The King and I Opens Today on Broadway with BNHM Accompanist Andrew Resnick

Our entire cast and crew is made up of Broadway-caliber performers, stage managers, and musicians. And tonight one of our accompanists, Andrew Resnick, opens The King and I on Broadway as an Associate Conductor. We take enormous pride that the Broadway community gets to share in Andrew's talent. He played for Broadway's Next Hit Musical for many years and  conducted Jason Robert Brown's Bridges of Madison County last season and the year before that played the Off-Broadway revival of The Last Five Years. (For you serious musical theatre geeks out there, JRB refers to Resnick "The best. THE best.")

Cast member Annie Schiffmann - who has worked with Resnick for nearly ten years  - chatted with him while he was on a break during previews for the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic. Here we crib the notes from their conversation.


WHEN TO START THE MUSIC - SCRIPTED

With scripted material, obviously the cues are set, there are lines and technical cues. But in the rehearsal process, Resnick explains how they look at the music from different levels and try to figure out if what's on the page works. And if not, can they "modify what's been there to make it work."

The moment of actually beginning a song - that second when the conductor cues the musicians to start - should come from a connected place. The conductor takes it off the right word, rhythm, and tone of how the scene is progressing with how the actors are saying their lines.  (Although he did admit that with long-running shows it's possible there are moments of disconnectedness, and the conductor just has to follow the cues.) 

Former BNHM Accompanist Andrew Resnick conducting the Broadway revival ofThe King and I 

Former BNHM Accompanist Andrew Resnick conducting the Broadway revival ofThe King and I 

WHEN TO START THE MUSIC - UNSCRIPTED

In an improv show, when the improvisers are in the middle of a scene and the moment calls for a song, Resnick explains how he often starts playing and isn't sure what will come out musically. He doesn't always have a complete idea, but might "tinker with it for a few seconds" before building  to a full song.

 "Improv songs can be plot-driven" and Resnick mentions this as their downfall. "The best songs," he says, "have the scenes as context." He mentions that Jason Robert Brown says that "great songs move the story forward, but not the plot forward." Resnick warns that starting an improv song on a "catchy line" may not necessarily be the best time. Is it an emotional moment that can be explored? Are the stakes high enough? If it's all plot and no heart, this can make for confusing storylines in unscripted musicals.

Andrew Resnick playing Broadway's Next Hit Musical at Stage 72 in 2013.

Andrew Resnick playing Broadway's Next Hit Musical at Stage 72 in 2013.

THREE HOUR MUSICALS VS HALF HOUR MUSICALS

The running time for The King and I is nearly three hours - quite a difference from a second act musical in BNHM which usually hovers at the thirty minute mark. Resnick is clear, though, that "successful musicals can be distilled down to very little. You don't need a lot to happen to justify the story." He mentions how thirty minutes is "more than enough time to develop a funny - sometimes even moving, depending on what comes up - story." When shows become too plot-heavy and add in too many characters, the story becomes cumbersome.

This is where he cites the advantage the accompanist has by being both outside of the scene, but inside of the show. The musicians in an improv show have the ability to look above what is happening onstage and ask "why is this story being told? What themes are arising that are funny and important? Why do we care?" Is there a universal theme being explored? Accompanists can help to shape the musical by satisfying what the story calls for.


Congratulations to Andrew for another Broadway opening! We hope to have you create Broadway's Next Hit Musical with us again soon! 

Purchase tickets to Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I at Lincoln Center Theatre.

 

How Do You LEARN The Show?

We talk to our audiences after every show. And we often hear, "I don't know HOW you do what you do." So we thought we'd take you through the process a little bit giving you the perspective from one of our newest members. And just to shake things up a bit, we had one of the founding members, Deb Rabbai interview him. 

Matt Giroveanu will be making his BNHM on April 16th at the Bloomington Center for the Performing Arts.

Posted on April 3, 2015 .

Tribute to Our Gig Bag (And How We Improvise Every Day)

We are improvisers. So we're used to handling situations on the fly. We adapt. We course-correct. We change. It happens all of the time in our show and not surprisingly that ethos makes its way into the real world. (Which explains why we teach so many improv workshops to non-improvisers)

A crazy example of our having to spring into action unexpectedly occurred during a recent tour out West. 

A little background, when we travel to a town there is not a lot of extra time. If the show is on a Friday we'll travel and arrive in that town at some point on Thursday, start tech around 3pm on Friday, and then head out on Saturday morning - either to our next destination or back to New York. (Note how we are in each town for two breakfasts. This is why we're always asking you after the show and on Twitter where the good places to have breakfast are.)

So time is tight even when everything goes according to plan. 

In February we had a show in Medford, OR and then another show two days later in Modesto, CA. in between the two shows, our "Gig Bag" got stolen. All of our props, costumes, wigs, merchandise, even our Phony Award was lost.

Imagine you're in a new town you've never been to with a few hours to completely rebuild something you've been building for years. 

Needless to say, you've got to start improvising. And that's what our cast and crew in Modesto did.

Here's a video we put together about what happened in our own words. We like to think of it as a tribute to Gig Bag. 

Costumes become a big part of the second act of our show. What are some stand out, insane costumes that we wore when you saw our show? Leave a comment below to tell it (we'll try to dig out the picks from our archives)

Posted on March 30, 2015 and filed under Videos.

Blog patience

Look at our blog! We just brought it over from Blogger! We know there are going to be some wonky stuff that's happened design-wise since it got switched over. Thanks for understanding that some stuff may have gotten a little lost in translation!

Posted on March 30, 2015 .