Current:Home > Back"Hell's Kitchen": Alicia Keys' life and music inspires a new musical-DB Wealth Institute B2 Expert Reviews
"Hell's Kitchen": Alicia Keys' life and music inspires a new musical
View Date:2024-12-23 22:46:46
For more than a dozen years, pop star Alicia Keys has been working on a musical. Now, "Hell's Kitchen" is being performed at the Public Theater in New York. "This is what I've been dreaming about, the whole time," she said, walking up to the theater's entrance. "And we're here!"
What took so long? "Good things take time!" she laughed. "I've been working on this since even before my first son was born. Egypt just turned 13."
"He's never known a mom who's not working on this show?" asked Sanneh.
"Facts! I was trying to figure out, 'Well, dang, maybe 'Hell's Kitchen' is my first kid!'"
For Keys, it's been a labor of love, and she says she's been laboring: "It's hard. Work is hard."
But she never lost faith that it would actually work. "Nope. I didn't doubt the process."
"Hell's Kitchen" is named for the New York neighborhood where she lived as a kid. Geographically it's just a few feet from Broadway, but to Keys, it felt much farther: "When I lived there, it was how it sounds. There was a lot of desolation there. There was a lot of drug addiction there. There was a lot of prostitution there. It was side-by-side, the desolation and the possibility. And I think that's what kind of gave me a lot of hunger and grit."
The musical is narrated by 17-year-old Ali, who loves music, loves a boy, and tries to love her mother. When asked the biggest difference between Keys and the character she created, she laughed, "Maybe her mama lets her get away with a little more backtalk that my mother let me get away with!"
Keys says the show is only loosely based on her own life story. For example, Ali starts playing piano at 17; Keys began at age 7. And by 12, Keys was composing songs. By 15, she had a recording contract, and at 20, a #1 record with "Fallin'," from her debut album, "Songs in A Minor":
"Hell's Kitchen" includes most of her biggest hits, along with four new songs. Some of her most beloved songs have been rearranged, or recontextualized. For example, in the show, "Teenage Love Affair" turns out to mean something a little different.
Keys says she's been involved in everything, including finding the actress that could play the character loosely based on her. "You can't pretend to be from New York City if you don't understand the nuances of it; it just won't work," she said. "And so, I have definitely been a major pain in the ass to all the casting agents. The pain in the ass-ness is through the roof!"
Twenty-one-year-old Maleah Joi Moon is making her professional theater debut as Ali.
Keys also pays close attention to who's in the audience. Her mother just saw the show.
"Can we put it on the marquee? What did she say?" asked Sanneh.
"Mama f***ing loves it! Can we put that out?" she laughed.
"Can't put it on TV, but you can put it on the marquee!"
Former New York Times theater critic Ben Brantley has seen clips of "Hell's Kitchen," but with the show still in previews, the theater did not make a ticket available to him. Sanneh asked him, "When you heard that the star Alicia Keys was working on a musical partly based on her own life, what was your reaction?"
"Well, I mean, her voice has certainly been part of the aural wallpaper of my life," Brantley replied. "It is a great selling point, and that's the lure."
There is a term for shows built around pop hits: Jukebox musicals, a term Brantley has employed: "When I was using that in the early days, when they were first emerging in droves, I suppose I used it, if not with contempt, then it was with cynicism, because it seemed like such a lazy way to put a show together."
The fact that "Hell's Kitchen" changes up some of Keys' most familiar songs, to better fit the plot, might help de-jukebox-ify the show. "I like it that she's doing it herself," Brantley said. "I like it when familiar songs sound fresh. You like to think that, especially her fan base, will have listened to those songs so often, that they may be sort of startled."
Brantley identifies 2001 as the beginning of the jukebox musical era: "The one that you can blame a lot of really bad stuff on is 'Mamma Mia!,' which was ABBA," he said. "It was a huge hit, that took the ABBA songbook and then just jimmied it into a kind of a sweet soap opera-ish plot. It was ridiculous. It was really tacky. And when I saw it in New York, I loved it, because it opened just after 9/11. And there was obviously a great sense of release for the people listening to this music, and the mindlessness of it."
He said that musicals have been borrowing from pop music for decades, although, in the old days, musicals were pop music, with a lot of top-selling albums in those days being Broadway cast albums.
"Young adults in the 1950s or, like, 1940s would be singing along with 'Some Enchanted Evening' from 'South Pacific,'" Brantley said. Then, there were concept albums turned into stage musicals, like "Jesus Christ Superstar."
Sanneh asked, "Do you think the jukebox musical era has been good overall for Broadway, and for musicals?"
"No," Brantley replied. "My friend and current Times critic Jesse Green calls the jukebox musical the cockroach of musicals. I don't feel that way. I did at one point, but, you know, I kind of learned to stop worrying and love the jukebox. Selectively!"
"Hell's Kitchen," which has already sold out its entire run, might be a different kind of jukebox musical, but it's got a familiar destination in mind: Brantley says it's practically preordained to wind up on Broadway. "It's the most expensive production the Public has ever mounted," he said. "If people say they're not thinking it's going to Broadway, they're lying. I think pretty much everyone assumes it will transfer."
Including Alicia Keys.
Sanneh asked her, "Is it important to you that this show eventually might move 40 blocks north to Broadway?"
"My eyes are definitely on that," she said. "It would be a dream come true, really."
For a behind-the-scenes look at the cast of "Hell's Kitchen" click on the video player below:
For more info:
- "Hell's Kitchen" at the Public Theater, New York City (through January 7, 2024)
- aliciakeys.com
- Thanks to Joe Allen Restaurant
Story produced by Mary Raffalli. Editor: Ed Givnish.
See also:
- Alicia Keys on her book "More Myself: A Journey" ("Sunday Morning," 2020)
- "No one" can get in the way of Alicia Keys ("Sunday Morning," 2007)
- In:
- Broadway
- Alicia Keys
- musical
veryGood! (423)
Related
- Jamie Lee Curtis and Don Lemon quit X, formerly Twitter: 'Time for me to leave'
- Blake Lively and Gigi Hadid Are Simply the Perfect Match With Deadpool & Wolverine After-Party Looks
- Hailey Bieber shows off baby bump in W Magazine cover, opens up about relationship
- Bryson DeChambeau to host Donald Trump on podcast, says it's 'about golf' and 'not politics'
- Get well, Pop. The Spurs are in great hands until your return
- Israel's Netanyahu in Washington for high-stakes visit as death toll in Gaza war nears 40,000
- Widespread Panic reveals guitarist Jimmy Herring diagnosed with tonsil cancer
- Rushed railcar inspections and ‘stagnated’ safety record reinforce concerns after fiery Ohio crash
- My Chemical Romance returns with ‘The Black Parade’ tour
- Dave Bayley of Glass Animals reflects on struggles that came after Heat Waves success, creative journey for new album
Ranking
- Report: Jaguars' Trevor Lawrence could miss rest of season with shoulder injury
- U.S. Navy pilot becomes first American woman to engage and kill an air-to-air contact
- George Clooney backs VP Harris, after calling for Biden to withdraw
- Kamala Harris is preparing to lead Democrats in 2024. There are lessons from her 2020 bid
- Patricia Heaton criticizes media, 'extremists' she says 'fear-mongered' in 2024 election
- Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively Reveal Name of Baby No. 4
- Conservatives use shooting at Trump rally to attack DEI efforts at Secret Service
- With US vehicle prices averaging near $50K, General Motors sees 2nd-quarter profits rise 15%
Recommendation
-
AI could help scale humanitarian responses. But it could also have big downsides
-
Repercussions rare for violating campaign ethics laws in Texas due to attorney general’s office
-
Taylor Swift could make it to quite a few Chiefs games this season. See the list
-
Toronto Film Festival lineup includes movies from Angelina Jolie, Mike Leigh, more
-
'He's driving the bus': Jim Harbaugh effect paying dividends for Justin Herbert, Chargers
-
Kathy Hilton Reacts to Kyle Richards' Ex Mauricio Umansky Kissing Another Woman
-
Two-time Wimbledon champion Andy Murray says Paris Olympics will be final event of storied career
-
This state was named the best place to retire in the U.S.