Something Rotten!
Musical that premiered on Broadway in 2015 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Something Rotten! is a musical comedy with a book by John O'Farrell and Karey Kirkpatrick and music and lyrics by Karey and Wayne Kirkpatrick. Set in 1595, the story follows the Bottom brothers, Nick and Nigel, who struggle to find success in the theatrical world as they compete with the wild popularity of their contemporary William Shakespeare.
Something Rotten! | |
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![]() 2015 Broadway Playbill | |
Music | Karey Kirkpatrick Wayne Kirkpatrick |
Lyrics | Karey Kirkpatrick Wayne Kirkpatrick |
Book | Karey Kirkpatrick John O'Farrell |
Setting | 1595, South London |
Premiere | April 22, 2015 : St. James Theatre |
Productions | 2015 Broadway 2017–2019 US tour |
Something Rotten! opened on Broadway at the St. James Theatre on April 22, 2015, where it played for 708 performances. It was nominated for ten Tony Awards, including Best Musical, and won one for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (Christian Borle). Tours and international productions have followed.
Background
The musical began with an idea that brothers Karey and Wayne Kirkpatrick had had since the 1990s. They finally joined with John O'Farrell to write several songs and presented those songs and a treatment to the producer Kevin McCollum in 2010. The team then joined with Casey Nicholaw, who brought in several of the actors, resulting in the workshop in 2014.[1]
Something Rotten! was expected to have a pre-Broadway tryout at the 5th Avenue Theatre, Seattle, Washington, in April 2015. However, when a Broadway theatre became available, Kevin McCollum decided to open the show without the Seattle tryout. "David Armstrong, artistic director of 5th Avenue Theater, said ... that after the positive buzz surrounding the musical's workshop in October [2014], he and Mr. McCollum began discussing the possibility of the show bypassing Seattle in favor of Broadway."[2] The developmental lab took place in New York City in October 2014 with Casey Nicholaw as director and choreographer.[3]
Productions
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Broadway (2015–2017)
Something Rotten! began previews on Broadway at the St. James Theatre on March 23, 2015, and officially opened on April 22, starring Christian Borle as William Shakespeare, Brian d'Arcy James as Nick Bottom, John Cariani as Nigel, Heidi Blickenstaff as Bea and Brad Oscar as Thomas. It was directed and choreographed by Casey Nicholaw, with the sets designed by Scott Pask, costumes by Gregg Barnes and lighting by Jeff Croiter.[4] The production closed on January 1, 2017 after 742 performances.[5] It was nominated for ten Tony Awards, including Best Musical, and won one (for Borle as Best Featured Actor in a Musical).
US national tours (2017–2019)

The show launched a US national tour with previews at Proctor's Theatre in Schenectady, New York on January 10, 2017, before officially opening at the Boston Opera House on January 17.[5] The tour cast featured Rob McClure (Nick Bottom), Adam Pascal (Shakespeare) and Josh Grisetti (Nigel Bottom).[5]
The show also launched a Non-Equity national tour beginning on September 19, 2018 at the RiverCenter for the Performing Arts in Columbus, Georgia. The tour starred Matthew Janisse (Nick Bottom), Matthew Baker (Shakespeare), and Richard Spitaletta (Nigel Bottom) and was staged by Steve Bebout (associate director of the original Broadway production).[6] In June 2019, the show played a short run of June 9–30 at the Chungmu Art Center Grand Theater in Seoul, South Korea, marking the final destination on the tour.[7]
International productions
A Swedish-language production ran from November 8, 2018 to March 3, 2019 at the Wermland Opera in Karlstad, Sweden, directed by Markus Virta. The translation was by Calle Norlén.[8]
A South Korean production in Korean was scheduled to run from August 7, 2020, to October 18, 2020, at the Chungmu Art Center Grand Theater.[9] Some of the performances were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10]
A Czech-language production played from June 19 to 23, 2021, from September 2021 to June 2022, and on May 22, 2023,[11] at Nová Scéna, produced by J. K. Tyl Theatre, in Plzeň, Czech Republic. The production was directed by Lumír Olšovský. The translation was by Pavel Bár and Lumír Olšovský.[12]
A production in Germany played from November 7, 2023 to January 14, 2024, at The English Theatre Frankfurt, directed and choreographed by Ewan Jones.[13]
An Austrian production, the first German-language production of "Something Rotten!" (the earlier production in Frankfurt, Germany was in English), premiered on November 16, 2024, at the Landestheater Linz with Gernot Romic as Nick Bottom and Christian Fröhlich as Shakespeare. The production swapped the sexes of several minor characters: Lord Clapham was Lady Clapham (Alexandra-Yoana Alexandrova) and Nostradamus was Nancy Nostradamus (Daniela Dett).[14]
Stratford Festival (2024)
A production at the Canadian Stratford Festival began previews on April 16, 2024, and opened May 28 at the Festival Theatre, directed by Donna Feore.[15][16] The production closed in November 2024.[17][18]
West End concert (2024)
A concert staging played at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, in London's West End on August 5 and 6, 2024. Jason Manford starred opposite Richard Fleeshman, Gary Wilmot, Evelyn Hoskins and Marisha Wallace. It was directed by Tim Jackson.[19][20]
Synopsis
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Act I
The Minstrel welcomes everyone ("Welcome to the Renaissance"). Nick Bottom runs a theatre troupe with his brother Nigel. They are rehearsing their upcoming play, Richard II, when Lord Clapham, a patron of the troupe, announces that Shakespeare is doing Richard II. The news outrages Nick, as Shakespeare has already done Richard III, and the thought of going backwards seems absurd to him. Lord Clapham tells the brothers he is stopping their funds unless they have another play by the next morning, sending Nick into a rant ("God, I Hate Shakespeare").
On the way home, Nick encounters Shylock the Jew who wants to help fund the troupe, but Nick rejects this as it is illegal to employ a Jew. Nick and his wife Bea are saving for a better life, and when Nick tries to open the Money Box, Bea pulls it away, instead offering to help them by working, but Nick is ambivalent ("Right Hand Man"). Despite Nick's arguments, Bea goes out to do jobs that Nick claims are for men. Nick reveals that Shakespeare makes him feel self-conscious ("God, I Hate Shakespeare" (reprise)). He seeks a way to top Shakespeare and steals from the Money Box to see a soothsayer named Thomas Nostradamus (the nephew of Nostradamus). Nick asks him what the next big thing in theatre will be, and Nostradamus says that it will be "a musical", where the speaking stops, and the story is told through songs. Nick finds this ridiculous but quickly warms up to the idea ("A Musical").
Nigel has just met Portia, the daughter of Brother Jeremiah, and they immediately fall in love. Nick tells him that he shouldn't pursue her because she is a Puritan. Nick soon tells Nigel about the musical idea but does not tell him about seeing Nostradamus. Nigel wants to musicalize "The Brothers from Cornwall", but Nick says it has to be bigger and decides to adapt the Black Death. The troupe performs a song for Lord Clapham ("The Black Death"). Lord Clapham is disgusted and deserts the troupe, and Brother Jeremiah threatens to have Nick executed if he continues with his work.
Nigel tries to write a new play. Portia sneaks out to see him; they discover that they both love poetry ("I Love the Way"). Nigel tells Portia he sent one of his sonnets to Shakespeare for feedback. A messenger arrives with an invitation for Nigel to attend Shakespeare in the Park and an after-party. He takes Portia as his "plus one". Shakespeare performs ("Will Power").
Bea tells Nick she's pregnant, and he is ecstatic. Shylock also has an invitation to the after-party and tells Nick that Nigel is attending it. Furious at Nigel, Nick goes to the party to tell him off. There, Portia gets drunk, and Shakespeare asks to read Nigel's journal of poems and writings. Nick chastises Shakespeare for trying to steal Nigel's ideas and reprimands Nigel for his naiveté. Brother Jeremiah arrives to find a drunk Portia and once again admonishes Nigel. Desperate and out of options, Nick agrees to let Shylock invest in his play.
Nick goes back to Nostradamus with the remaining money from the Money Box to ask what Shakespeare's new hit is going to be. Nostradamus sees Hamlet but misinterprets it as "Omelette" and sees the protagonist eating a danish pastry rather than being a Danish prince. Nick dreams of a future in which crowds cheer for him and Shakespeare bows down to him ("Bottom's Gonna Be on Top").
Act II
The Minstrel notes the stresses that the Bottom brothers and Shakespeare face ("Welcome to the Renaissance" (reprise)). Shakespeare laments of trying to write hits while managing his fame ("Hard to Be the Bard"). A spy tells him that the brothers are trying to steal his upcoming hit. Shakespeare decides to disguise himself as "Toby Belch" and audition for the brothers' troupe to steal the play.
The troupe is rehearsing Omelette: The Musical ("It's Eggs!"). Shylock is their new investor, but they cannot find a title that would make his role legal. Some of the actors wonder why Nostradamus is at their theatre; Nick says that he is an actor. "Toby Belch" arrives and is hired. Shakespeare is surprised to learn that his next hit is supposed to be about eggs.
Nigel sneaks out to London Bridge to see Portia and reads her another poem about his love for her. Portia says that everyone will change their minds about their relationship when they hear Nigel's beautiful sonnets ("We See the Light"). Nigel is not happy with Omelette. Brother Jeremiah interrupts the lovers and imprisons Portia in a tower for disobeying. Saddened, Nigel is inspired to write a different play that is revealed to be Hamlet. At the theatre, Nigel tells Nick about this, and Shakespeare realizes that this is his next hit and takes advantage of the brothers' argumen to get his hit ("To Thine Own Self"). Nick is having qualms about Omelette as well but dismisses these doubts when he learns the musical is sold out. Shakespeare steals Nigel's hit under the guise of "improving it". Bea tells Nigel that they should trust Nick because they can always fall on him if they need him ("Right Hand Man" (reprise)).
Nick and the troupe prepare for the show ("Something Rotten!"). It opens with a bombastic dance number filled with references to musicals such as The Lion King and The Phantom of the Opera ("Make an Omelette"). Shakespeare removes his disguise and reveals Nick's plot, horrifying Nigel and the troupe.
In court, Nick, Nigel, Nostradamus, and Shylock are on trial and are about to be sentenced to beheading. Bea enters disguised as a lawyer and makes Nick confess that he stole from the Money Box; she tells the judge that beheading him would be redundant because he has already lost his head. She has made a deal with Shakespeare that they will be exiled to America ("To Thine Own Self:" (reprise)). She says that they always wanted a new country house, and they are getting a house in a new country. Portia then arrives, having escaped the tower. She renounces her father's ideals and joins the Bottoms, Shylock, and Nostradamus in exile.
They find new opportunities in the New World ("Finale"). When they hear about the opening of Shakespeare's new masterpiece, Hamlet, Nostradamus sighs, "I was this close!"
Music
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Musical numbers
Source:[21]
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Recording
Ghostlight Records released the Original Broadway Cast Album of Something Rotten! on June 2, 2015 in digital music stores and July 17, 2015 on CD.[22]
In the recording, "Something Rotten!" and "Make an Omelette" are combined into one track because of the brevity of the former.
Musical references
The show includes references to numerous musicals. For example, during the song "A Musical", "Nostradamus and the chorus men don sailor hats, which harkens to several nautical-themed musicals, including South Pacific, Anything Goes, On the Town and Dames at Sea."[23] The TheaterMania reviewer noted that the song "A Musical" "encapsulates the entire book-musical form in six hilarious minutes. It's so chock-full of witty references and energetic dance; it's hard to see how it could be topped."[24] Variety also pointed out that the song "A Musical" "simultaneously celebrates and sends up everything we hold dear about this peculiar art form, from the 'jazzy hands' of Bob Fosse to the synchronized line dancing of the Rockettes."[25]
Characters and cast
The original casts of the major-market productions are as follows:
Character | Original Broadway Cast (2015)[26] |
US National Tour (2017–18)[27] |
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Nick Bottom | Brian d'Arcy James | Rob McClure |
Nigel Bottom | John Cariani | Josh Grisetti |
William Shakespeare | Christian Borle | Adam Pascal |
Bea Bottom | Heidi Blickenstaff | Maggie Lakis |
Portia | Kate Reinders | Autumn Hurlbert |
Thomas Nostradamus | Brad Oscar | Blake Hammond |
Brother Jeremiah | Brooks Ashmanskas | Scott Cote |
Shylock | Gerry Vichi | Jeff Brooks |
Lord Clapham | Peter Bartlett | Joel Newsome |
Master of the Justice | Patrick John Moran | |
Minstrel | Michael James Scott | Nick Rashad Burroughs |
Notable Broadway replacements
- Nick Bottom: Rob McClure
- Nigel Bottom: Josh Grisetti
- William Shakespeare: Will Chase, Adam Pascal
- Bea Bottom: Leslie Kritzer
- Portia: Catherine Brunell
- Lord Clapham/Master of the Justice: Edward Hibbert
Awards and honors
Original Broadway production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
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2015 | ||||
Tony Award[28] | Best Musical | Nominated | ||
Best Book of a Musical | Karey Kirkpatrick & John O'Farrell | Nominated | ||
Best Original Score | Karey Kirkpatrick & Wayne Kirkpatrick | Nominated | ||
Best Leading Actor in a Musical | Brian d'Arcy James | Nominated | ||
Best Featured Actor in a Musical | Christian Borle | Won | ||
Brad Oscar | Nominated | |||
Best Costume Design of a Musical | Gregg Barnes | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Casey Nicholaw | Nominated | ||
Best Choreography | Nominated | |||
Best Orchestrations | Larry Hochman | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Award[29] | Outstanding Musical | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Brian d'Arcy James | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Christian Borle | Won | ||
Brad Oscar | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Casey Nicholaw | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Choreography | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Lyrics | Karey & Wayne Kirkpatrick | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Book of a Musical | Karey Kirkpatrick & John O'Farrell | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Orchestrations | Larry Hochman | Nominated | ||
Outer Critics Circle Award[30] | Outstanding New Broadway Musical | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Book of a Musical | Karey Kirkpatrick & John O'Farrell | Nominated | ||
Outstanding New Score | Karey & Wayne Kirkpatrick | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Casey Nicholaw | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Choreographer | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Set Design | Scott Pask | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Costume Design | Gregg Barnes | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Lighting Design | Jeff Croiter | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Christian Borle | Nominated | ||
Brian d'Arcy James | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | John Cariani | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | Heidi Blickenstaff | Nominated | ||
Drama League Award | Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical | Nominated | ||
Distinguished Performance Award | Christian Borle | Nominated | ||
Brian d'Arcy James | Nominated | |||
2016 | Grammy Award | Best Musical Theater Album | Blickenstaff, Borle, Cariani, James, Oscar & Kate Reinders (principal soloists); Kurt Deutsch, K. & W. Kirkpatrick, Lawrence Manchester, Kevin McCollum & Phil Reno (producers); K. & W. Kirkpatrick (composers/lyricists) | Nominated |
References
External links
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