|
|
|
bars & clubs restaurants specials best of chicago film and video food and drink music and clubs stage style words sports features |
|
|
![]() Click for stage events Rent Heads Original cast member Anthony Rapp writes the book
"Sorry, we are out of `Without You' by Anthony Rapp," reads the sign
outside of Barbara's Bookstore in Oak Park on this snowy evening. Posted
just thirty minutes before the start of the night's event--a reading and
signing with "Rent" original Broadway cast member and film co-star
Anthony Rapp on the eve of the publication of his memoir about life with
the show--it's the kind of news that could dampen the spirits of any fan
in attendance. But these are not just any fans: they're self-proclaimed
"Rent Heads" and like the Broadway show from which they take their
moniker, they are a curious combination of optimism and perseverance. A
thirtysomething woman from Wisconsin, having braved the snow for three
hours, had luckily just received her copy from Amazon the afternoon
before leaving her house. Three Romeoville high-school girls, having
rushed over "right after play practice," heard that the Border's down
the block might have the book and are about to take that pilgrimage.
Others are glad to have brought along a clutch of personal
memorabilia--the original stage cast recording or movie soundtrack, the
coffee-table book of the musical affectionately referred to as "The
Rent Bible"--for actor, singer and now newly minted author Anthony Rapp
to autograph.
Blond, bespectacled and even more boyish-looking in person than his
34 years of age, the Joliet native is here as part of a multi-city book
tour. Beyond the backstage insight into the theatrical smash, the book
details Rapp's grief during and after his mother's losing struggle with
cancer, as well as the candid and humorous accounts of his relationships
with boyfriends and partners. In turns funny and somber, his authorial
voice is largely unself-conscious, organically theatrical in all of the
right places and rich in detail. This is in evidence as he mesmerizes
the crowd with both a reading from a chapter entitled "Glory," a smart
selection that effortlessly weaves together the book's narrative
threads, and an intimate yet passionate a cappella rendition of
"Seasons of Love," one of Rent's signature songs. He finishes and the
crowd goes wild. As the line of admirers begins to coil down every nook
and cranny of Barbara's, an assistant store manager assures the group
that Rapp will stick around past the store's closing if necessary to
ensure that every fan has been taken care of. How to reconcile the love
in this room from the public with the vitriol from the critics that
accompanied the film's recent release?
It's a question that consumed our conversation during a breakfast
interview earlier that day. "I would never mean to suggest that the
critics can't be critical of `Rent' but I also think there was a large
amount of context missing that I thought was irresponsible and
unfortunate." Having created the role of "Rent"'s nerdish narrator
Mark Cohen onstage, taking it to London's West End and coming full
circle almost a decade later by joining six of the eight original
Broadway cast members recreating their roles onscreen for director Chris
Columbus' film version, Rapp's evaluation of the show--warts and all--is
clearly balanced between the emotional and the dramaturgical with full
embracement of the fact that "Rent"'s unabashed sentimentality and
celebration of life is built into the fabric of the piece, content to
wear its lachrymose heart on its grungy sleeve. This very quality that
may have engendered some of the film's vituperation is also what endears
it to its fans. Tiffany Stelmachowski, a 26-year-old brunette at
Barbara's who had already seen the film five times, best articulated the
typical sentiments about the show from fans at the reading. "All these
different people--gay people, straight people, people with AIDS--are all
really good friends who love and accept one another for what they are.
The show brings out every emotion in me--laughter and sadness--and warms
your heart." Omit her first sentence and she could be describing a
moving performance of Chekhov. And yet, her entire comment speaks
directly to the points that Rapp made earlier that morning: "Everyone
involved in `Rent' has always maintained that `Rent' is not perfect. But
I've also maintained that I'm not interested in perfect. I'm interested
in something that feels like life is being expressed. All of life. And I
think that at its core that is what `Rent' does best. In this day and
age and in this political climate in our country to not at least
acknowledge the fact that even though it's been ten years since we did
the show on Broadway it still is incredibly rare for any mainstream film
to show gay couples, interracial couples, people with AIDS and HIV,
people with drug problems. That alone, at the very least, has to be
acknowledged."
Wherever fans or informed theatergoers may fall on the Rent critical
continuum, there will be plenty of opportunities for them to practice
what informed and trenchant criticism should expect its readership to
do: go see the work in question and judge it themselves. Along with the
memoir, now in bookstores, the movie is released on DVD this week and
Rapp is joined by stage and film co-star Adam Pascal as well as director
Columbus for the DVD commentary. "The jury can always be out on some of
the choices Chris made," says Rapp, "but I think it's worthwhile
hearing why he made some of those choices." As well, a non-equity tour
of the stage version hits the Cadillac Palace Theatre as part of the
Broadway in Chicago season in early April. And if fans really want to
blow their tax return this Spring, there will be a "very expensive"
one-night only tenth anniversary performance of the show that will
benefit three organizations and reunite the entire original cast onstage
at Broadway's Nederlander Theatre in New York City. For Anthony Rapp,
Tiffany Stelmachowski and the rest of the Rent Heads, it should be a
season of love, indeed.
Also by Fabrizio Almeida
|
|
about Newcitychicago | about Newcity magazine | advertising | privacy policy | FAQ | employment |