NewsPHOTO RECAP: Bring It On: The Musical Opens on Broadway; Red Carpet Arrivals, Curtain Call and Cast PartyBring It On: The Musical, the new muscular, pop-fueled musical inspired by the popular film franchise about rival cheerleading teams, closed on Broadway Dec. 30, 2012. We look back at the show's opening night.
By
Matthew Blank
December 30, 2013
The Broadway engagement was the culmination of the national tour of Bring It On, which launched in Los Angeles. It began previews July 12, 2012. Tony-winning In the Heights choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler directed and choreographed the musical, which had musical supervision by Tony Award winner Alex Lacamoire.
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PHOTO RECAP: Bring It On: The Musical Opens on Broadway; Red Carpet Arrivals, Curtain Call and Cast Party
PHOTO RECAP: Bring It On: The Musical Opens on Broadway; Red Carpet Arrivals, Curtain Call and Cast Party
Bring It On: The Musical, the new muscular, pop-fueled musical inspired by the popular film franchise about rival cheerleading teams, closed on Broadway Dec. 30, 2012. We look back at the show's opening night. Read the Playbill.com story.
Jeff Whitty, the Tony-winning book writer of Avenue Q, authored the original book for the musical, which is anchored in the world of competitive high school cheerleading.
Bring It On, which is set in rival Truman and Jackson high schools, has music and lyrics by Tony Award winner Lin-Manuel Miranda (In the Heights), music by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning composer Tom Kitt (Next to Normal) and lyrics by Kitt's High Fidelity collaborator Amanda Green. All three collaborated on the score for the tuner.
Bring It On had scenic design by David Korins, costume design by Andrea Lauer, lighting design by Jason Lyons, sound design by Brian Ronan, video design by Jeff Sugg and hair design by Charles G. LaPointe.
The stage production was produced by Universal Pictures Stage Productions/Glenn Ross, Beacon Communications/Armyan Bernstein and Charlie Lyons, and Kristin Caskey and Mike Isaacson. Beacon and Universal also produced the "Bring It On" films.
Here's how producers bill the work: "In Bring It On: The Musical, the high-stakes world of competitive cheerleading is intertwined with cutthroat high school politics to tell the story of Campbell, the heir apparent to the head cheerleader at Truman High School. Campbell is at the top of the cheerleader pyramid and she has it all — a strong squad, a doting boyfriend and a straight path to the national championships. Her entire life has been dedicated to honing routines and staying within the strict rules and guidelines, but when a surprise letter arrives, Campbell's world is thrown upside down."