'Newsies' Musical Will Get A Love Story

By MARK KENNEDY   09/ 1/11 06:34 PM ET   AP

Newsies Broadway

NEW YORK -- When Harvey Fierstein was asked to make the film "Newsies" work on stage, he realized that something was missing from the original.

"In a musical, there's an old rule: You must follow the love story," the four-time Tony Award-winning actor and writer said Thursday. "It gives the audience somewhere to go and someplace to rest their hearts."

The trouble with the film "Newsies" was that it lacked that spark of passion.

So Fierstein rolled up his sleeves and put one in. It's among many changes made to the 1992 film musical that tells the story of child newspaper sellers in turn-of-the-century New York who go on strike.

The film, starring Christian Bale, Bill Pullman, Robert Duvall and Ann-Margret, did poorly at the box office but has become something of a cult hit of late. It's the top most requested stage adaptations from Disney films.

The Disney-backed stage musical will make its debut this month at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, N.J. Performances begin Sept. 15, with an official opening set for Sept. 25.

The idea of putting it on stage began when Fierstein met with composer Alan Menken in his office decorated with posters of his hugely successful films, such as "The Little Mermaid," "Beauty and the Beast," "Aladdin" and "Pocahontas."

At one point, Fierstein pointed to a poster of "Newsies," and asked if he'd considered adapting the film. Menken said he and lyricist Jack Feldman had been wrestling with it for decades but couldn't make it work.

"I said, `I'll make it work,'" recalled Fierstein.

Fierstein, known for his work in "Hairspray," "La Cage aux Folles" and "Torch Song Trilogy," remembers the film fondly, even if it did contain bad Brooklyn accents. He would show a video of the film to his nephews. "It was one of those baby-sitting tools for boys," he said. "It's very boy."

When he recently went back to the movie, Fierstein said he realized that it was a very old story – the next generation standing up for itself. "Whether it's Tiananmen Square or the Arab Spring or the American Revolution, there comes a time when the older generation must step aside for the new one."

In the stage musical, the lead role of Jack Kelly is played by Jeremy Jordan, who recently starred on Broadway in "West Side Story" and will be there again this winter in the musical "Bonnie and Clyde." The part of Davey went to Ben Fankhauser, who starred in the first national tour of "Spring Awakening."

The new musical retains the memorable songs "Santa Fe," "The World Will Know," "Carrying the Banner," "Seize the Day" and "King of New York," but adds a young female reporter to the story, played by Kara Lindsay.

Menken recalls being shocked initially when Fierstein suggested starting the show with the song "Santa Fe." Menken balked, saying that song was something the musical had to build up to.

In the end, Fierstein won.

"Just the boldness of that idea, of that moment at the top of the show, for me, was transformative. And the idea of Katherine – hugely transformative," Menken said. "So it's just great to have that infusion of new ideas and energy."

___

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NEW YORK -- When Harvey Fierstein was asked to make the film "Newsies" work on stage, he realized that something was missing from the original. "In a musical, there's an old rule: You must follow the...
NEW YORK -- When Harvey Fierstein was asked to make the film "Newsies" work on stage, he realized that something was missing from the original. "In a musical, there's an old rule: You must follow the...
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
03:51 PM on 09/05/2011
"Newsies" was always awful and it's still awful. I just cannot see what Fierstein thinks he's doing unless it was that quote about the movie being a baby-sitting tool for boys: 'It's very boy." And that it is. A friend of mine is in love with it. But I don't know why. That the article hovers over one particular horrible song, "Santa Fe," stands as a sort of aversion therapy because the very idea that the song wouldn't automatically be cut--much less turned into the opening number (a dull ballad where uneducated slum boyss in 1910 New York City dream of moving to have a better life)--is proposterous; since the place in question is quite likely somewhere these boys have never even heard of.
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kosmotis69
12:41 PM on 09/05/2011
Why don't you do a feature on Kinky Boots which is a lot closer to being on Broadway than this project?
11:03 AM on 09/05/2011
The reason Newsies flopped was it was a bad film that went nowhere fast!
02:35 PM on 09/05/2011
Newsies has been one of my favorite films since it debuted around my 5th grade year. I have always owned a copy of the film and the soundtrack. I still listen to the music, watch the movie and play the songs on my piano and I think it's a wonderful film. Just because you didn't appreciate it, that doesn't make it bad.
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
03:52 PM on 09/05/2011
One can appreciate a bad film. That's why they came up with the term 'guilty pleasure'.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
04:16 AM on 09/04/2011
Fierstein seems to have the right take on NEWSIES for the stage. It is an exuberant movie, but the book needs serious shaping and reframing. Harvey understands Broadway and this seems like a shoo-in for success. Interesting that Disney had the cojones to hire one of the most outspoken and recognizable gays on Broadway to shape their show.
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
03:55 PM on 09/05/2011
Good points, SteveDenver. Fierstein CAN solve a book. But Alan Menken can take all six, or seven of his Oscars and write this show in previews for YEARS without ever coming up with a suitable production number.
03:37 AM on 09/04/2011
my 3 year old LOVES this movies.. since netflix sent it(i remember the movie from my music class years ago) she watched it 3 times and now runs around the house saying shes the king of new york..LOL.... i hope they dont ruin this like everything else!
01:26 PM on 09/05/2011
What "everything else" have they ruined...??!!
03:43 PM on 09/05/2011
all the movies they try to remake!!
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
03:56 PM on 09/05/2011
If you wish to start a list on 'what else they've ruined' I hope you have a very thick yellow pad--or several.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cloudmaker
10:39 AM on 09/03/2011
Why would they turn a third-rate musical movie into a musical? When are they doing Ishtar?
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:03 PM on 09/05/2011
If "Newsies" makes it to Broadway, "Ishtar: The Musical" can't be far behind. And after that, "Heaven's Gate: The Nine Hour Musical," "Battlefield Earth: "The Musical," and "Hudson Hawk: The Musical." ANYTHING except an original musical. Broadway Producers gave up on them the moment "The Jersey Boys" (a revue) won the Best Musical Tony Award over "The Drowsy Chaperone" (an original) in 2006. Originality is OUT. It used to be that if something became popular on Broadway, there might be a movie sale. Now that they keep mining movies, they sure don't have a lucrative movie deal anymore, they only have touring companies which get further and further away from what the show was.
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Nightling
11:55 PM on 09/02/2011
1. Santa Fe does NOT belong at the beginning. "So that's what they call a family. Mother, father, daughter son." He's saying that AFTER meeting David's family.

2. There WAS a love story! Was this guy not paying attention? Jack and David's sister were an itiem. What did they do? Retcon the existence of Denton (Bill Pullman's character) just for something more blatant? This was an histiorcal movie. There were NO teen female reporters in New York City in 1799!
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Nightling
12:11 AM on 09/03/2011
Typo, I meant to say 1899.
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:07 PM on 09/05/2011
Nightling: Thank you for pointing out the big flaw in moving "Santa Fe" to the beginning. However, they will re-write the lyrics. They obviously aren't counting the romance you are referring to, Fierstein needs credit for creating SOMETHING--and so he shall. I'm sure I must be mistaken by saying the events in the film took place in 1910, (I didn't look it up, no) but could I be off by an entire century? Can someone set us both straight on this?
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:17 PM on 09/05/2011
1899! Thank you. That makes much more sense.
06:37 PM on 09/02/2011
Seriously?! I've been saying for years that I would love to direct a stage adaptation of this musical. This should be a good thing. But now they're screwing with the story, adding love plot lines, and trying to fix it.... It wasn't broken!
Why Must They Screw Over Good Things?!?!
Well, there goes that dream...
I try to be reasonable
... but don't always succeed...
05:11 PM on 09/02/2011
================
At one point, Fierstein pointed to a poster of "Newsies," and asked if he'd considered adapting the film. Menken said he and lyricist Jack Feldman had been wrestling with it for decades but couldn't make it work.

"I said, `I'll make it work,'" recalled Fierstein.
================

Pretty sure it worked just fine the way it was, thanks, Mr. Fierstein.

The ol' Hollywood/Broadway mantra: If it ain't broke, give me five minutes with it...
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:20 PM on 09/05/2011
Reasonable: In the very long running play "Deathtrap," the plot hinges on the quality of a play a student asks his professor to read. In a fury of jealousy, the professor/author turns to his wife and yells: "This play is so good, not even a gifted director could ruin it!"
I try to be reasonable
... but don't always succeed...
05:52 PM on 09/05/2011
Ha! Brilliant, I love it. Thanks for sharing :D
04:43 PM on 09/02/2011
They're ruining it! D: The reason I adore that movie is that it DOESN'T get bogged down with a stupid love story that detracts from the main plot. grrrrrrrrr....
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:09 PM on 09/05/2011
Well, it will get bogged down now.
04:33 PM on 09/02/2011
A love story? For whom? When I watched NEWSIES the first time, I sensed the beginnings of passion between Jack Kelly and David's sister
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:11 PM on 09/05/2011
Chaz2150: And I sensed the unwholesome passions between a whole gaggle of cooped up boys basically being used as slave labor.
04:24 PM on 09/02/2011
This is for all the Newsies' fans out there. I'm curious to this as a stage production. I think it could be really great!
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:20 PM on 09/05/2011
Well Miriam...... THINK AWAY!
02:21 PM on 09/02/2011
AHHH!!!!.... Their going to RUIN the best film Disney ever produced! What the heck were they THINKING?!?
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
04:23 AM on 09/04/2011
They're probably thinking that the 2-hour film needs to be trimmed to 50-minutes, intermission and 40-minutes to finish; with 1/3 dialogue and 2/3 song & dance. The musical needs to establish a main thread that is easy to follow, and a subplot that is engaging.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan1964
My micro-bio can kick your micro-bio's butt
01:03 PM on 09/05/2011
The best?? Really???
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Xak999
It came out of the faucet that way...
04:14 PM on 09/05/2011
Susan1964, you took the words right off of my keyboard. Such a lofty opinion of 'Newsies' that it can cancel out the memory of "Mary Poppins," "The Happiest Millionaire" and "The Lion King"?
01:53 PM on 09/02/2011
Aww I love this movie. When I used to dance, we did a competition routine to "King of New York." We were all dressed in knickers and caps with rolled up newspapers. It brings back so many memories.
01:16 PM on 09/02/2011
I loved this movie and watch it all the time. It was energetic, entertaining and educational all at the same time. At the time it was released I had two young sons who were enthralled with it. They knew the songs and the dances. What I liked about it was it didn't really have a love theme to it. It was great for my two sons.