#great Gatsby musical
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Me whenever a new musical goes on broadway:
#starkid#working boys#team starkid#henry hidgens#musical theatre#broadway#musicals#theatre kid#gutenberg#joe locke#sweeny todd#bad cinderella#romeo and juliet#parade musical#merrily we roll along#great gatsby#great gatsby musical
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Is the Gatsby musical an accurate retelling of the original novel? No.
Does it romanticize the fuck out of Gatsby and Daisy? Yes.
Is the idea of the green light being a metaphor for romantic love entirely missing the point? Yes.
Is it a really, really fun time with gorgeous music, beautiful visuals, and a wildly talented cast? You're goddamn right
#eva noblezada#jeremy jordan#the great gatsby#great gatsby#great gatsby musical#the great gatsby musical#broadway#theatre#theater#musicals#musical theater#musical theatre#jeremy johnson#jay gatsby#daisy buchanan#also despite the fact it gets a lot wrong as far as themes of the original novel goes#beautiful little fool is on point#like they NAILED that
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Jeremy Jordan and Eva Noblezada as Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby (2023)
#my first time making a gifset in soooo long#my edit#jeremy jordan#eva noblezada#great gatsby#great gatsby musical#great gatsby broadway#broadway#musicals#musical theatre#broadwayedit#broadwaygifs#theatregifs#theatreedit#musicaltheatreedit
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pov me jumping to get gatsby tickets:
#gen’s a dingus#gatsby#great gatsby#gatsby musical#jay gatsby#great gatsby musical#the great gatsby#the great gatsby musical#jeremy jordan#jerjor#jack kelly#newsies#varian#winn schott#musicals#broadway#theater kid#musical theatre#theatre kid#musical theater#gif#gifs#funny#meme
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Jay and Daisy
#jeremy jordan#digital drawing#digital art#digital illustration#digital painting#artwork#newsies art#newsies#newsies broadway#the great gatsby#great gatsby#great gatsby musical#bwaygatsby#gatsby musical#jay gatsby#daisy buchanan#the great gatsby musical#eva noblezada
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But like, Jeremy Jordan
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Nobody:
Me at 2:30am on a school night deciding its time to listen to The Great Gatsby for the 30000009th time: WHERES THE PARTY AND CAN YOU TAKE ME THERE
#great gatsby#broadway#jeremy jordan#eva noblezada#great gatsby musical#great gatsby broadway#musicals#old sport#AHHH I LOVE IT
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Therapist: describe your current mental state
Me: Jay Gatsby in "Only Tea"
#when he said “im gonna go home and scream into a jar” i felt that in my bones man#competing with “I'm breaking down” for most relatable musical theatre song tbh#the great gatsby#gatsby musical#great gatsby musical#im about to be so annoying
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Does anyone have slime tutorials of any of the following:
The Outsiders
Water for Elephants
Lempicka
The Great Gatsby
Illinois
The Heart Of Rock and Roll
PLEASE I NEED TO REWATCH THE OUTSIDERS AND W4E AND I NEED TO SEE THE REST PLEASE DM ME IF YOU HAVE SLIME TUTORIALS SINCERELY A HOPEFUL CANADIAN
#the outsiders musical#lempicka#water for elephants musical#great gatsby musical#illinois musical#the heart of rock and roll#I NEED SLIME TUTORIALS NOWWWWW
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i want:
that new money
crisp money
straight-from-the-mint money
young money
fresh money
dont want:
that old money
clean money
comes-with-strings money
cold money
funny money
don't forget to push against the tide bestie !!
#the great gatsby#great gatsby musical#this was stuck in my head samantha pauly is such a diva i love her#musicals#musical theatre
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#great gatsby musical#jett talks (me)#jay gatsby#nick carraway#natsby#musical theatre#theatre#musical#musicals
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Eva Noblezada for Paper Magazine 📷 Timothy Greenfield Sanders
#eva noblezada#great gatsby bway#great gatsby musical#bwaygatsby#theatreedit#broadway#bwayedit#i had to#y'all#*
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My friend needs help finding a great gatsby slime tutorial if y’all have any info please tell me
#great gatsby#great gatsby musical#the great gatsby#the great gatsby musical#musicals#theatre#musical theatre#slime tutorials
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@trevination I FOUND PART OF AN AUDIO AHHHHH
#ryan mccartan#the great gatsby#the great gatsby musical#the great gatsby on broadway#great gatsby musical#great gatsby
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Last night I saw the Great Gatsby musical. Before I went, I reread the Great Gatsby book (for the first time since 11th grade!) to get a refresher on the source material and the original story. Having the book so fresh in my mind made seeing the musical really interesting, and now I am going to do something I never thought I'd do, which is post some lengthy meta about The Great Gatsby. If you haven't seen the musical, this post may still be interesting to read, but it does contain some mild spoilers, so I leave that up to you. If you also haven't read the book, godspeed lol.
There's a lot I could talk about here when it comes to the way the book was adapted for the stage. But there's one particular thing I want to zero in on in this post, and that's the "unreliable narrator" of it all.
In the book, Nick Carraway is our narrator. He's an unreliable narrator practically by default - the idea is that he's retelling events that occurred two years prior, from memory. But even knowing that Nick is probably not reporting all events and characters with complete accuracy, it's hard to know which parts exactly are wrong, or what might have happened in reality, because even though he's an unreliable narrator, he's still the only narrator and this is the only version of events we know. We're forced to take Nick as our surrogate and take him at his word. Until the musical.
(I wondered how the show was going to deal with the fact that the story of Great Gatsby is not only told by an unreliable narrator but also by an outside perspective - generally speaking the events of the Great Gatsby aren't happening to Nick, they're just kind of happening around him. Yet he's the voice of the story, so in that way he's central to it, and I was curious how they were going to balance that fact with the fact that Gatsby is functionally the main character.
I think they struck a really good balance in the end. Nick's beginning and ending lines, lifted verbatim from his book narration, frame him clearly as the anchor of the story - I think that's the best word for it; the audience jumps from scene to scene, many but not all of which contain Nick, but we know that Nick is always going to be where the action is, or that he will at least know about it. He may not be the main character, but he's an essential character. But I digress a little bit.)
The difference between the way the story is imparted to the audience in the book versus in the musical boils down to this: in the book, Nick "plays" every character, so all their dialogue and actions, their mannerisms and the way they're described and reported, it's all informed by the beliefs Nick holds about them. Whether he means to or not, his biases paint certain characters in certain lights, and because he is our eyes and ears to the story, we have no choice but to absorb those biases.
But in the musical, every character is literally played by a different actor. Nick can only speak for himself. Nick can only tell his own parts as they happened. He may be "telling" the story, but we're watching the story. We have the benefit of an unblemished perspective on things - we can watch the events the way they actually unfold, regardless of how Nick believes or remembers they went down.
This difference - between Nick as the narrator and Nick as merely his own voice - is crucial in how the musical develops each character, some of them fairly different from how Nick described them in the book. And there's one book-to-stage change - a fairly small one, all things considered - that, to me, illustrated this difference perfectly.
There's a line towards the end of the Gatsby book. Something Nick says in narration, after his final conversation with Tom Buchanan, talking about how Tom gave away Gatsby's name and location to George Wilson (which ultimately led to Gatsby's death). Nick writes:
"I couldn’t forgive him or like him, but I saw that what he had done was, to him, entirely justified. It was all very careless and confused. They were careless people, Tom and Daisy — they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made…"
When I read this line in the book, I couldn't help vehemently agreeing. Screw those rich assholes! Money does corrupt! Tom and Daisy ARE careless wealthy people! It was easy to side with Nick, not only because he was the only perspective on the situation that I had, but also because he said this in internal response to a conversation with Tom, who, I think we can all agree, is a major jackass and a deeply unsympathetic character.
But in the musical, this line is spoken aloud by Nick. And he says it to Daisy, in her house, as she's packing up to skip town after Gatsby's death. In fact, he doesn't just say it; he shouts it, visibly and audibly outraged at her audacity to lead Gatsby on, ghost him, skip his funeral, and then move away to avoid the fallout. Nick is angry and highly critical of Daisy. But because we're no longer confined to his shoes, we also get to see Daisy's reaction - not as Nick remembers it, but as Daisy actually reacts. And because of that, we're able to really see, and confirm, that "Daisy is rich and careless" is not the full story.
I have to credit Eva Noblezada for a phenomenal performance (duh). Daisy in this scene is emotional, grieving, and it's clear she has been trying to contain these feelings for the sake of her husband and her own sanity. She's remorseful, not that Gatsby is gone necessarily, but that she allowed herself to entertain the fantasy of running away with him, only for it to be torn from her. She is trying to make the best of her unavoidable reality. And then Nick tears her a new one, calling her careless, accusing her of destroying things and being too rich to care.
And as I watched that scene, I was no longer wholly on Nick's side. I understood that this situation was so much more complex than Nick's chastisement acknowledged. Sure, Daisy wasn't innocent, but she also wasn't the callous rich girl Nick made her out to be. She did love Gatsby. And she also had a whole life with Tom. She had a daughter. She was a woman in the 1920s! That's a kind of life sentence even wealth can't erase.
The way Daisy responded may not quite have landed with Nick (if we consider the kind of fun possibility that the musical is the events as they happened and the book is Nick retelling those events as he remembers them two years later, then clearly Nick's disdain for Daisy's actions overtook whatever sympathy he felt for her), but the musical gave Daisy the opportunity to appeal to us. The audience. Having this omniscient perspective of things allowed us to draw our own conclusions, and I found myself a lot more sympathetic towards Daisy when I could both see and hear how she responded to Nick's verbal castigation.
In the book, Nick is the narrator. In the musical, Nick is a narrator. But he's no longer the sole arbiter of the story. The audience got to make our own judgements on the events as we witnessed them. Every one of us was a Nick - beholden to our own biases, maybe, but at least not beholden to his.
#gatsby musical#the great gatsby#great gatsby musical#tgg#also this is a separate and much smaller point not worthy of its own post but: jordan baker bro.#she's a flat and fairly inconsequential character in the book#in the show she comes ALIVE not only is she a real person but she is a cool person with dimension#and she's a baddie and i love her#stuff#never thought id be writing a long tumblr post tagged with anything gatsby related but here we are!#broadway the things you make me do. jeremy jordan the man that you are#jeremy jordan#bold of me to tag that way but im going for it! hes in the show it counts#noah j ricketts#eva noblezada#damn guys this post kinda slaps#wait fuck i have to do one more tag#sighs deeply.#gatsby meta#great gatsby analysis
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DAISY IS LEAVING YOUUUUUUUUUUUU
SHE DOESNT LOVE YOUUUUUU
#gen’s a dingus#pov my brain 24/7#musicals#broadway#made to last#theater kid#musical theatre#theatre kid#musical theater#jeremy jordan#gatsby#gatsby musical#great gatsby#great gatsby musical#the great gatsby#the great gatsby musical
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