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A Theater Kid's Path To Broadway Producer

2025/6/30
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Terry Gross: 杰弗里·赛勒在《吉屋出租》和《汉密尔顿》等百老汇热门剧目中扮演了重要的幕后角色,这些剧目为新型音乐剧打开了大门。他并非出身富裕,家庭常常经济拮据。他写了一本名为《剧院小子》的回忆录,内容引人入胜,深入探讨了他的生活和戏剧世界的不同方面。书中也写到了在艾滋病流行期间出柜的经历,以及那段经历有多么可怕,以及它如何摧毁了许多在百老汇演出中创作和表演的人,以及很大一部分观众。在一份声明中解释取消《汉密尔顿》演出的原因时说,最近的清洗与这个国家文化中心所代表的一切背道而驰。 Jeffrey Seller: 我完全被《身在高地》迷住了。第一次听到林恩演唱《身在高地》时,感觉像被加勒比海水包围一样温暖。《汉密尔顿》在很多方面只是林恩的下一部音乐剧。托米·凯尔认为,如果他能让林恩公开表演这些歌曲,就能说服他将其改编成音乐剧。在林肯中心爵士乐的表演之后,我写信给他们,表示我想成为他们的制作人,并全力支持他们。我当时有一家新公司,我给它命名为“冒险乐园”,我说让我们一起去冒险吧。作为首席制作人,我的工作是为他们创造良好的工作环境,并在必要时给予他们赞扬、鼓励和支持。有时,我也需要知道何时提出建议才是合适的时机。在《汉密尔顿》的制作过程中,我提出的建议比以往任何时候都少。我提出的一个非常重要的建议是删掉第二幕中的第三场说唱 battle。另一个建议是删掉第二幕中的《Dear Theodosia》重唱。我还记得我们深入讨论了如何实现舞台布景,以及如何安排《Washington on Your Side》的舞台效果。删掉说唱 battle 和另一首歌很重要,因为我们作为观众能接受的信息量是有限的。我们无法承受三个小时的音乐剧。我们的音乐剧第一幕已经有一个小时 15 分钟了,而第二幕甚至更长,这打破了奥斯卡·汉默斯坦的规则。我们的工作是感受观众在演出的每一刻是否都能投入。观众会有一个无法再承受的时刻,我们需要找到哪里是多余的,哪里是可以删减的。第一幕通常会投入最大的精力来建立角色、情节、上升的戏剧动作和大戏剧问题。在第二幕中,我们只想看到问题得到解决。当我第一次听到《My Shot》时,我感到非常震撼。我知道林-曼努埃尔·米兰达正在将这种形式带到一个更深刻、更有影响力的境地。《汉密尔顿》具有一种不可思议的力量,几乎在任何演出开始后的几分钟内就能激发观众的热情。为《汉密尔顿》筹集资金比我之前为任何其他项目筹集资金都更快、更容易。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Jeffrey Seller, the producer of Broadway hits like Rent and Hamilton, shares his journey from a childhood in a poverty-stricken neighborhood to the heights of the theater world. He discusses his early experiences, his activism, and his role in the production of Hamilton.
  • Seller's upbringing in "Cardboard Village," a low-income neighborhood outside Detroit.
  • His involvement in protests against changes at the Kennedy Center.
  • His role as a lead producer in Hamilton and other successful musicals.

Shownotes Transcript

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This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross. My guest was a key behind-the-scenes figure in Rent and Hamilton, two Broadway mega-hits that opened the door to new kinds of musicals. Each won a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and multiple Tony Awards, including Best Musical. My guest Jeffrey Seller produced Rent with his business partner. Seller's own company produced Hamilton.

He was also a producer of Lin-Manuel Miranda's first musical, In the Heights, as well as the satirical adult puppet musical Avenue Q, and the recent revival of Sondheim's Sweeney Todd, starring Josh Groban as Sweeney.

You may assume that since his skills include raising money to produce shows, that he's from money, but he's most definitely not. His family was often broke or close to it. He grew up in a neighborhood outside Detroit that was nicknamed Cardboard Village because the houses were so cheap and shoddy. His father worked serving papers, 20 bucks for each summons served. His mother worked for low wages as a clerk at a neighborhood pharmacy.

The family couldn't afford health insurance, and Seller had serious respiratory problems. Seller has written a new memoir called Theater Kid that's a fascinating look into his own life and into different parts of the theater world.

His life in the theater started when he was a child and landed a role in a synagogue Purim play. After many stops along the way, he became a booker with the job of booking touring companies of popular musicals into theaters around the country. That work led him where he always wanted to be, producing musicals.

He also writes about coming out during the AIDS epidemic and how terrifying that was and how it wiped out so many people who created and performed in Broadway shows, as well as a significant part of the audience.

We recorded our interview June 17th. A few days later, on June 23rd, an announcement was made that on that night, a group of Democratic senators, along with Jeffrey Seller, would host an invitation-only pride celebration at one of the Kennedy Center's smaller theaters. This was not programmed by the Kennedy Center.

Seller was also part of a protest in early March when Hamilton canceled its scheduled run at the Kennedy Center in protest against President Trump removing and replacing 18 Kennedy Center board members who were appointed by President Biden. Trump fired the chair of the board and took over that position himself.

In a statement explaining Hamilton's cancellation, Seller said, quote, the recent purge flies in the face of everything this national cultural center represents, unquote. Here's our interview.

Jeffrey Seller, welcome to Fresh Air. Well, since this is the 10th anniversary of Hamilton, congratulations of Hamilton opening on Broadway. Let's start there. Thank you. You had already produced Rent and Lin-Manuel Miranda's first musical, In the Heights. When you heard In the Heights' mix of rap and Broadway music, you felt a little out of your element because you hadn't followed rap. Had you listened to a lot more rap by the time of Hamilton?

No, I had, of course, become completely enamored with In the Heights. And, you know, that first time Lynn Sang lights up on Washington Heights at the break of day.

It was so warm. It was like this Caribbean water that's just enveloping me. And then when, after that, the Broadway chorus came in with, In the Heights I Wake Up and Start My Day, my God, I already had the goosebumps. And in many ways, Hamilton was just Lynn's next musical. Okay, so since you mentioned In the Heights and that opening song, let's hear it.

That was Abuela, she's not really my Abuela But she practically raised me, this corner is her escuela now You probably thinking, I'm up sh*t creek I've never been north of 96th street Well, you must take the A train Even farther than Harlem to Northern Manhattan and maintain Get off at 181st and take the escalator I hope you're writing this down, I'm gonna test you later I'm getting tested, times are tough on this bodega Two months ago somebody bought Ortega's, our neighbors thought

I can't survive without the big. But tonight, it seems like a million years away.

Okay, that's the opening of the Broadway musical In the Heights, Lin-Manuel Miranda's first musical produced by my guest, Jeffrey Seller. So Hamilton was supposed to be a record. That was the plan. It was going to be called the Hamilton Mixtape. And you convinced or helped convince Lin that it should be a musical, not just a recording. How did you convince him?

Well, I'm going to give real credit to that to his colleague, friend and director, Thomas Kael. And Tommy had an idea, which is that if he could get Lynn to do a public cabaret performance of just the songs that would persuade him that this could be a musical. So in early 2012, they did like eight songs from Hamilton at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

And it was so clear from that performance that this was a book musical that after that, I wrote a letter to both of them saying, if you want to get going on a musical, I want to be your producer and I'll clear the decks. I'll be your cheerleader. I'll be your nurturer. I'll be your critic if you want to go. I had a new company at that point. I named it Adventureland. And I said, let's go on this adventure together. And that was early 2012.

So as the lead producer, what was your role? What was your job? Sometimes it was to make lunch. Like at one point, Lynn and Tommy and another writer we were considering working with came out to my house and they would work in the morning. I would make egg salad with my own mayonnaise that I had learned how to make from the New York Times cookbook and serve. But what I mean by that is setting the table for them to do the great work.

And giving them that space and giving them that praise when it was necessary, giving them that reinforcement and encouragement when it's necessary. And then sometimes knowing when can I make a suggestion or not can I, sometimes knowing when is the right time to make a suggestion. Tell us a suggestion you made that you think was really helpful.

You know, in the case of Hamilton, I would say I made less suggestions than I ever had before. But, you know, one very important one was cutting the third rap battle in Act Two. You know, we had not two rap battles, but we had three rap battles. You know, another situation was cutting the Dear Theodosia reprise in Act Two.

I also seem to remember talking deeply about how the set would be realized, which came later with David Korins and Thomas Kael. I also remember talking a lot about the staging of Washington on Your Side, which may not have been in its best form the first time they did it.

Cutting. Why was cutting the rap battle and the other song that you referred to, why was cutting them important? And why did you think they needed to be cut? How much can we as audience members take in?

We are not equipped for three-hour musicals. And our musical already had a first act that was an hour and 15 minutes. And believe it or not, the second act was even longer, which actually breaks the rule that Oscar Hammerstein once said, which was that the first act is usually going to be twice as long as the second act. Or let me put it another way. The second act is going to be half as long as the first act.

And in our show, the second act was actually longer. And one of our jobs is to really try to feel how the audience is going to stay with the show through every moment of the show. And there's a moment where the audience, they can't take anymore. Where are we redundant?

Where are we in a situation where we can actually lose something? And in those instances I gave, and there were others in Act II as well, that we succeeded. What's the logic behind the second act being shorter than the first?

Because we give our greatest amount of energy to the show for the first act. That's where you're establishing character, plot, the rising dramatic action, that big dramatic question, what is the major dramatic question. And then in act two, we just really want to see it resolved. And if you look at West Side Story, that's a show that has a 90-minute first act and a 45-minute second act.

Is there a particular song in Hamilton that when you first heard the music from it made you think, this is great? Well, Lynn shared with me the first songs probably around 2010, 2011. And when I heard my shot for the first time, I was like, whoa. Like if In the Heights was this warm Caribbean embrace, my shot was lightning fast.

It was a wallop. And I knew he was taking this form to a deeper place that had even more impact. And I knew he was on another creative tear.

Well, let's hear a little bit of my shot. And of course, this is Lin-Manuel Miranda. I am not throwing away my shot. I am not throwing away my shot. Hey, I'm just like my country. I'm young, scrappy, and hungry, and I'm not throwing away my shot. I'm going to get a scholarship to King's College. I probably shouldn't brag. I'm amazed and astonished. The problem is no polish. I got a

♪♪ ♪♪

that runs independently. Meanwhile, Britain keep f***ing on us endlessly. Essentially, they tax us relentlessly. Then King George turns around and runs a spending spree. He ain't never gonna set his descendants free. So there will be a revolution in this century. Enter me. He says in parentheses. Don't be shocked when your history book mentions me. I will lay down my life if it sets us free. Eventually, you'll see

That's Lin-Manuel Miranda from the original Broadway cast recording of Hamilton. And my guest was lead producer of Hamilton, Jeffrey Seller. He has a new memoir called Theater Kid. Was it hard to convince backers to invest in Hamilton? Oh, gosh, no.

Hamilton had this incredible power to galvanize audiences almost within minutes of any performance starting. So when we started to share readings of Hamilton with people in the industry, they were going crazy for it.

So I raised the money for Hamilton faster and easier than I had raised money for anything else before. Let's talk about Jonathan Larson and Rent. You went to a workshop of Larson's show that was in the works at the time.

Oh, my gosh.

You know, up on that stage was just this piano, bass, drums, guitar. And out came this guy named Jonathan, who I'd never known in my life before. You know, he was tall and lanky and had curly brown hair. And he just attacked this piano ferociously. And he was singing these songs about turning 30 and how he had this...

Image or the sound that kept going off in his head tick tick boom he thought he was going to explode because he was a writer of rock musicals that nobody wanted to produce because he lived in the fourth floor walk up of an apartment down on Greenwich with a bathtub in the kitchen where all the roommates had to switch off on who could use it at what time.

He was an amazing performer, and he was singing these songs through the most amazing rock music that was giving me goosebumps all over my arms. And, you know, here was the question. Should he keep writing rock musicals that nobody wants to produce? Or should he take a job as an advertising copywriter where he'll finally have some money and get health insurance and a better apartment and maybe be able to go on a vacation? And what do I do? Do I sell out?

Or do I keep pursuing my passion? And I thought, how is this guy telling my life story when I've never even met him before? Because I felt exactly the same way as a 25-year-old booker who really wanted to be a producer.

And his goal also was to write a show that spoke to his life and the people he knew and his generation. Did you identify with that goal? Oh, my God. You know, Jonathan said about the shows that were happening in the late 80s into the early 90s, those aren't our characters. That's not our music. Those aren't our stories. And...

You know, the first shows that meant something to me were like a chorus line where I looked up on that stage. I'm a 14 year old kid and they're telling stories of their lives. It was a genuinely contemporary musical with a sort of contemporary score. And that I knew right then and there. That's what I love. So when he said that the shows on Broadway aren't telling our stories, what was on Broadway at the time?

You had the four mega musicals from England. You had Cats, Les Mis, Phantom, and Saigon. And basically, that's it. Like, we were not making musicals during the 80s and the 90s on Broadway. I'll give you an example, Terry. In 1995, the year before Rent...

there were only two musicals nominated for Best Musical. One was Sunset Boulevard, Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical, and one was a show called Smokey Joe's Cafe that was a review of songs by Lieber and Stoller. So Sunset Boulevard actually won Best Score and Best Book by default. Two musicals. And that's where the industry was in the late 80s into the 90s. Why do you think that was true? Um...

I think one big reason was AIDS. Look at the number of artists we lost, Howard Ashman, Michael Bennett, and look at the artists we lost that we don't even know.

And I think it was also about economics. And for some reason, Broadway was having a hard time attracting investment dollars in the 80s into the 90s. So you offered to produce Boho Days, decided to rename it Tick, Tick, Boom, and you convinced Larson to do that.

And in Serendipity, you were getting fired from your booking job. And the person you were working for said, your heart really isn't into this. You should just like leave and go produce. We're firing you. And as to who was firing you, Larson is returning a call. Yes, it actually is true. And you couldn't take the call. So that seemed like real serendipity. Oh, my gosh. And then, you know, you offered to produce that first, well, really second show that he had written. Yes.

And then you decided it wasn't really working. You had several problems with it. What were some of those problems? I couldn't raise the money. You know, in many ways, when we were working on that show, he had told me that he had shared it with Sondheim once. And I said, well, what did Sondheim say? He said, that show is just you whining about superbia.

And in some ways, Superbia was the show he'd written before. That's correct. And, you know, those listeners who remember the movie Tick, Tick, Boom that Lin-Manuel directed with Andrew Garfield knows that they had done this big workshop of Superbia and nothing happened from it. And when Jonathan calls his agent after Superbia doesn't get picked up by any theater, she says, pick up your pencil and go back to work.

So he writes Tick, Tick, Boom and or Boho Days. And in so many ways, it's his rant about not getting Superbia produced, at least according to Sondheim. And for me, it was a show about how do I stay true to my dreams without selling out? And guess what? Every theme, every motif is

that's in Tick, Tick, Boom ultimately finds its way to the better show, and that's Rent. So how do you convince him to, like, stop writing Tick, Tick, Boom and instead write

Start writing what was his next idea, which is a musical, a contemporary musical based on Puccini's opera La Boheme. Yeah. Early on in our professional friendship, he shared with me this idea that someone had given him to make a version of La Boheme that would take place in the East Village in which Mimi would have AIDS instead of tuberculosis.

and I thought it was a genius idea from the moment he told me. So he was kind of working on two things at once. But the thing about Tick, Tick, Boom was that

If you took away all the other instruments and he was just at the piano and he was in a rehearsal room and doing it for a bunch of people that could be investors, it seemed as he was getting older, it seemed to lose its luster. Like, I wonder if he had moved on himself emotionally because at some point as we were trying to get Tick, Tick, Boom done, it just sounded like a 30-year-old who's afraid he's never going to be successful. Yeah.

And I'm not sure audiences really are going to be that sympathetic to a 30-year-old who's already in despair that he's not going to be successful. Because most of us would say, well, get on with it. Let me reintroduce you here. If you're just joining us, my guest is Broadway producer Jeffrey Seller. His new memoir is called Theater Kid. We'll be right back after a break. I'm Terry Gross, and this is Fresh Air. 525,600 me.

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Hi, this is Molly C.V. Nusberg, digital producer at Fresh Air. And this is Terry Gross, host of the show. One of the things I do is write the weekly newsletter. And I'm a newsletter fan. I read it every Saturday after breakfast. The newsletter includes all the week's shows, staff recommendations, and Molly picks timely highlights from the archive. It's a fun read. It's also the only place where we tell you what's coming up next week.

and exclusive. So subscribe at whyy.org slash fresh air and look for an email from Molly every Saturday morning. How do you deliver criticism to someone like Jonathan Larson without destroying him?

Oh, Lord. Jonathan invited me to the first ever staged reading of Rent in the spring of 93. Stage reading means actors are reading and singing in front of music stands with the scripts in front of them. And there may be a band or a piano and a drum.

And I go down. It was at New York Theatre Workshop. It was a hot day in June. And I actually had met this guy who wanted to be a producer and I knew came from a very wealthy family in Australia. So I thought maybe if I bring this guy and he loves it, I can get him to invest. That guy leaves at intermission. And...

The reading starts with the song Rent, and it's like a wallop. It's great. But then immediately the show kind of disintegrates into all these different songs about life in the East Village, and it really has no...

spine it doesn't have a plot that's coming through yet the characters of mimi and roger and collins and angel are not coming through and um that reading kind of drones on for almost three hours it's like 90 degrees in there and then this other guy who's there that i was with says well jonathan's very talented but he should just try something else she should just work on something else and then jonathan calls me and says okay let's go to dinner i want to hear what you think

So the first thing about criticism is don't offer it till you're asked, right? You got to wait until they say, what did you think? And sitting at Diane's hamburgers on the upper side, when he said, what do you think? Then I really had to pause because I didn't want to hurt his feelings. And I was afraid that he might reject me, but you always start with praise. And I talked about how great that opening song rent was. And I talked about how great the environment was, right?

And he said, yeah, but what else? And that's when I said, I don't understand the story. I don't get the characters. Are you trying to write a play or are you trying to write a collage of life in the East Village? And he looked at me and he was like, no, I'm trying to write a play. And I said, well, then you have to bring forth the story because right now I'm not getting it. So during the final dress rehearsal of Rent,

Jonathan Larson went home early complaining of an upset stomach, a stomach ache, and by the next morning he was dead. And the day that he died, that was the day of the first preview that was scheduled of Rent. What we know now is he died of a tear in his aorta, probably caused by Marfan syndrome, which is a genetic disease that weakens the body's connective tissue.

First of all, he didn't have health insurance. If he had health insurance, do you think it might have been diagnosed and he might still be alive? He had visited two hospitals in the week before he ultimately died, and neither of them had diagnosed it properly. Had he had health insurance and a doctor who was his personal advocate, would the outcome have been different? I don't know. But...

I know what it means to not have health insurance, and I know how scary that is. Yeah, because you went through a lot of your life without it. Yeah. So describe for us how you heard the news about Jonathan Larson's death and what that day was like for you, including deciding what to do that night, which was to be the night of the first dress rehearsal. I woke up that morning euphoric after the dress rehearsal, and I had given...

huge praise to Jonathan after the show saying, you did it. You made the show. It's great. He was happy to hear that praise and he described that he wasn't feeling well to me. But that morning after, so I woke up, I was like, you know, I was picking out what sweater do I want to wear tonight? What clothes? And, um, after I, uh, went to my own therapy appointment, I took the R train to the office and when I got there, everybody's head was down. And, uh,

My own general manager said, Jeffrey, I have something terrible to tell you. Jonathan Larson died last night. And I was in shock. And then I was immediately struck by the fact that, holy, he wrote his own life and he wrote his own death. This is a man who wrote the song for Roger, One Song Glory, One Song Before I Go. And I thought, did he know? No.

He was going to die? I thought, did he know he was going to die? I was, maybe, maybe I wasn't shocked. Maybe it all made its own dramatic sense. But I was sad and I was crushed. And I also somehow knew in that moment he would become a legend. Well, that's a very famous story now in Broadway history.

What about deciding to go through with the dress rehearsal? In what form? Yeah. You know, I was on the phone with Jim Nicola, the artistic director at New York Theatre Workshop, and what he said is he was afraid that the kids in the show would not be safe to try to do all the complicated maneuvers, choreography, staging, backstage and onstage, given this trauma that we had all just experienced. So they were going to do a reading of the show for family members,

and friends of Jonathan. And in fact, that night, we all came into the theater, sat down, and they started doing the show, sitting at those famous silver metal tables that were the set of Rent. And it was so powerful hearing Adam Pascal sing one song, Glory. It was so powerful hearing Wilson Heredia sing I'll Cover You with Jesse Martin.

And then by the end of the first act, when they were in the Life Cafe doing La Vie Boheme, there was just this moment that Daphne Rubin-Vega, who was playing Mimi, just got up on that table and she started dancing. And then Wilson Heredia as Angel got up, and then Nadina got up, and then the entire cast did all the choreography on that table to La Vie Boheme. And the first act ended with a sense of euphoria.

I'm going to let you choose. What would you rather hear right now, Rent or One Song Glory? Oh, Glory. Okay, here we go. One song, glory. One song before I go. Glory, one song to leave behind.

Find one song, one last refrain. Glory from the pretty boyfriend man. Wasted opportunity. One song, he had the world at his feet. Glory in the eyes of a young girl. A young girl.

Find glory beyond the cheap colored lights. One song before the sun sets. Glory on another empty life. Time flies. Time dies. One place of peace.

That was Adam Pascal singing One Song Glory from the original cast recording of Rent. So I think that Rent won the Pulitzer Prize at more or less the same time that Larson died. They're very close to each other. What was it like to go through the honor and the, I'm sure, like normal feeling of jubilation having won a Pulitzer Prize?

And at the same time still be grieving for Jonathan Larson. Oh, it was the best of times and worst of times because the show's success was potent and thrilling and changing my life. And yet I was also filled with the loss of Jonathan and I think a little bit of guilt that he didn't get to go with us.

Because it was going to change his life. He had only just quit the Moon Dance Diner as a waiter two months before we started rehearsal. He still lived in that fourth floor walk-up, and he didn't get to enjoy all of that. And I felt badly, and I felt a little bit guilty.

Well, let's take another break here and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guest is Jeffrey Seller and he's written a new memoir called Theater Kid, a Broadway memoir. We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air. This message comes from Carvana. Selling your car shouldn't take all day. With Carvana, it doesn't. Get a great offer in no time. Then choose to drop off or pick up and get paid on the spot. Sell your car today on Carvana.com. Pickup fees may apply.

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Since you're a producer and part of your job is raising the money needed to produce the show and rent the theater, like I said in the introduction, people might assume you came from money when the story is the opposite. So describe your neighborhood that was known as Cardboard Village. Okay. My father, who had inherited his family business, which was a tool business, bankrupted it.

by overspending and through his own manic behavior. And then he was in a motorcycle accident on I-94 in between Detroit and Kalamazoo, which caused brain damage, aphasia, a kind of dementia, and disenabled him from working. Our family wound up on welfare, and we lost our nice house in our nice neighborhood. And we had to move to this neighborhood that the kids called Cardboard Village.

Because the houses were made of those shingles, those tar shingles instead of bricks. And instead of having basements, they were built on these 800 square foot slabs of concrete. You know, one teeny bathroom, maybe a carport, but certainly no garage. And...

And that was the neighborhood where I grew up, ultimately. And no basement meant there was no place to shelter if there was a tornado. Yeah. So they'd like they would like tease you and say, you know, this is Michigan. So they tease you and say, how you have nowhere to go. Where do you go if there's a tornado? And I would go, I don't know. One of the craziest stories for me in the book, your Hebrew school teacher is teaching about the Warsaw ghetto during the Hitler regime.

Where all the Jews were kind of forced to stay. And there was like no food. I mean, it was horrible conditions. And a kid asks her like, was there anything contemporary like that? And she says, yes, Cardboard Village. Yeah. I just think like, that's insane. Like, I don't care how poor your community was. It wasn't taking place during the Holocaust. Right.

What was your reaction when you heard the comparison of the Warsaw ghetto to your home? I wanted to disappear. I wanted to – I was afraid I was going to be found out. I was burning red. I was – my heart was beating a million miles a minute, and I was holding in tears, crying.

And what I realized in retrospect is that it was inconceivable to this teacher that anyone in this class at Temple Israel could be that poor. Right. And you weren't very comfortable with the temple because most of the members were from an adjoining neighborhood that actually had money, which you did not. Yeah. So then your father, because of his traumatic brain injury—

He became a summons server, you know, serving papers. That's right. Summons, subpoenas, all the different court orders to people in trouble. Yeah. So he dealt with deadbeat dads, prospective divorces, delinquent mortgage holders. And when you were available, he'd take you with him everywhere.

But it sounded like a terrifying experience because he was a reckless driver. And his way of serving papers was often very confrontational. Like, there were incidents that really left you terrified. Would you describe one of them? Well, I have this, like, very strong memory of him like, come on, go serve papers with me. And I didn't want to. I didn't like it. I didn't like going to these neighborhoods that were far from our house and leaving, you know, the house. And...

But he wanted my company so badly. So I would say yes. And I remember once going to this one neighborhood where, you know, the house doesn't look that different from ours. It actually might have been a little bigger. And he can't like he's banging on the door and no one's coming. And then finally this woman comes out and she is like, you know.

Like, what is... She's wearing, like, a T-shirt dress. And she's, like, kind of shaking her head, no, no, no, meaning, like, whoever he's looking for isn't here. And then...

Um, from the other side of the house, this guy comes around and he starts trying to kind of run away. And my six foot three, 250 pound father starts chasing after him. And then he winds up seeing, you know, getting him on the sidewalk in front of the next door neighbor's house. And they're like talking and I like roll down the window so I can hear it. And then he

The neighbor who's actually living in the house next door opens the door and says, leave him alone. And then my father serves him the paper. And then that guy screams to my father, get out of here, you pig. And he used the F word. And then my father ran up and put his hand through his window.

So, you know, during all of this, you fall in love with theater. And was theater for you the kind of place you wanted it to be for others? Like you leave life outside the theater door and you immerse yourself in the characters or in directing or producing the show. And that becomes your world while you're in the theater. I guess it became the greatest new world I could have ever discovered.

This world where we make plays and invent dialogue and create characters and build sets.

And I took it very seriously. And I was incredibly rewarded by the audience reactions. Yeah, because you started off acting. Sure. And then I love this story. You were in a play called Popcorn Pete. It was a school play, right? It was the community. It was the youth theater play. Right, right. It was the youth theater play from a

a local theater company that was an adult company, but they had a kid's part. Correct. And it didn't do well. You know, the theater was half filled and you decided it's because like, it's not a good play. It's not a good title. Why would anybody come? And so you asked to be on the committee that chooses the plays that the kids perform. And in a way like that's your first time you were a producer and you were how old?

13 years old. Yeah, and you had to convince the adults that you were worthy of being on the committee. So was that a very empowering feeling, like helping to choose the plays? Well, that was the first step I took toward becoming a producer because you know what the most important decision I ever make is as a producer? What play to produce. And is that a reflection of my aesthetic, my values, my likes? Yeah.

the characters I care about. So that was a huge moment for me. And I want to also say at the time, I didn't even know it. I just knew we could do better. And I started reading plays every weekend. I would read all these different plays. And that's where I started to learn what makes a good play and a bad play. Well, let me reintroduce you. My guest is theater producer Jeffrey Seller, author of the new memoir, Theater Kid. We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air.

Decades ago, Brazilian women made a discovery. They could have an abortion without a doctor, thanks to a tiny pill. That pill spawned a global movement, helping millions of women have safe abortions, regardless of the law. Hear that story on the network, from NPR's Embedded and Futuro Media, wherever you get your podcasts. On NPR's ThruLine… School teachers are going to be the ones that rebuild our society in a way that is more cohesive.

Basically, where soldiers set down their arms, school teachers need to pick up their books. How the U.S. Department of Education tried to fix a divided nation. Listen to ThruLine wherever you get your podcasts.

You know those things you shout at the radio or maybe even at this very NPR podcast? On NPR's Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, we actually say those things on the radio and on the podcast. We're rude across all media. We think the news can take it. Listen to NPR's Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me wherever you get your podcasts. So you devote some time in your book to your personal story of being gay and it taking you a while to realize it. And a great story is

You had like made out with a girl or two and, you know, just kissing. Yeah. And then you're with some friends, I think at a party, and you're playing some kind of game where you're supposed to reveal a truth about another person or ask them a different question. It wasn't exactly truth or dare, but it was kind of like a cousin of that. Yeah. So one of the girls at the party tells you,

That you're gay. And this is before you recognized that or at least admitted it to yourself. Can you explain how that happened and what your reaction was? Yeah, Lori Resnick. You remember the name. Oh, I remember that name. Yeah, this was like a game after the eighth grade kind of graduation party at Joanne Cooper's house.

And Lori's like, I just want you to know, Jeffrey, you're gay. And at this moment, I'm still 13 years old, and I was very late to adolescence. So in fact, at that moment, I had never had, I hadn't really ever thought about sex. And I had never thought about being gay, and I'd never had a gay fantasy. So when she told me that, I was embarrassed, ashamed, and anxious, right?

It was sweet. After that party, like I was I was sleeping over at my friend's house and my best friend, Bruce Rosen, who was definitely not gay and who was a jock and was obsessed with girls. He said, by the way, I don't care what Laurie said. I thought that was so sweet.

You know what? I'm thinking this might be a good time to play a song from Avenue Q. Yes, please. It's a song sung by two puppets who are roommates and one of them's straight and one of them's gay, but won't admit it, maybe not even to himself. And so this is a duet about that. And maybe did you relate to this duet?

Not really, because by the time I came in contact with Avenue Q, I'd obviously been gay and out of the closet. No, no, obviously, but didn't it bring back that memory? Oh, that is so funny. Well, no, when you just now, when I told you that story and you said, let's play a song from Avenue Q, I laughed because, Terry, I had never put those two events together in my life.

And I love that you just discovered that. That is a new discovery that Bruce Rosen could have been singing to me. If you were gay, that'd be okay. I mean, cause Hey, I'd like you anyway. I love it. Great. Well, let's hear it. If you were gay, that'd be okay. I mean, cause Hey, I'd like you anyway, because you see me.

If it were me, I would feel free to say that I was gay, but I'm not gay. Niki, please, I am trying to read.

What? Nicky, I am trying to read this book. Nicky. What? I would. Hey, guess what? I'm gay. I'm happy.

So that's a song from the original cast recording of Avenue Q, a show that was produced by my guest Jeffrey Seller, author of the new memoir, Theater Kid. One last question. Do you see Broadway as headed in a particular direction? Do you see any interesting risks being taken now? The one thing that I look back on with Jonathan and his goals to write stories about our characters is

our stories, our music, is that that value, our music, our characters, our stories, started with Rent, and it continued on from Avenue Q and In the Heights to Hamilton, but it also continued on through so many other shows that I didn't produce, like the Pulitzer Prize-winning Next to Normal or Dear Evan Hansen. And even in its own fun way, maybe Happy Ending, which is now about two robots who fall in love.

So, when I look at Broadway and I see all these contemporary musicals, I say, bless you, Jonathan, because every single one of these musicals is standing on his shoulders in some way, shape, or form. And I think if we keep making musicals about who we are today, and by the way, Hamilton does that too, even though it's telling a story that's 250 years old. So, if we keep making those musicals, I think we're going to be in great shape.

Jeffrey, it's been great to talk with you. Thank you so much. It's just been a pleasure. Thank you so much. It's been my great, great delight and pleasure.

Jeffrey Sellers' new memoir is called Theater Kid. Tomorrow on Fresh Air, we remember Bill Moyers and listen back to interviews we recorded over the years. Moyers was a presidential aide to Lyndon Johnson, helped put together Johnson's Great Society program, then became Johnson's press secretary. He later crossed over and became an award-winning journalist and PBS host. He died last Thursday at age 91. I hope you'll join us.

Our co-host is Tanya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross.

How does a bastard, orphan, son of a whore and a Scotsman Dropped in the middle of a forgotten spot in the Caribbean By Providence, impoverished and squalor Grow up to be a hero and a scholar? The $10 Founding father without a father Got a lot farther by working a lot harder By being a lot smarter By being a self-starter by 14

They placed him in charge of a trade in charter. And every day while slaves were being slaughtered and carted away across the waves, he struggled and kept his guard up. Inside, he was longing for something to be a part of. The brother was ready to beg, steal, borrow, or barter. Then a hurricane came and

Devastation reigned, our man saw his future drip, dripping down the drain. Put a pencil to his temple, connected it to his brain. And he wrote his first refrain, a testament to his pain. Well, the word got around, they said this kid is insane, man. Took up a collection just to send him to the mainland. Get your education, don't forget from whence you came.

And the world's gonna know your name What's your name, man? Alexander Hamilton My name is Alexander Hamilton And there's a million things I haven't done But just you wait Just you wait When he was ten his father split Full of it, dead to rid In two years later see Alex and his mother bed Dead

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