New York Musical Theatre Festival
New York Musical Theatre Festival | |
---|---|
Location(s) | New York City |
Foundation | 2004 |
Type of play(s) | Musical |
Website | |
www |
The New York Musical Theatre Festival (NYMF) is an annual three-week summer festival which presents more than thirty new musicals at venues in New York City's midtown theater district. More than half of these productions are chosen by leading theater artists and producers through an open-submission, double-blind evaluation process; the remaining shows are invited to participate by the Festival's artistic staff.
As of 2015, the festival has premiered over 375 musicals, which have featured the work of over 8,000 artists and have been attended by 300,000 theatergoers. NYMF alumni productions had been produced in all fifty U.S. states (plus the District of Columbia,) and in 24 countries worldwide, having been seen by approximately four million people.[1]
History
NYMF audiences have enjoyed premieres of new musicals from Australia, Britain, Canada and the United States, featuring a broad spectrum of contemporary musical styles including R&B, jazz, hip-hop, Broadway, emo-pop, rock, punk, ska, country and opera. NYMF premieres have ranged from original pieces like Next To Normal, Altar Boyz, Gutenberg! The Musical!, The Great American Trailer Park Musical, and title of show, to adaptations of classic stories like Caligula, The Portrait of Dorian Gray, R.U.R. (Save The Robots), and Much Ado About Nothing (About Face).[1]
In addition to full productions, NYMF presents a wide range of special events, readings and concerts of new music, educational seminars, explorations of musicals in TV and film, and unusual collaborations with other New York-based arts organizations. In 2005, the Festival featured a series of co-productions with the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater exploring the nexus of improvisation and musical theater.[1] NYMF has also partnered with The Paley Center each season to present special screenings of Musicals on Television.[2]
Also in 2005, the New York Musical Theatre Festival received the 21st Jujamcyn Theaters Award, a $100,000 prize given to a not-for-profit institution that has made an "outstanding contribution to the development of creative talent for the theatre."[3]
NYMF also features a Dance Series, celebrating the fusion of musical theatre and dance. Each series included one new musical commissioned by the Festival: Common Grounds (2006), Platforms (2007), Wild About Harry (2008), and Andy Warhol Was Right (2009).[1]
During the off season, NYMF produces a number of concerts, from large star-studded evenings like "The Unauthorized Musicology of Ben Folds", to intimate events like a salon with Grammy Award nominee and Spring Awakening composer Duncan Sheik. It also operates a year-round writer service program, The Next Link Project, which provides dramaturgical, professional, entrepreneurial and financial support to help writers bring their musicals to fruition as fully staged productions. The Next Link Project culminates with twelve writing teams each year receiving subsidized productions in NYMF's fall Festival.[4]
On July 17, 2008, the musical title of show became the first show to transfer from the New York Musical Theatre Festival to a commercial Broadway production when it opened at the Lyceum Theatre. The show closed October 12, 2008 after playing 13 previews and 102 performances. It was produced by Kevin McCollum, the producer of Rent and Avenue Q, as well as Roy Miller, producer of Drowsy Chaperone, the Vineyard Theatre, Laura Camien and Kris Stewart, founder emeritus of the New York Musical Theatre Festival.[5]
In 2009, Next To Normal became the second show to transfer from the New York Musical Theatre Festival to a commercial Broadway production. It became a smash hit at the Booth Theatre, winning 3 Tony Awards including Best Score and Best Leading Actress In A Musical.[6] "Next To Normal" went on to win the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, only the ninth musical to be so honored in the history of that award.[7] It was far and away the biggest success to emerge from NYMF, catapulting its cast and creative team to stardom, and played 21 previews and 733 regular performances before it closed on January 16, 2011.
Also in 2009, NYMF began a partnership with the Daegu International Musical Theatre Festival (DIMF), which shares its dedication to new musicals and new artists. The partnership includes a production exchange, which began with the hit Korean production of My Scary Girl at NYMF, and continued in the Summer of 2010 with the 2009 NYMF musical Academy at DIMF. NYMF's Korean production of Academy received awards for Best Musical and Best Supporting Actor at the annual Daegu Musical Theater Awards.[8]
On September 10, 2012, Chaplin became the third musical to transfer from NYMF to the commercial Broadway stage when it opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theater. It closed on January 6, 2013, after 24 previews and 136 performances. Rob McClure received a Tony nomination for Best Leading Actor in a Musical.
In 2013, NYMF won a Special Drama Desk Award "for a decade of creating and nurturing new musical theater, ensuring the future of this essential art form."[9]
Notable alumni productions
Broadway
- title of show (NYMF '04) The Lyceum Theatre, 2008
- Next to Normal (NYMF '05 as Feeling Electric) The Booth Theatre, 2009-2011
- Chaplin (NYMF '06) Ethel Barrymore Theatre, 2012
- Nerds: A Musical Software Satire" (NYMF '05) Longacre Theatre, 2016
Off-Broadway
- Altar Boyz (NYMF '04) New World Stages, 2005–2010
- The Great American Trailer Park Musical (NYMF '04) New World Stages, 2005
- Captain Louie (NYMF '04) York Theatre, 2005
- Shout! The Mod Musical (NYMF '04) Julia Miles Theatre, 2006
- The Big Voice: God or Merman? (NYMF '05) Actors Temple Theater, 2006-2007
- Gutenberg! The Musical! (NYMF '06) 59E59 and Actor's Playhouse, 2006
- Tales of Custard the Dragon (NYMF '06) DR2 Theater, 2008
- My Vaudeville Man (NYMF '07) The York Theatre Company, 2008-2009
- Things to Ruin (NYMF '06) Second Stage Theater, 2009
- Rooms: A Rock Romance (NYMF '05) New World Stages, 2009
- Yank! (NYMF '04) York Theatre, 2010
- In Transit (NYMF '04) 59E59 Theaters, 2010
- With Glee (NYMF '07) Kirk Theater, 2010
- The Blue Flower (NYMF '04) Second Stage Theater, 2011
- The Shaggs: Philosophy of the World (NYMF '05) Playwrights Horizons, 2011
- Play It Cool (NYMF '08) Acorn Theater, 2011
- Balls...The Musical? (NYMF '11) Lion Theater, 2011
- Fat Camp (NYMF '09) American Theater of Actors, 2012; Theatre Row, 2015
- The Last Smoker in America (NYMF '09) Westside Theater, 2012
- The Other Josh Cohen (NYMF '10) SoHo Playhouse, 2012
- Unlock'd (NYMF '07) The Duke on 42nd Street, 2013
- F#@king Up Everything (NYMF '09) Elektra Theater, 2013
- Vote for Me: A Musical Debate (NYMF '10) Roy Arias Studios & Theatres, 2014
- Bedbugs!!! (NYMF '08) ArcLight Theater, 2014
- Clinton: The Musical (NYMF '14) New World Stages, 2015
- Real Men: The Musical (NYMF '15) New World Stages, 2015
In total, 27 NYMF shows have gone on to Off-Broadway.
NYMF Awards for Excellence
At the end of every festival starting in 2006, a jury of Broadway professionals gave out awards for excellence to the deserving productions in that year's festival. There is also a "Best of Fest" award that the public votes for. 2013 was the first year where the public and the jury agreed on a best musical (Volleygirls).
The NYMF Awards do not serve as a good barometer for future success. No musical that won "Most Promising New Musical" has yet had an off-Broadway production. Two "Best of Fest" winners have been seen Off-Broadway: Unlock'd (NYMF '07) and Fat Camp (NYMF '09). The only other awarded musicals that have transferred Off-Broadway were two winners of Excellence in Writing (Book): Gutenberg! The Musical! (NYMF '06) and F#@king Up Everything (NYMF '09).
Year | "Best of Fest" Audience Prize | Most Promising New Musical | Theater for the American Musical Prize | Excellence in Writing (Music) | Excellence in Writing (Lyrics) | Excellence in Writing (Book) | Excellence in Direction | Excellence in Choreography | Excellence in Overall Design | Outstanding Orchestrations | Outstanding Ensemble Performance |
2015[10] | The Calico Buffalo | Songs for the Fallen | The Cobalteans | The Cobalteans | The Cobalteans | Claudio Quest | What Do Critics Know? | Claudio Quest | Acappella | Acappella | |
2014[11] | Cloned! | Academia Nuts | The Gig | The Gig | Bayonets of Angst | Academia Nuts | Propaganda! The Musical AND The Mapmaker's Opera (tie) | The Snow Queen | The Gig | Bayonets of Angst | |
2013[12] | Volleygirls | Volleygirls | Crossing Swords | Julian Po | Gary Goldfarb: Master Escapist | Crossing Swords | Crossing Swords | Castle Walk | The Awakening of Angel DeLuna | The Awakening of Angel DeLuna | Volleygirls |
2012[13] | Baby Case | A Letter to Harvey Milk | Stuck | Baby Case | Baby Case AND A Letter to Harvey Milk (tie) | A Letter to Harvey Milk | Baby Case | Prison Dancer | Le Cabaret Grimm | Foreverman | Prison Dancer |
2011[14] | Crazy, Just Like Me | Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice | Kiki Baby | Central Avenue Breakdown | Date of a Lifetime | Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice | Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice | Central Avenue Breakdown | Pride and Prejudice | Central Avenue Breakdown | This One Girl's Story |
2010[15] | Things As They Are | My Mother's Lesbian Jewish Wiccan Wedding | I Got Fired | Trails | Frog Kiss | My Mother's Lesbian Jewish Wiccan Wedding | My Mother's Lesbian Jewish Wiccan Wedding | Petrouchka | Shine! | Without You[note 1] | Fellowship! AND The Most Ridiculous Thing You Ever Hoid (tie) |
2009[16] | Fat Camp | My Scary Girl | Under Fire | Academy | Judas & Me | Fucking Up Everything | Hurricane | Fat Camp | Hurricane | Academy | |
2008[17] | Idaho! | Bonnie & Clyde: A Folktale | The Jerusalem Syndrome | Bonnie & Clyde | College: The Musical | Love Jerry | Idaho! | Ward 9 | Idaho! | Love Jerry | |
2007[18] | Unlock'd | The Boy in the Bathroom | Sherlock Holmes (The Early Years) | The Yellow Wood | Such Good Friends | The Boy in the Bathroom | Such Good Friends | Platforms | The Boy in the Bathroom | Going Down Swingin' | |
2006[19] | Smoking Bloomberg | Kingdom | River's End | Have a Nice Life | Three Sides | Desperate Measures AND Gutenberg! The Musical! (tie) | Common Grounds[note 2] | Journey to the West | Have a Nice Life | ||
In 2013, another category was added for Outstanding Musical Direction. It was won by Crossing Swords. In 2014, the award went to The Gig. In 2015, it was awarded to Acappella.
At least eight awards for Outstanding Individual Performance are also given out every year. Notable past winners include Michelle Federer, Andrea McArdle, Andy Mientus, Anthony Rapp, Linda Hart, J. Robert Spencer, and Max von Essen.
References
- 1 2 3 4 , The Official Site of The New York Musical Theatre Festival.
- ↑ , The Paley Center's Musicals on Television Series.
- ↑ , Playbill Article on the 22nd Jujamcyn Award referencing prior winners.
- ↑ Playbill article on 2010 Next Link Project Selections.
- ↑ , The Internet Broadway Database entry for Title of Show's Broadway production.
- ↑ , Internet Broadway Database page for Next to Normal.
- ↑ , The Pulitzer Committee's announcement of the 2010 Prize for Drama.
- ↑ , Theatermania article on the Daegu production of Academy.
- ↑ NYMF News Announcement About the Special Drama Desk Award]]
- ↑ 2015 Awards
- ↑ 2014 Awards
- ↑ 2013 Awards
- ↑ 2012 Awards
- ↑ 2011 Awards
- ↑ 2010 Awards
- ↑ 2009 Awards
- ↑ 2008 Awards
- ↑ 2007 Awards
- ↑ 2006 Awards
Notes
External links
- The New York Musical Theatre Festival Official Site
- New York Musical Theatre Festival Downstage Center XM radio interview at American Theatre Wing, 2006
- Los Angeles Times feature on the 2006 New York Musical Theatre Festival