A Strange Loop
A Strange Loop | |
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2022 Broadway poster
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Music | Michael R. Jackson |
Lyrics | Michael R. Jackson |
Book | Michael R. Jackson |
Premiere | May 3, 2019Playwrights Horizons, New York City : |
Productions | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
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Awards | Obie Award for Playwrighting Pulitzer Prize for Drama Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical Tony Award for Best Musical Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical |
A Strange Loop is a musical with book, music and lyrics by Michael R. Jackson. In 2019, the show had its world premiere off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons in co-production with Page 73 Productions.[1] The Washington, DC production was postponed to December 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2][3] A Strange Loop premiered on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre on April 26, 2022, following previews beginning April 14.[4][5] At the 75th Tony Awards, A Strange Loop earned a leading 11 nominations and won for Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical. A Strange Loop also won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
The show follows Usher, a black, queer writer writing a musical about a black, queer writer writing a musical about a black, queer writer. The title refers to a cognitive science term coined by Douglas Hofstadter, as well as the song by Liz Phair.
Contents
Plot summary
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.The chorus, depicted as Usher's Thoughts, calls Usher's name out many times. Usher, working as an actual usher for The Lion King, informs the audience about what the show will entail. Usher wonders if and how he should write A Strange Loop to represent what it's like to "travel the world in a fat, black, queer body" and the pressures of doing so ("Intermission Song").
After work, Usher sings about how he plans "to change this show for the better" as his Thoughts interject, reminding him of his self-loathing, student loans, issues on Black pride, and his repressed sexuality. Usher wants to change himself, but his Thoughts are too disruptive ("Today"). He gets a call from his mother, who asks about "what's going on in [his] life" and reminds him of the work she and his father (both named after characters in The Lion King) went through to raise him. She then requests that Usher write a Tyler Perry-style gospel play in return ("We Wanna Know").
Hanging up, Usher sings about how he wishes he could act more like his "inner white girl" while he is held back by expectations put on Black boys ("Inner White Girl"). After the song, Usher's Thoughts criticize "Inner White Girl," the show, and advise him that the main character should have more sex appeal or that he should add elements of "slavery or police violence so that the allies in the audience have something 'intersectional' to hold on to."
Usher’s father calls, leaving a message to let him know that he was able to find Scott Rudin’s number online, and despite the fact that his father does not condone homosexuality, Usher has student loans to pay off and should leverage their common sexuality to make a connection ("Didn't Want Nothin'").
At a medical checkup, Usher's doctor inquires about Usher's sex life and preemptively prescribes him Truvada, pressuring Usher to have more sex. Usher "enters the sexual marketplace" through the use of various gay dating apps, where he is rejected for being "too black, too fat, too feminine," and for having too small of a dick. Usher rages against the ways in which the gay community is also discriminatory ("Exile In Gayville").
A stranger on a train asks about what Usher is writing. Usher explains that "A Strange Loop" is a cognitive science term about how "your ability to conceive of yourself as an 'I' is ... an illusion. But the fact that you can recognize the illusion proves it exists." The stranger introduces himself as Joshlet and the two flirt, before Joshlet explains that he's a figment of Usher's imagination. Joshlet dismisses Usher and his Thoughts ask him what his problem is. Usher sings about how "the second-wave feminist in [him] is at war with the dick-sucking Black gay man" ("Second Wave").
Usher's agent calls, informing him that Tyler Perry is seeking a ghostwriter for a gospel play. Usher sings about his low opinion of Tyler Perry’s work. In the appearance of famous Black figures such as Harriet Tubman, Carter G Woodson, James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, “Twelve Years A Slave,” and Whitney Houston, his Thoughts accuse him of being a race traitor and persuade him to take the ghostwriting job for "for the money. And Mom. And Dad. And the ancestors" ("Tyler Perry Writes Real Life"). Usher sings through the process of writing the play, acting out all the characters as caricatures ("Writing a Gospel Play").
Back at his job, Usher tells a patron about how he can't continue the show without confronting his parents with his artistic self. The patron advises him to live his life without fear ("A Sympathetic Ear"). Usher's father asks him on a phone call if he has HIV like his cousin Darnell had. The rest of his family appear and the call quickly devolves. Usher's mother asks where her gospel play is.
Usher hooks up with a white man who fetishizes him, silently wondering if he should do this. During sex, Inwood Daddy calls Usher racial slurs ("Inwood Daddy"). After, Usher leaves and questions where his boundaries are ("Boundaries").
He gets a voicemail from his mother wishing him a happy birthday. She continues on to tell him how homosexuality is a sin ("Periodically"). His father calls, informing him people at their church found music of his online and didn't approve ("Didn’t Want Nothin' (reprise)").
Usher's mother and father fight about him and his homosexuality and their worry he might catch AIDS, before Usher explodes with his thoughts about how his repressed sexuality came about, including societal and environmental factors like his upbringing. Usher wants his father to like his work and to care about his complexity. His mother asks him why he hates them and why they're portrayed as they are in the show. Usher says that he writes them like that because he loves them. Usher’s mother says that if Usher actually loved them, he wouldn't have disappointed them.
The set transforms into a gospel play, with Usher as a church pastor and the Thoughts as a choir. Usher recalls visiting Darnell in the hospital, and how Darnell refused HIV medication because he thought he deserved to die for his sins. Usher preaches that he has realized "the only thing worse than dying of AIDS would be living with it and hearing the people you loved say 'I told you so.'" Usher's mother eventually stops the show ("Precious Little Dream/AIDS is God's Punishment"). She tells Usher he is loved but she still thinks that his struggle is due to his homosexuality being a sin and that they could "work this gay abomination thang out."
The Thought playing his mother asks Usher if he wants to end the show with hateful caricature versions of his parents. Usher says that he was trying to depict life as it was for him when he was seventeen but the Thought reminds him that he is twenty-six now. Usher realizes that for his perceptions of his parents to change he must change as well. He sings about childhood memories and what it was like to be "one lone, Black gay boy ...who chose to turn his back on the Lord" ("Memory Song").
With his back to the audience, Usher blanches at the thought of the show ending, wondering what will happen. He turns, facing himself, before reflecting on himself, his relationship with others, and what would happen if he were to change, before coming to the conclusion that "change is just an illusion," and what a strange loop they are in.
Cast and characters
Character | MTF Workshop (2015)[6] | Off-Broadway (2019)[7] | Washington, DC (2021)[3] | Broadway (2022)[4] |
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Usher | Larry Owens | Jaquel Spivey | ||
Thought 1 | L Morgan Lee | |||
Thought 2 | James Jackson, Jr. | |||
Thought 3 | Elijah Caldwell | John-Michael Lyles | ||
Thought 4 | John-Andrew Morrison | |||
Thought 5 | Jason Veasey | |||
Thought 6 | Jamaal Clark Turpin | Antwayn Hopper |
Musical numbers
- "Intermission Song" – Usher, Thoughts
- "Today" – Usher, Thoughts
- "We Wanna Know" – Thoughts
- "Inner White Girl" – Usher, Thoughts
- "Didn't Want Nothin'" – Thought 5, Thoughts
- "Exile in Gayville" – Usher, Thoughts
- "Second Wave" – Usher
- "Tyler Perry Writes Real Life" – Usher, Thought 3, Thoughts
- "Writing a Gospel Play" – Usher, Thoughts
- "A Sympathetic Ear" – Thought 1
- "Inwood Daddy" – Usher, Thought 6, Thoughts
- "Boundaries" – Usher
- "Periodically" – Thought 4, Usher
- "Didn't Want Nothin' Reprise" – Thought 5
- "Precious Little Dream / AIDS Is God's Punishment" – Usher, Thoughts
- "Memory Song" – Usher, Thoughts 2-6
- "A Strange Loop" – Usher, Thoughts
Productions
Original off-Broadway production
A Strange Loop began previews at off-Broadway venue Playwrights Horizons on May 24, 2019. It opened on June 17, 2019 with closing scheduled for July 7, 2019,[8] before extending to July 28, 2019.[9] The show featured Larry Owens as Usher. The creative team credits included Michael R. Jackson as writer of book, music, and lyrics, Stephen Brackett as director, Raja Feather Kelly as choreographer, Charlie Rosen as orchestrator, and Rona Siddiqui as music director.[10]
Original Washington, D.C. production
The Washington, DC production at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company was originally scheduled for September 2020 and was postponed to December 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2][3] The 6 week limited run began previews on November 22, 2021 and opened on December 3, 2021.[11] The show extended another week, changing its closing date from January 2 to January 9, 2022.[12]
Original Broadway production
The Broadway production of A Strange Loop was announced on December 20, 2021.[13] Alongside lead producer Barbara Whitman, many notable people from the entertainment industry served as producers for the production, including Benj Pasek, Justin Paul, Jennifer Hudson, RuPaul Charles, Marc Platt, Megan Ellison of Annapurna Pictures, Don Cheadle, Frank Marshall, James L. Nederlander, Alan Cumming, Ilana Glazer, Mindy Kaling and Billy Porter.[14] Previews were scheduled to begin on April 6, 2022 but were delayed to April 14, 2022 due to COVID-19 breakouts in the cast.[15] It opened on April 26, 2022.
Cast recordings
The original off-Broadway cast recording was released on September 27, 2019, on Yellow Sound Label.[16] The album peaked at number 6 on the Billboard Cast Albums chart.[17] A Broadway cast album was recorded on April 10, 2022 and released on June 10, 2022 through Sh-K-Boom Records, Yellow Sound Label, Barbara Whitman Productions, and Ghostlight Records.[18] It debuted at number two on the Cast Albums chart.[19]
Awards and nominations
On May 4, 2020, the Pulitzer Prize for Drama was awarded to Jackson for the musical, with the committee citing the show as "A metafictional musical that tracks the creative process of an artist transforming issues of identity, race, and sexuality that once pushed him to the margins of the cultural mainstream into a meditation on universal human fears and insecurities." The show is the tenth musical to win the award, as well as the first musical written by a Black person to win and first musical to win without a Broadway run.[20] As one of the Broadway production's producers, Jennifer Hudson's win for the Tony Award for Best Musical made her the second black woman to receive all four of the major American entertainment awards (EGOT).[21]
Original off-Broadway production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | Lucille Lortel Awards[22] | Outstanding Musical | A Strange Loop | Nominated |
Outstanding Director | Stephen Brackett | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Choreographer | Raja Feather Kelly | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical | Larry Owens | Won | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | John-Andrew Morrison | Won | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | L Morgan Lee | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Costume Design | Montana Levi Blanco | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Awards[23] | Outstanding Musical | A Strange Loop | Won | |
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Larry Owens | Won | ||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Stephen Brackett | Won | ||
Outstanding Music | Michael R. Jackson | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Lyrics | Won | |||
Outstanding Book of a Musical | Won | |||
New York Drama Critic's Circle Awards[24] | Best Musical | A Strange Loop | Won | |
Drama League Award[25] | Outstanding Production of a Musical | A Strange Loop | Nominated | |
Distinguished Performance Award | Larry Owens | Nominated | ||
Off-Broadway Alliance Awards[26] | Best New Musical | A Strange Loop | Won | |
Pulitzer Prize | Pulitzer Prize for Drama | Michael R. Jackson | Won | |
Outer Critics Circle Award | Outstanding New Off-Broadway Musical | A Strange Loop | Honoree | |
Outstanding Book of a Musical | Michael R. Jackson | Honoree | ||
Outstanding New Score | Michael R. Jackson | Honoree | ||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Stephen Brackett | Honoree | ||
Outstanding Choreographer | Raja Feather Kelly | Honoree | ||
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Larry Owens | Honoree | ||
Obie Award[27] | Playwrighting | Michael R. Jackson | Won | |
Special Citation | Creative team and ensemble – Antwayn Hopper, James Jackson, Jr., L Morgan Lee, John-Michael Lyles, John-Andrew Morrison, Larry Owens, Jason Veasey, Elijah Caldwell, Stephen Brackett, Raja Feather Kelly, Arnulfo Maldonado, Montana Levi Blanco, Jen Schriever, Alex Hawthorn, Cookie Jordan, Charlie Rosen, Rona Siddiqui, Michael R. Jackson | Won |
Original Broadway production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Tony Awards[28] | Best Musical | Won | |
Best Book of a Musical | Michael R. Jackson | Won | ||
Best Original Score | Nominated | |||
Best Actor in a Musical | Jaquel Spivey | Nominated | ||
Best Featured Actor in a Musical | John-Andrew Morrison | Nominated | ||
Best Featured Actress in a Musical | L Morgan Lee | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Stephen Brackett | Nominated | ||
Best Scenic Design of a Musical | Arnulfo Maldonado | Nominated | ||
Best Lighting Design of a Musical | Jen Schriever | Nominated | ||
Best Sound Design of a Musical | Drew Levy | Nominated | ||
Best Orchestrations | Charlie Rosen | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Jaquel Spivey | Won | |
Drama League Award[29] | Outstanding Production of a Musical | A Strange Loop | Won | |
Distinguished Performance Award | Jaquel Spivey | Nominated | ||
L Morgan Lee | Nominated | |||
Outer Critics Circle Awards[30] | Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Jaquel Spivey | Won | |
Theatre World Award[31] | Jaquel Spivey | Honoree |
References
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