imakeitrealinmymind
You had me at 'Underneath these stairs...'
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The important thing is knowing the love in your life is stronger than the hate - Mia she/her
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imakeitrealinmymind · 22 hours ago
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imakeitrealinmymind · 22 hours ago
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mhemusical: “Ahhh, what a night!”
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imakeitrealinmymind · 2 days ago
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mhemusical: Get Ready for Love, Robots, and a Whole New Adventure! Step into the future at Maybe Happy Ending, now playing at the Belasco Theatre!
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imakeitrealinmymind · 2 days ago
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mhemusical: Is this our maybe happy ending…
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imakeitrealinmymind · 2 days ago
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maybehappyending: Tonight, it all begins! Take a look back as we remember the journey that led us here. 💜
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imakeitrealinmymind · 2 days ago
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Photos: MAYBE HAPPY ENDING Starring Darren Criss and Helen J. Shen | Source
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imakeitrealinmymind · 5 days ago
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A New Broadway Musical Asks: Can Robots Fall in Love?
“Maybe Happy Ending” had an initial Korean-language production in Seoul in 2016. Here are five things to know about the show.
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Darren Criss and Helen J Shen star as outmoded robots who meet in a retirement home in “Maybe Happy Ending.” (Photo by Lanna Apisukh for The New York Times)
Hue Park was sitting in a Brooklyn coffee shop in the spring of 2014 when “Everyday Robots,” an indie pop ballad by Damon Albarn, floated over the speakers: “We are everyday robots on our phones / In the process of getting home.” What if, Park thought, there were a whole world filled with robots who looked just look humans? The result: a one-act Korean-language musical about a pair of abandoned robots who fall in love in Seoul in 2064. The show, which Park wrote with Will Aronson, a former New York University classmate, found success with its premiere in Seoul in 2016, and five subsequent commercial productions there. The New York Times critic Jesse Green, who saw an English-language production at Atlanta’s Alliance Theater in 2020, called it “charming” and “Broadway-ready.” Now that version will open at Broadway’s Belasco Theater on Nov. 12, starring Darren Criss and Helen J Shen.
The story is about two outcast helperbots who meet at a robot retirement home and build a relationship while grappling with their own obsolescence, and Park thinks it is especially relatable after the coronavirus pandemic. “People have become so comfortable staying alone in their rooms and connecting to each other through a screen,” he said in a recent interview in Midtown Manhattan.
Shortly after previews began last month, Park, 41, a former K-pop lyricist who wrote the show’s lyrics, and Aronson, 43, who wrote the music — both collaborated on the book — talked about their inspirations and the different approaches to developing the show’s Korean and English versions. In a separate video call, Criss, 37, and Shen, 24, discussed the challenges of playing robots who look like humans.
Here are five things to know.
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Shen and Criss star alongside two other actors in the musical, which is at the Belasco Theater in Manhattan. (Photo by Jeenah Moon for The New York Times)
The first draft was in English.
Initially, Aronson said, they wrote in English because his Korean — which he began learning in 2008, when he was hired to write the music for a Korean show — “was not as good as it is now.” Park, who was born in South Korea, then wrote the Korean lyrics and translated the script for the musical’s premiere in Seoul. When it came time to create the English version, for the Alliance production, “we went back to the English one we already had,” he said.
Two versions, worlds apart.
Unlike in English-language musicals, the lyrics in Korean-language musicals do not rely on structural rhymes, Aronson said. “A lot of English lyrics are very specific, things you would actually say,” he added. “Korean lyrics are more like poetry.” The English version of “Maybe Happy Ending” also spells out plot details more concretely, according to Park. He noted a scene in the Broadway production in which the former owners of the female robot appear as holograms and recount their relationship history. In the Korean version, which, unlike the Broadway iteration, has a six-piece orchestra onstage, the characters do not appear. Their back story is instead implied in a duet between a male cellist and a female violinist.
The actors have a unique challenge.
The script spells it out: Oliver (Criss) and Claire (Shen) are robots who look like humans (they are dressed like hipsters, circa 2010).
Criss’s robot is an older model, so he, Shen and the production’s director, Michael Arden, decided that he would be the more robotic of the two main characters. That allowed Criss to draw on his training in physical theater at the Accademia dell’Arte, the performing arts school in Arezzo, Italy. “The fear for an actor on a stage is to be like a cartoon character,” said Criss, who cited Kabuki theater, vaudeville and silent-film-era comedians as inspirations for his character’s movements and expressions. “However, because of the construct of our show, which is extremely theatrical and heightened, the more you lean into that, I think the more effective the piece.” As for Shen’s character, the group decided that, because she was a newer model, her movements would be nearly indistinguishable from a human’s. “It was interesting to get to work in that middle ground, that gray area,” she said.
Japan’s hikikomori were an inspiration.
Aronson and Park had read about the hikikomori in Japan, which are extreme recluses — mostly young men — who hole up in a home for six months or more, often sequestering themselves in a single room and rarely engaging with the outside world.
“There’s less and less interaction with other people,” Aronson said. “We’re all becoming more like shut-ins, disconnected.”
It has a majority Asian American cast.
In addition to Criss, who is half Filipino, and Shen, who is Chinese and grew up in New Jersey, the two cast members who appear onstage are Dez Duron and Marcus Choi, who is Korean American. “It’s exciting to have more variety on Broadway,” said Park, who mentioned recent shows like “KPOP” and the puppet-driven play “Life of Pi,” which featured many South Asian actors. “I hope ‘Maybe Happy Ending’ can contribute to that.”
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imakeitrealinmymind · 5 days ago
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Via Darren's Instagram Story (November 7th, 2024)
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imakeitrealinmymind · 8 days ago
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darrencriss: #harriswalz2024
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imakeitrealinmymind · 8 days ago
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lin_manuel: @ maybehappyending is such a beautiful jewel of a show. I can’t remember the last time I was so surprised and moved by a new musical. Without spoilers: imagine if Kazuo Ishiguro wrote Company... Congrats to @hue_park & Will Aronson for a score that gorgeously threads the needle between the distant future and your favorite jazz vinyl. @ michaelarden is at the top of his game. Congrats to @ darrencriss & @helenjshen & my old pal @marcuschoi11 and an incredible company. My new musical loving heart is so full. GO.
Slide 2: had to hit em with a .5
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imakeitrealinmymind · 13 days ago
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Darren Criss attends the 2024 CFDA Awards at American Museum of Natural History | October 28, 2024 | 📸 by BJ Pascual
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imakeitrealinmymind · 15 days ago
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pauldellozphotography: cfda awards // @ cfda - @ csiriano @ darrencriss
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imakeitrealinmymind · 15 days ago
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Via Darren's Instagram Story (October 29th, 2024)
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imakeitrealinmymind · 15 days ago
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Darren Criss attends the 2024 CFDA Awards at American Museum of Natural History | October 28, 2024 | 📸 by Kristina Bumphrey, J Mayer, The Stewart of NY
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imakeitrealinmymind · 16 days ago
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Via Darren's Instagram Story (October 24th, 2024)
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imakeitrealinmymind · 16 days ago
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wdym this happened in less than 24 hours
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imakeitrealinmymind · 16 days ago
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michaelivseyhair: Slaayy @ darrencriss X @ csiriano #PerfectHair @ edwardcruz makeup 🔥❤️ #CFDAawards *Videos via his ig story
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