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2002-09-16 - 11:47 a.m.
I've been listening to Rent a lot lately, because I have nearly the entire set of MP3s on my old computer, which has not been set up since last December. Rent has been intensely criticized by people whose opinions I value, but I maintain that it, while it has its problems, it deserves the Pulitzer and all the other awards it received. Listening to the following exchange only deeps its relevance. Guess which character I relate to: ROGER Who are you to tell me what I know, what to do
MARK A friend
ROGER But who, Mark, are you? "Mark has got his work" They say "Mark lives for his work" And "Mark's in love with his work" Mark hides in his work
MARK From what?
ROGER From facing your failure, facing your loneliness Facing the fact you live a lie Yes, you live a lie -- tell you why You're always preaching not to be numb When that's how you thrive You pretend to create and observe When you really detach from feeling alive
MARK Perhaps it's because I'm the one of us to survive
... ROGER (To MARK) For someone who longs for a community of his own, Who's with his camera, alone?
By now, the some of the key lyrics are dated: "When you're living in America / At the end of the milinium" doesn't quite have the power it used to. Furthermore, I'm bothered by the current status of the show: Still on Broadway, it decided to attract a new audience with a celeberty cast member: Right now, the role of Mark is played by Joey Fatone, best known for his role in N'SYNC. The following comes courtsey of an N'SYNC fan page:"It's very exciting," he said. "I've always wanted to do Broadway. ... About a year ago I went and saw 'Rent,' and it was really cool, and I thought it would be a cool show to do. It's so edgy and so based on real life. It's something I would love to do, and now we have that window." A modern retelling of Puccini's "La Bohème," the rock opera "Rent" is set in New York's East Village. Where Puccini's Bohemian artists battled star-crossed love, landlords and tuberculosis in 1830s Paris, the young artists in "Rent" find that AIDS is their generation's scourge. "It's a really touchy situation and subject, but it's something that's real," Fatone said, "and something that should be heard, and that's why it's such a great musical. You really got to focus on what the whole story is about, and the whole idea of what 'Rent' is, how close-knit a family these people are that are struggling to make ends meet and everything else." Of the artists, lesbians, drag queens, drug addicts and street people that comprise the 15-member cast, Fatone has not only the lead, but one of the most straightforward parts — aspiring documentarian Mark Cohen, "Rent"'s parallel character to "La Bohème"'s Marcello, the group's narrator. "He's somewhat on the outside looking in," Fatone said of his character, "and at the same time he's always seeing everyone's points of view and what's going on in these people's lives. Sometimes he feels like he's left alone. He had a girlfriend, his girlfriend left him for another woman, so he has nobody. He has his friends, but no girlfriend now. He always keeps coming back to his family, which is his friends." Fatone said he originally auditioned for the part of Roger, a rock songwriter who falls for HIV-infected dancer Mimi, but his voice wasn't high enough. "Then they called me back the next day and said, 'Hey, can you come back next week to audition for Mark?' " Fatone recalled. "And I said, 'Sure.' So I auditioned for Mark and ta-da, there you have it, I'm rehearsing." For the past two weeks, Fatone has been preparing for his stint, slated to start August 5 and run through December 22. His first few days of rehearsals have found him blocking, practicing songs and doing character work-up. Already, he's finding the schedule challenging. "It's a lot of work, it really is," Fatone said. "It's obviously different from touring, which is good and bad. I mean, it's good that I'm in one place for a while, which is nice, than constantly having to travel around a lot. But you do eight shows a week, that's what I'm doing. Usually [with 'NSYNC], I'm doing five or six shows a week with two days off. Here you only have one day off, and you do four shows over the weekend for matinees, so it's going to be interesting on my voice." ... "It's cool, it's fun, it's edgy, it's rock and roll, it's got a lot of real-life stuff," Fatone said. "I think everybody will enjoy it if they haven't seen it, and if you have seen it, come again because I'm in it. I'm in it, can you believe that? Who would have thought?" I'm guessing not Jonathan Larson.
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