'''Avenue Q''' is a
Tony award-winning
musical that was conceived by
Robert Lopez and
Jeff Marx, who wrote the music and lyrics. The book is by
Jeff Whitty. The show is largely inspired by (and is in the style of) ''
Sesame Street'': Most of the characters in the show are
puppets (operated by actors onstage), the set depicts several tenements on a rundown street in an "outer borough" of
New York City, both the live characters and puppet characters sing, and short animated video clips are played as part of the story.
Also, several characters are recognizably
parodies of classic
Muppet characters: for example, the roommates
Rod and Nicky are versions of Sesame Street's
Bert and Ernie, and
Trekkie Monster is based on
Cookie Monster. However, the characters are in their twenties and thirties and face adult problems instead of those faced by pre-schoolers. The characters use profanity, and the songs concern adult themes. A recurring theme is the central character's search for a "purpose".
After an
Off-Broadway opening, directed by
Jason Moore, the production moved to
Broadway in 2003 and won several
Tony Awards, including the award for Best Musical. As of July 2007, it is still running on Broadway. The show has spawned a 2005
Las Vegas production, a 2006
West End production and various international productions. A U.S. National Tour began in July 2007.
Background
The show is explicitly an homage to the
PBS children's television program ''
Sesame Street''. Both Marx and puppet designer/original cast member,
Rick Lyon have previously worked for ''
Sesame Street'', as have the other puppeteers in the original cast. However, unlike ''Sesame Street'', ''Avenue Q'' openly addresses adult topics such as
racism,
pornography, and
homosexuality; in fact, because of its adult language and content and "full puppet nudity" (including simulated sex between puppets), the show specifically disclaims any connection to the
Children's Television Workshop or
The Jim Henson Company. In an interview with Britain's ''
The Times'', addressing the question of potential conflicts with Henson, Marx claimed, “During early previews in the States we invited
Jim Henson's widow and children and they could see that what we were doing was a homage and love letter to 'Sesame Street.'”
[1]
The characters who are not puppets relate to the puppets, rather than to the actors holding them. The puppets also speak directly to each other and never to the actors operating them. During the course of the show, a puppet character may be operated by more than one of the actor-operators, although the same actor creates the voice for a particular puppet even if he or she is not holding the puppet at the time.
Plot overview
Setting
As stated in the Broadway
Playbill, the scene is a fictional street located "in an outer borough of New York City."
Manhattan, the center of New York City, has Avenues A, B, C, and D, making up the
Alphabet City neighborhood (now considered part of the
East Village). Some say Avenue Q is the hypothetical extension of that sequence: far from Manhattan, where the rents are actually affordable for recent college graduates.
Alternately, Avenue Q could be in the
Midwood and
Gravesend area of Brooklyn, where there are also Avenues A, B, C, etc. all the way up to Avenue Z, with a few exceptions. One of the exceptions is Avenue Q; the street between Avenue P and Avenue R is known as Quentin Road, named for
Quentin Roosevelt, the youngest son of President
Theodore Roosevelt. The
Q subway train, whose symbol used to be a Q in an orange circle resembling the Avenue Q logo, travels through this neighborhood. However, the authors have stated that Avenue Q is fictional and is not related to this or any other particular street.
Act One
Princeton, a recent college graduate, is looking for an affordable apartment in New York City ("What Do You Do with a BA in English"). At Avenue Q, he meets a group of neighbors: Kate Monster, a single assistant kindergarten teacher; Nicky and Rod, two long-time roommates; Brian, an unemployed comedian; Christmas Eve, Brian's Japanese fiancée, who is a therapist but has no clients; and
Gary Coleman, former child star of the TV show ''
Diff'rent Strokes'', now the
apartment superintendent. They all complain "It Sucks to Be Me", and all agree that Gary's life sucks the most. Princeton takes an apartment, and everyone welcomes him to the block.
Rod is reading a book about "Broadway musicals of the 1940s," when he is interrupted by Nicky, who wants to share a story about a
gay man he met on the
subway. Rod gets defensive at the mention of homosexuality, and Nicky assures his roommate that he would have no problem accepting Rod "If You Were Gay". Rod mentions two musicals,
High Button Shoes and
Pal Joey. The job that Princeton had lined up is eliminated and he needs a purpose in life. He finds a penny minted in his birthyear – a lucky omen ("Purpose"). Everyone explains their purpose in life (Gary is afraid he has already fulfilled his purpose). Kate says that she wants to open a school especially for monsters. When Princeton asks whether she and Trekkie Monster are related, Kate is offended at the implication that all monsters must be related, calling him racist. Princeton notes that her dream of a monster school is also exclusionary. Everyone comes in to join the song and all agree that "Everyone's a Little Bit Racist". In the American production Gary laughs about
Polacks (but in the English version, he laughs about the French). Princeton is approached by the Bad Idea Bears, two innocent-looking cuddly little teddy bears who distract him from finding his purpose and encourage him to spend his money on beer.
Kate receives a phone call from her boss, the unpleasant, humorless Mrs. Thistletwat, telling her that she has
heart replacement surgery the next day and needs Kate to teach the morning class, and that Kate may teach on whatever subject she likes. Kate plans to teach about the
Internet. Trekkie Monster and the other men frustrate her attempts at a lesson plan by telling her that "The Internet is for Porn". Princeton comes over to deliver a "Mix Tape", confirming her suspicions that he has a crush on her. Princeton invites Kate to the Around the Clock Café (a well known
East Village haunt) that night.
At the café, Brian performs the opening act ("I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today") and introduces Lucy the Slut, who sings ("Special"). Kate refrains from drinking, as she has the important teaching assignment in the morning. Kate and Princeton are ready to go home, but the Bad Idea Bears suggest that they have some harmless
Long Island Iced Teas (Absinthe Daiquiris in the London show) and play drinking games. While Kate retrieves a round of drinks, Lucy tells Princeton that when he's ready for a real woman, she'll be around. The Bad Idea Bears convince the tipsy Kate and Princeton to go home together and have sex. The tenants ask Gary Coleman to tell the wild lovers to quiet down, but Coleman says "You Can Be as Loud as the Hell You Want [When You're Making Love]". A sleepless Rod hears Nicky talking in his sleep about his attraction to Rod, who is jubilant that his secret crush is mutual. However, he wakes to discover that it was ''he'' who had been dreaming and is crushed to find out. Meanwhile, Kate and Princeton lie in bed happily. Princeton gives Kate his lucky penny to let her know how much she means to him ("Fantasies Come True").
The next day, Mrs. Thistletwat calls: Kate has missed the morning class that she was supposed to teach. Mrs. Thistletwat calls Monsters lazy. Angry, Kate quits her job. Princeton asks Kate to be his girlfriend and to accompany him to Brian and Christmas Eve's wedding. At the wedding, the neighbors ask Nicky whether Rod is gay. Nicky confirms that Rod is a "closeted homosexual"; Rod overhears him and vehemently denies this – they simply have not met "My Girlfriend Who Lives in Canada". Rod throws Nicky out of their apartment. Princeton, scared of commitment after witnessing the wedding, breaks up with Kate, asking her to be friends. Kate is hurt and defiant: "There's a Fine, Fine Line" between love and a waste of time.
Act Two
Princeton sits alone in his apartment two weeks later. He is in debt, unemployed, alone, and still purposeless ("It Sucks to Be Me" [Reprise]). The Bad Idea Bears suggest hanging himself. The neighbors take Princeton outside to remind him that "There is Life Outside Your Apartment". Princeton decides to take Lucy the Slut home with him. Kate is jealous, and Christmas Eve explains that Kate is angry because she actually loves Princeton ("The More You Ruv Someone"), which pays homage to "I Have a Love" from "
West Side Story". Kate stops by to give Princeton an invitation to meet her at the top of the
Empire State Building. He is in the shower, so she leaves the letter, which Lucy promptly destroys. Nicky has stayed with neighbors since he was kicked out, but they are all fed up with his sloppiness and throw him out on the street. Nicky begs for money. Gary Coleman admits that he cannot help feeling a sense of "
Schadenfreude" at Nicky's painful situation.
Princeton looks for Lucy, who has left without saying goodbye. Kate, angry that Princeton seems to have stood her up, throws the penny that he gave her from the top of the Empire State Building. Far below, Lucy, passing by, is hit in the head by the penny and knocked into a coma. At the hospital, Kate and Princeton attempt to work out their problems, but Princeton is still not ready for commitment. Rod, depressed, consults with Christmas Eve, who comforts him. Everyone ponders what it would be like to return to happier times ("I Wish I Could Go Back to College").
Nicky, begging in the street, tells Princeton that he should be thinking about other people. Struck with inspiration, he determines to raise the money to build Kate's monster school. Nicky likewise realizes that, to get back to his apartment, he needs to help Rod by finding him a boyfriend. The neighbors raise some money ("The Money Song"), but not much. Trekkie Monster, finding out what the appeal is for, remembers his hellish school days and donates ten million dollars that he earned by investing in pornography ("School for Monsters").
Kate is delighted with the new school. Brian has a new job and Christmas Eve has a steady client (Rod), so they are leaving Avenue Q for the Lower East Side (In some performances, they move to Hell's Kitchen). Rod reveals, to no one's surprise, that he is gay. He invites Nicky back in. Nicky has found a boyfriend for Rod named Ricky, who looks just like Nicky, only more muscular. Meanwhile, the Bad Idea Bears have found
Scientology, and Lucy has recovered to become a
born-again Christian. Kate is impressed that Princeton has made her monster school a reality. Princeton asks her for a second chance, and Kate says they'll take it a day at a time ("There's a Fine, Fine Line" [Reprise]).
A new kid, just out of college with a BA in English, comes to look at Brian and Christmas Eve's for-rent apartment, and Princeton has a revelation: he must pass on everything he's learned. His purpose may be to put all his knowledge into a
show. Everyone shoots the idea down, and the kid does not want Princeton's wisdom. Princeton worries that he may never find his purpose, but the others encourage him to cheer up. Life may be bad at the moment, but everything in life is only "For Now."
List of songs
;Act I
★ "The Avenue Q Theme" - Company
★ "What Do You Do with a B.A. in English?" - Princeton
★ "It Sucks to Be Me" - Brian, Kate Monster, Rod, Nicky, Christmas Eve, Gary Coleman and Princeton
★ "If You Were Gay" - Nicky and Rod
★ "Purpose" - Princeton and Company
★ "Everyone's a Little Bit Racist" - Princeton, Kate Monster, Gary Coleman, Brian and Christmas Eve
★ "The Internet Is for Porn" - Kate Monster, Trekkie Monster, Brian, Gary Coleman, Rod and Princeton
★ "Mix Tape" - Kate Monster and Princeton
★ "I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today" - Brian
★ "Special" - Lucy the Slut
★ "You Can Be as Loud as the Hell You Want (When You're Makin' Love)" - Gary Coleman, Bad Idea Bears, Princeton, Kate Monster, and Company
★ "Fantasies Come True" - Rod, Kate Monster, Nicky and Princeton
★ "My Girlfriend, Who Lives in Canada" - Rod
★ "There's a Fine, Fine Line" - Kate Monster
|
;Act II
★ "It Sucks to Be Me (Reprise)" - Princeton
★ "There Is Life Outside Your Apartment" - Brian, Princeton, Christmas Eve, Gary Coleman, Nicky, Trekkie Monster, Lucy the Slut and Company
★ "The More You Ruv Someone" - Christmas Eve and Kate Monster
★ "Schadenfreude" - Gary Coleman and Nicky
★ "I Wish I Could Go Back to College" - Kate Monster, Nicky and Princeton
★ "The Money Song" - Nicky, Princeton, Gary Coleman, Brian and Christmas Eve
★ "School for Monsters" - Trekkie Monster and Company
★ "The Money Song (Reprise)" - Trekkie Monster and Company
★ "There's a Fine, Fine Line (Reprise)" - Princeton and Kate Monster
★ "What Do You Do With a B.A. in English? (Reprise)" - Newcomer
★ "For Now" - Kate Monster, Brian, Gary Coleman, Nicky, Rod, Christmas Eve, Trekkie Monster, Lucy the Slut, The Bad Idea Bears, Princeton and Company
|
Other Avenue Q songs
So far, there are six ''Avenue Q'' songs that are not in the show itself.
★ "Tear It Up and Throw It Away": the only original number cut from the show, it came between the opening number and "If You Were Gay." Kate Monster is called for jury duty and won't be able to go to the aquarium with Nicky. Nicky tells her to pretend she didn't get the summons and that nobody will notice if she just doesn't go. As the number has no relevance to the plot as it is today (and the actors have a duet already in "The Internet is for Porn"), it was cut in rehearsals off-Broadway. (The cut came so late that the earliest promotional materials for the show refer to the song.) Rick Lyon and Stephanie D'Abruzzo recorded the song, and while it is not on the
cast recording, it is included with a souvenir program.
★ "How Much Do the People in Your Neighborhood Make?": a song written very early in the show's history and abandoned when it was decided to pursue a stage production rather than a television special.
★ "Rod's Dilemma": Written for Tony voters, this song spoofs the Tony voting as a vote for Rod's
Rotary Club's president. Rod is undecided, and the residents of Avenue Q tell him to "vote his heart". Princeton notes that "it's a secret ballot, so nobody has to know who you voted for!" The song can be heard on the official website.
★ "Only in Vegas": This song was written to promote the Las Vegas production. It features Rick Lyon as Steve Wynn telling the cast of ''Avenue Q'' how happy they will be in Vegas. The song was performed on ''Regis and Kelly'' and in some press and media events. The song was the first in the score that did not parody ''Sesame Street'' songs, instead sending up Las Vegas-style songs. It was also the first ''Avenue Q'' recording that did not feature the original Broadway cast.
★ "Rod's Christmas": Found on the CD ''Broadway's Greatest Gifts: Carols for a Cure, Vol. 5''. Rod headlines at the "Don't Tell Daddy's Cabaret and Night Club." Christmas is the time of year where he can combine his two great loves: "Christmas carols and showtunes". He sings a Christmas medley but gets no applause. Another ''Carols for a Cure'' recording featuring Avenue Q cast members out of character.
★ "Time": Shown in London previews on the video screens at the intermission, it was a video of Nicky
sitting on the toilet, singing that he is taking his time before the next act begins, with the stagehands yelling at him to get out. It was cut during early previews, although the CD is included with the souvenir brochure. The video is also available on
YouTube. It also features a short appearance by
Matt Lucas.
Original production
The musical opened
off-Broadway at the
Vineyard Theatre in March
2003 (where it won that season's
Lucille Lortel Award for Best Musical). It then moved to
Broadway at the
John Golden Theatre on
July 31 2003 where it is still running as of
July 2007. ''Avenue Q'' won three 2004
Tony Awards, including the
Tony Award for Best Musical, despite strong competition from the very successful musical ''
Wicked''. The production was directed by
Jason Moore and choreographed by Ken Roberson. The puppets were designed and constructed by original cast member
Rick Lyon. The musical supervision, orchestration and arrangements for ''Avenue Q'' and its cast album are by Stephen Oremus. The original cast included:
★ Princeton/Rod:
John Tartaglia
★ Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut:
Stephanie D'Abruzzo
★ Trekkie Monster, Nicky, Bear, Etc.:
Rick Lyon
★ Gary Coleman:
Natalie Venetia Belcon
★ Brian:
Jordan Gelber
★ Christmas Eve:
Ann Harada
★ Mrs. Thistletwat, Bear, Etc.:
Jennifer Barnhart
Subsequent productions
Las Vegas production
On
September 8 2005, a second production of ''Avenue Q'' opened up at the
Wynn Las Vegas hotel and casino in Las Vegas. This production had an "exclusive" contract that precluded ''Avenue Q'' tours within North America. A new 1,200 seat theater was built specially for the show. There were some differences from the Broadway production, including a new reprise of "It Sucks To Be Me" for Princeton at the top of Act Two, some new orchestrations, a trimmed "The Money Song," and a new rock arrangement of "There Is Life Outside Your Apartment", as well as a few jokes aimed at Las Vegas audiences. Most of these changes have since been incorporated into the Broadway version.
In mid-January 2006, the show was cut to 90 minutes, removing the intermission and trimming 10-15 minutes of material.
Steve Wynn promoted the show heavily, including dressing twenty cabs in orange fuzz to promote the show. They had "Q" in white letters etched in front. Though the show was reported to have been profitable, it closed on May 28, 2006, after only a 9 month run. The closing of the show in Las Vegas released the Avenue Q producers from their exclusivity agreement, opening the way for a U.S. national tour or other U.S. productions.
London production
A production premiered in June 2006 in London's West End at the
Noël Coward Theatre (''Avenue Q'' is its first production since it changed its name from the
Albery Theatre), produced by
Cameron Mackintosh. The show previewed on
June 1 2006 and opened on
28 June 2006. ''Avenue Q'' is currently booking in London until
26th January,
2008. The production unveiled a new logo for the show (visible on the production's
UK website), presumably since the original logo, styled after the
New York City Subway system
graphics, would have little resonance with a London audience; however both logos are used.
The most noticeable initial change was that Gary Coleman was assumed not to be well known enough for a UK audience, and the character was changed to "Gary - that famous kid from TV" and cast as a male actor instead of a female. This also caused a rewrite of the orchestration's nod to Diff'rent Strokes in "It Sucks To Be Me". After audience polling, the character's name was changed back to Gary Coleman, and the original dialogue of his catchphrase: "Whatchoo talkin' about Willis?" has been reinstated. The Original London Cast was:
★ Princeton/Rod:
Jon Robyns
★ Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut:
Julie Atherton
★ Trekkie Monster, Nicky, Bear, Etc.: Simon Lipkin
★ Gary Coleman: Giles Terera
★ Brian: Sion Lloyd
★ Christmas Eve:
Ann Harada
★ Mrs. T, Bear, Etc.: Clare Foster
U.S./Canada Tour
The first North American tour began at the Spreckels Theatre in
San Diego, California on
June 30 2007.
[2] The tour dates and venues are available on the avenueq.com website. The principal cast includes, as Princeton/Rod: Robert McClure, as Kate Monster, Lucy the Slut & others: Kelli Sawyer, as Trekkie Monster, Nicky, Bear & others: Christian Anderson, as Gary Coleman: Carla Renata, as Brian: Cole Porter, as Mrs. T./Bear: Minglie Chen, and as Christmas Eve: Angela Ai.
[3]
International productions
;Stockholm
The first translated version of the musical opened on
February 16 2007 in
Stockholm,
Sweden, at Maxim teatern, starring Jakob Stadell as Princeton/Rod, and Cecilia Wrangel as Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut.
;Helsinki
''Avenue Q'' played at the Savoy Theatre in
Helsinki from February 23, 2007 to May 19, 2007.
;Manila
A Philippine production of the musical is scheduled to be presented in August - September 2007, directed by Bobby Garcia and Chari Arespacochaga. Casting includes
Rachel Alejandro as Kate Monster and Lucy The Slut,
[4] and
Felix Rivera as Princeton and Rod.
[5]
;Tel Aviv
A translated version of the musical is scheduled to open on
October 23 2007 in
Tel Aviv,
Israel, at the
Beth Lessin Theatre, translated by Eli Bijaoui and directed by Moshe Kepten. the Israel Stars included:
★ Roy Bar-Natan: Princeton/Rod
★ Idan Alterman: Nicky
★ Tali Oren: Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut
★
Michal Yannai: Herself (Instead Gary Coleman)
★ Nicky Goldstein: Trekkie Monster
★ Michal Muctar: Ms. T (footevesh)
★ Elinor Aharon: Latina (Christmas Eve)
★ Nir Shalmon: Brian
''Avenue Q'' promotional events
On September 30, 2004, the day of the first
Bush-
Kerry presidential debate, on a stage set up in
Times Square, the cast of ''Avenue Q'' presented their version of the debate, called ''Avenue Q&A'', with portrait puppets of Bush and Kerry created by Rick Lyon. Eighteen television networks covered the event. Lyon operated the Bush puppet, while Jennifer Barnhart operated the Kerry puppet. Each puppet sang responses to questions from Avenue Q's concerned residents, and then the whole cast sang to the rain-drenched crowds to "Vote your heart!"
Regis Philbin and
Kelly Ripa puppets created by Lyon hosted the first few minutes of an episode of ''
Live! with Regis and Kelly''. In addition, Rod and John Tartaglia doing "man-on-the-street"-style interviews on the 2005 CBS broadcast of the
Macy's Day Parade. Rod and John also appeared alongside other Broadway stars in a
World AIDS Day benefit concert of ''
Pippin'' held at the
Manhattan Center on November 29, 2004. Rod played "The Head".
In another
World AIDS Day benefit, the original cast of ''Avenue Q'' and the cast of the recent Broadway revival of ''
Fiddler On The Roof'' together presented a ten minute performance that was essentially a spoof of "''Fiddler''" called "Avenue Jew,"
[1] in which Trekkie Monster played the Fiddler Theme and, at its conclusion, ate the fiddle. In a sort of epilogue to Tevye's story, Tevye, his wife Golde, and his two remaining unwed daughters arrive on Avenue Jew, an area inhabited by Jewish puppets (the Q cast played Jewish versions of their usual characters). Avenue Jew is also home to some human Jews such as Brian and
Hannukah Eve. The human Jews are fed up with the puppet Jews upstaging them constantly. Jewish-American Princeton arrives asking "What do you do with a B.A. in Yiddish?" One of Tevye's daughter's, Shprintze, falls in love with Princeton, but Tevye forbids their union. The Matchmaker sets Rod up with Lazar Wolf (Tevye is surprised Lazar is gay). After a brief interior monologue, Tevye finally consents to Princeton and Shprintze's marriage. Rod and Lazar Wolf also wish to be wed, so they decide to ask permission from the Tsar, who just happens to be a puppet Bush, who forbids gay marriage.
Ben Brantley interrupts, asking where the real Jewish people in the cast are, and the company finish with a rousing finale, telling us that "everyone's a little bit Jewish" and "in theatre you can be whatever you want to be."
In November 2005 , the ''Avenue Q'' website held a "One Night Stand" contest, calling for people to register their puppets and see whose was most worthy to be put next to Rick Lyon's. Eventually, the contest narrowed to ten entrants, and later to three, at which point the worthiest puppet and puppeteer were voted on. Andrew MacDonald Smith and his puppet Maurice Tipo won, and on March 10, 2006, Smith and his puppet appeared onstage during a show performance, appearing in the
café scene, singing the opening song and
curtain call.
In July 2006, several members of ''Avenue Q'' appeared for the opening ceremonies of the
Gay Games in
Chicago. In October 2006, Jonathan Root and Princeton presented the award for Best Young Adult Novel at the
Quill Awards. In November 2006, the London cast appeared on the BBC ''
Children in Need'' show and performed "It Sucks To Be Me"
[2]. In December 2006, the London cast performed on the
Royal Variety Performance and performed "It Sucks To Be Me", "For Now" and "Special", in which 'Lucy the Slut' suggested through lyrics and dialogue she was making a pass at
Charles, Prince of Wales.
Puppets
Although the puppets are substantially similar, there are 3 main types of puppets used in ''Avenue Q''.
Single-rod puppets
''Princeton, Kate Monster''
In a single-rod puppet, the puppeteer's right hand goes inside the puppet and controls the mouth. The puppeteer's left hand holds the rod attached to the puppet's left hand, and the puppet's right hand is pinned to its side. Should the puppet need to manipulate a prop, the puppeteer holds the puppet's hand and the prop, creating the illusion that the puppet is holding the object. One puppet features velcro to allow the fingers to perform a more intricate maneuver, i.e. "flipping the bird".
[6]
Double-rod puppets
''Rod, Lucy, the Bad Idea Bears, the Newcomer''
Double-rod puppets are similar to single-rod puppets, but feature two rods instead of one. Instead of the puppet's right hand being stitched to its side, both hands are able to be moved. The puppeteer holds both rods in his left hand, while the right hand manipulates the mouth. Occasionally, the puppeteer will use only one of the puppet's hand in a motion and will need to drop the other rod, but will pick up the rod after the action.
[6]
Free-Hands Puppets
''Nicky, Trekkie, Mrs. T., Ricky''
Free-hands puppets are more intricately maneuvered, requiring two puppeteers. The puppeteers' hands and arms fit into long sleeves and gloves and become the arms and hands of the puppet. The speaking actor controls the puppet's left hand and mouth while the second controls the puppet's right hand. On occasion, either puppeteer will leave to command another puppet, and the remaining puppeteer will control the whole puppet. In a variation on this puppet, one or both hands can be stitched to the puppet's body.
[6]
Original Broadway cast recording
The original cast recording was made on August 10, 2003, at Right Track Studio A in New York City, produced by
Grammy Award winner Jay David Saks for RCA Victor. The album contains almost all of the music from the show, with the original Broadway cast and band. Released on October 6, 2003, it has been in the top ten of the ''Billboard'' Top Cast Album Chart since the chart's launch on January 12, 2006.
[9] It was nominated for the Musical Show Album category in the 2004 Grammy Awards.
[10]
The cast album presents the music in the order in which it appears in the show, omitting short and primarily instrumental sections. Though not included on the cast album, the cut song “Tear It Up And Throw It Away” was recorded by Stephanie D’Abruzzo and Rick Lyon and issued for a time inside copies of the souvenir program book. Other recorded songs by members of the Broadway cast include three which are not part of the show: "Rod's Dilemma" (which can be heard on avenueq.com), and two Christmas songs: "Rod's Christmas" (on ''Carols For A Cure'', Vol. 5) and "Holi-Daze" (on ''Carols For A Cure'', Vol. 8). See "Other Avenue Q Songs," above, for more information.
Awards and nominations
;Broadway production
★
Tony Award for Best Musical
★
Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical (Jeff Whitty)
★
Tony Award for Best Original Score (Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx)
★
Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical (Jason Moore) (nomination)
★
Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical (John Tartaglia) (nomination)
★
Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical (Stephanie D'Abruzzo) (nomination)
★
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Musical (nominee)
★ Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical (nominee)
★ Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical (nominee)
★ Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics (nominee)
★ Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music (nominee)
The soundtrack received a
Grammy Award nomination
;London production
★
Variety Club Showbiz Theatre Award for 2006 won by London cast
★
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical (''
Caroline, or Change'' won the award; that show was nominated for a Tony the same year as ''Avenue Q''.)
References
1.
2. "Old Globe Productions," retrieved 11 July 2007
3. Playbill.com news article of May 7, 2007
4. "Rachel Joins Avenue Q" Accessed: 1 June 2007.
5. "Felix Rivera Finds His Purpose" Accessed: 1 June 2007.
6. Glossary - The Art of Puppetry
7. Glossary - The Art of Puppetry
8. Glossary - The Art of Puppetry
9. Information from ''Billboard'', November 2006
10. Information from ''Variety'', December 7, 2004
External links
★
Official website
★
London Production Website
★
Sweden Production Website
★
Finland Production Website
★
Official website of Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx, ''Avenue Q'' creators/composers/lyricists
★
★
Licensing agent MTI's website
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