line, and again, we in the audience are all on our feet,
as “Seasons of Love” starts again, a new arrangement for this
the 10th anniversary, and when after a verse, the
current cast steps back a few feet, the stage is suddenly
flooded with scores of performers who have played these
characters we all know so well, and all of them joyfully singing
“Seasons of Love,” all the moments we’ve enjoyed together,
forming this family brought together by Jonathan Larson’s
message of love, tolerance and compassion. So many faces once
so familiar, all on the stage again, all the people we laughed
and cried with over the course of ten years, now all assembled
together on one stage, in one theatre, under one roof. The
ultimate RENT
family reunion – home again, home at last.
No one really wants to leave
the Nederlander, not until the final note is played and the band
packs up its instruments, and so then, we do file out, and onto
plush buses which glide us across 42nd Street to the
after-party at Cipriani where the cameras await us again, and
there’s another enclosed walkway with the Target red carpet.
Cipriani. Could there be a
more respected name in service and cuisine? World famous for
their Harry’s Bar in Venice, and later Cipriani in New York, any
party at a Cipriani space is well worth the price of admission,
and in this locale particularly. Cipriani 42nd
Street is what was once known as the Bowery Savings Bank, an
Italian renaissance masterpiece designed by Louis Aires of York
& Sawyer. Built in 1921 with soaring marble columns, inlaid
floors, and a 65-foot ceiling, it’s no wonder this
awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping building has been designated a
national as well as city landmark. Think Grand Central for the
sense of proportion, and then think party space.
There’s a
RENT sign and a
massive disco ball hanging from that 65-foot ceiling, with an
equally massive disco stick – so that together, they form a
RENT 10, rotating
and shooting shards of light around the room which is filled
with the kinds of immense floral arrangements that look as if
they might have been air-lifted from the nursery and lowered
down from the ceiling. A profusion of spring blossoms in pink
and red. And disco lights flashing while a background
soundtrack of jazzy soulful lounge music plays. The Cipriani
staff, celebrated, and rightly so, for their unparalleled level
of attentive service, is out in force, lined up to take our
coats and wraps, and to offer us any number of hors d’oeuvres,
passed butler style, as well as their fabled Bellinis, served
raffishly in champagne flutes embossed with the Target target.
The buffet tables are laden: risotto and ravioli, tagliolini and
cannelloni, artichokes and fritto misto. A server passes by
with individual chocolate mousses, warm and oozing. Another
with crepes filled with ricotta and topped with artichoke. It’s
all too rich and too indulgent and too delicious to pass up.
And everyone’s here. They’ve
come out of the woodwork, as Tony Vincent says, all these people
whose lives have been so impacted by RENT. People we haven’t
seen in so long: Robert Glean who looks as delicious in dreads
as he did with a shaved head, and Wilson Cruz, with that
contagious smile and that endearing baby face. And Maya Days,
with a photo of her baby Boston Quinn on her handbag,
ever-stunning and gracious. We’re wandering the party,
spellbound at the space, the details leftover from its days as a
bank: the brass plates with their admonition: SAVE TIME, BANK BY
MAIL. And the men’s room the size of a Manhattan apartment –
they knew how to build back in 1921, before the Depression
cramped the nation’s style.
There’s a deejay and he gets
the kids dancing to Diana Ross who threatens to come out and
there’s Markie Setlock with that most brilliant smile, and then
we’re directing him to Jimmy Poulos for their hot tub reunion,
where we run into Gwen Stewart who’s got those tiger eyes which
hold us in their gleam. Flashes and photo ops, and smiles for
the press. And then we’re over by the Target booth, where the
Target dog, an English bull terrier (apparently named Ariela) is
available for photographs. Everyone’s a star at
RENT. And Michael
McElroy, of course, tall and gorgeous, and ever the gentleman,
always the diplomat. And Calvin Grant, too sexy for his shirt,
too sexy by far -- and also, oh, my goodness, but it’s been far
too long, and now his hair is that long, too, it’s Carlos
Gonzalez, aka Sahara, writer and composer of
Warm (now preparing
for its debut at the Lambs Theatre) – and he looks good. And
happier than we remember and we’re so happy to see him again,
and that’s how it is all around. All these friends together
again, they’re all trading numbers and jumping each other’s
bones. What a bunch, what a crazy talented bunch – it’s a
privilege to know them all.
So that’s how we measure ten
good years: in all the laughter we’ve shared, in all the joy
we’ve received, in all the good that has emanated from the stage
of the Nederlander where
RENT still plays, night after night.
And the gift bag? It’s black
and sleek with a target of red patent leather, a little bit of
Angel on a New York background – and filled with goodies – just
as RENT is a gift
to the city and to all of us whose lives have been touched by
its love.