Itamar Moses. (Photo by Marika Kent)
Itamar Moses by no means meant to jot down musicals. He started his profession within the early 2000s as a playwright, with premieres in New York City and regionally at Berkeley Repertory Theatre, the Old Globe, South Coast Repertory, and Portland Center Stage. But he’s now additionally one of many prime e-book writers for the musical theatre, with a Tony for the 2017 The Band’s Visit.
Moses’s latest musical, an adaptation of the beloved 1986 animated movie An American Tail, for which he’s writing e-book and co-writing lyrics, begins performances subsequent week at Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis and runs via June 18th.
In the next interview, which started in December 2019 in Park Slope, Brooklyn, and concluded over Zoom in March 2023, Moses talks about his work on An American Tail and The Band’s Visit (which simply had its European premiere at London’s Donmar Warehouse final December), in addition to the distinction between playwriting and e-book writing, getting his begin in musicals with Nobody Loves You (on the Old Globe in 2012, then Second Stage Theater in 2013), working with the late composer/lyricist Michael Friedman on the musical Fortress of Solitude (at Dallas Theater Center and the Public Theater in 2014), and whether or not he’ll ever write his personal lyrics.
SHOSHANA GREENBERG: How did you get entangled in engaged on An American Tail?
ITAMAR MOSES: Children’s Theatre Company of Minneapolis had acquired the stage rights from Universal, and I simply bought an electronic mail out of the blue at some point. I had by no means labored at CTC. I didn’t actually have any relationships there.
Do you already know why they considered you?
[The characters are] mice, however [the story] is pretty clearly an analogue for the human world, and the central figures are a Jewish immigrant household. I’m Jewish, my dad and mom are immigrants, and I had a few musicals beneath my belt at this level. Definitely this was post-Nobody Loves You and Fortress. It was definitely after I used to be employed to do The Band’s Visit. I used to be somebody individuals considered a e-book author. Having labored on three musicals, I may now not deny that I used to be one. As it occurs, I’m precisely the correct age, the place I used to be 9 years previous when the film got here out, so in the event that they did that math they could have surmised that it was one thing that was an enormous deal in my childhood, which was additionally true.
It sounds prefer it was an enormous movie for you.
It wasn’t a lot that it was a movie I used to be obsessive about, in the way in which that youngsters can watch a film time and again. It was an enormous deal for my technology typically and that made an impression on me. I feel I watched it for the primary time at school on VHS. I went to a Jewish day faculty within the Bay Area till fifth grade, and after I was 9 I didn’t have a brilliant subtle understanding of assimilation versus otherness. But I feel most likely all of the lecturers and older children at this Jewish day faculty had been extra consciously conscious of the rarity and the import of a mainstream American movie having this explicitly Jewish mouse household on the middle. I nonetheless keep in mind sitting within the classroom and watching it, and the refrain of “There Are No Cats in America” was burned into my reminiscence endlessly, and “Somewhere Out There,” in fact.
What excited you about engaged on the piece?
People name me about musicals once in a while, and my default response is to say no as a result of they’re so laborious. It’s so uncommon that something is a good suggestion for a musical and that the correct components are being put in place to execute it nicely. So what excited me was that I had simply had a very good expertise of adapting a film to the stage—it was a lot simpler than a novel, which is what I attempted to do with Fortress—and I’d by no means achieved something for teenagers. I felt this lightbulb go off in that this is a chance to be sincere in an much more uncynical approach. I additionally knew, and this was an enormous attraction for me, that the film solely has three or 4 songs, and even when we used all of them, we would want to jot down eight or 9 or ten new songs. I like doing lyrics and collaborating on lyrics with composers, and so I assumed, it’s going to be writing within the candy spot of like, you could be humorous and you may be sensible and you are able to do intelligent rhymes that youngsters will recognize but in addition attempt to make a degree.
I additionally thought, right here we’re on this actually fraught second round questions of immigration and what’s America for and are we residing as much as our founding rules and credos about welcoming individuals who come right here from different locations searching for a greater life—which, P.S., just about all of us did sooner or later in our household historical past. So this was a extremely attention-grabbing and priceless second to deliver this story again. It checked a ton of bins straight away.
What are some methods you’ve constructed out the story?
The core characters and arc of the story is similar. My perspective towards adaptation is at all times, if it’s not damaged, don’t repair it. But what you are able to do with the motion sequences in a cartoon, and the leisure worth you will get out of that, is simply merely unimaginable on stage. The greatest modifications that we made needed to do with sitting in these moments a bit longer and actually mining who these totally different teams of mice are and what their totally different agendas are. We additionally expanded the lens a bit little bit of the variety of “mouse immigrant groups” which can be represented.
How does this being a recognized property change your course of and the extent of freedom you’re feeling?
You simply find yourself honoring the piece. It truly does, as much as a sure level, not restrict you however offer you totally different parameters. Collaborating with Michael Mahler and Alan Schmuckler because the composers, it’s simply been a delight. I talked to some totally different composers, and I keep in mind sitting right down to lunch with one composer—a wonderful composer I might have been fortunate to work with—and so they had been like, “We’re cutting ‘Somewhere Out There,’ right?” Part of me was like, “That is so badass!” But then a bigger a part of me was, “Why would you cut ‘Somewhere Out There’? It’s so good!” Not even as a result of it’s well-known, however as a result of it does one thing. We went in contemplating actually something to be on the chopping block, however you’ll be able to’t eliminate issues simply to alter them or put your personal stamp on it. You can also’t preserve issues as a result of, nicely that is how the film did it.
You talked about you’d had a very good expertise adapting a film already, which was The Band’s Visit. When did you first see that movie?
I first noticed it after my first assembly in regards to the present, which was with Orin Wolf, the producer, and Hal Prince, who was initially going to direct it. They handed me a DVD and had been like, “Start by watching this and see if you like this and if you think it should be a musical, and if you think you’re the person who could adapt it.” So that was the primary time I watched it, with that potential job in thoughts.
When you watched it, what had been your impressions and ideas?
Well, if it’s any indication at how good I assumed it was, I used to be not concerned about writing one other musical. I had simply achieved Nobody Loves You and The Fortress of Solitude again to again, and each of them had been quite a lot of work. Starting one other musical was the very last thing I needed to do. What I preferred in regards to the movie was how counterintuitive it was. On the one hand, it’s so spare and so inner and so quiet and so quick and doesn’t appear to lend itself to spectacle. On the opposite hand, there’s an natural motive to have music in it as a result of it’s a few band, and I felt like the rationale to do it was as a result of it wasn’t what you’ll count on somebody to decide on as supply materials for an adaptation. I watched the film and felt I noticed find out how to do it and that I is perhaps the correct particular person.
Did you’ve gotten any considerations about adapting the movie?
Before I talked to David Yazbek about it for the primary time, I used to be frightened that individuals weren’t going to share my imaginative and prescient for it. I noticed that the rationale I needed to do it, the truth that it could possibly be like an anti-musical, was a bit bit perverse, as a result of Orin Wolf is a business producer. He wasn’t in the end producing Band’s Visit in order that it could be a tiny present that nobody would see. I felt like if Yazbek didn’t see it the identical approach I did, if he was like, “We really have to razzle-dazzle this up,” that is perhaps an issue. I didn’t know him. I knew his work and I preferred it, however Full Monty and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Women on the Verge—they’re tremendous attention-grabbing however they’re extra historically showy musicals. But from the primary time we talked he was saying all the very same issues that I used to be. It was the rationale he needed to do it: as a result of it was so totally different from the stuff he’d achieved up to now. Orin shared our imaginative and prescient too, so we had been actually protected.
How did you and Yazbek work collectively?
My first step was to jot down a script with no songs, after which [Yazbek] wrote one music independently, which was “Answer Me.” Then we sat down along with the remainder of the script and went via it web page by web page and circled what we thought the music moments had been. If he was struggling to jot down a music he would ultimately say, “There might not be a song here, and that’s why I can’t write it.” And I’d be like, “Are you sure it’s just not because you’re lazy?” And he’d be like, “No. After one week, it’s because I’m lazy. If I still can’t write it after three weeks, there’s no song.”
When you’re going via a script, how will you inform the place the music moments are?
Sometimes you already know with nearly certainty, like we knew we needed Dina to sing a music about Omar Sharif and Umm Kulthum when she talks within the cafeteria. Sometimes you’re not completely certain. And typically you get your self into bother by interested by what the “rules” are. It took us some time to simply accept the truth that we didn’t want an enormous solo for Tewfiq. I feel David wrote not less than three songs the place Tewfiq is taking a look at Dina and falling in love with Dina; we may inform that they didn’t belong. We ultimately had been in a position to articulate to ourselves that the model of Tewfiq who may sing an enormous solo about his emotions in the course of the present didn’t have to go on the journey the present takes him on—that it’s solely on the very finish of the present that he’s starting to get again in contact along with his emotions.
Another useful approach that I used to be in a position to body it for myself was that Dina is a musical theatre protagonist, which is a part of her downside. She’s kind of a romantic and sees her life as this musical the place she’s imagined to be this nice romantic heroine, and it didn’t occur. And his downside is that he doesn’t see his life as a musical, not anymore, so he’s not in a musical. So it’s a romance between people who find themselves in two totally different genres of a present.
It actually simply brings up the query of why are characters singing. When I noticed it I felt that it was such a book-heavy musical, and I questioned, was {that a} acutely aware resolution?
No. It’s humorous that you simply say it’s a book-heavy musical, which I agree with—I imply, there are individuals who even name it extra of a play with music than a musical. It’s a really spare script, however the scenes are very naturalistic and lived-in in a approach that perhaps is much less frequent in musicals. I feel that’s why it feels that approach. Not each scene must have a music, or not each second of e-book is about constructing in direction of the music. But that each one got here from the film.
Did you ever really feel such as you had been strolling a line of, “Is this a play?”
I didn’t assume in these phrases, however there have been instances early on the place I questioned if we would have liked extra songs or I wrote sections that I assumed, “Well, surely David is going to cannibalize this and turn it into a song.” And there have been instances the place that didn’t occur, and I used to be like, “Do we really just want to leave all of this naked?” That was earlier than we began seeing it with audiences. You can inform when individuals need a music and also you haven’t given it to them, and you may inform if you’ve given them a music and so they didn’t need one. People have all these guidelines for musicals, however the rule is simply do no matter works on your musical in that second.
What first bought you into playwriting?
I went to Berkeley High, which is the one public highschool in Berkeley, California. It’s like an enormous, loopy, numerous, bizarre, artsy highschool, and there have been a few guys just a few years older who had been doing theatre, not like theatre on the faculty, however they had been like doing their very own performs and placing them on on this, like, black-box theatre in Berkeley beneath a pizza place. One of them was Gaby Alter, who I might go on to jot down Nobody Loves You with. I keep in mind going to see the performs and early rock operas that this theatre firm was doing that Gaby was part of, and I used to be like, “That’s really cool.” I needed to be doing that—to impress different individuals the way in which that these guys had been impressing me. And then I used to be in highschool within the early ’90s, Angels in America had been on Broadway after which it was going again out throughout the nation. ACT in San Francisco was one of many huge regional post-Broadway productions, and I went to see each components of that my senior 12 months of highschool. I’d learn it the 12 months earlier than, after which I noticed it, and after I noticed it I began my first play the following day.
Had you been in any respect in musicals at this level?
I preferred musicals. I used to be by no means that concerned about writing them. The first one I wrote as a result of Gaby moved to New York just a few years after I did, and he went to NYU’s musical theatre writing program just a few years after I’d gone to their MFA playwriting program. When he graduated, it was identical to, “Well, we’re hanging out anyway. I write plays. You write musicals. We should write a show together.”
And had been you identical to, let me bounce into this?
I used to be very cocky and hubristic about it. I used to be like, “This doesn’t seem that hard.” And I needed to jot down lyrics. I used to be like, “I’m good at rhyming.” I had no coaching in anyway in e-book writing. I dove in figuring out nothing, which is the easiest way to begin one thing.
Right, studying by doing. Were there components of e-book writing that took you unexpectedly?
In my early musical theatre writing, there have been instances after I would let myself lose an argument as a result of anyone concerned would say, “Well, that might be how you do it in a play, but in a musical you have to do it this way.” What I finally realized was that I ought to nonetheless belief my instincts. You actually simply need to study what the instruments are after which use these instruments to interact individuals in the identical approach. I imply, I used to be being glib earlier than after I stated I didn’t assume it could be laborious; I knew simply how laborious it’s to make a musical work. I’ve written performs. I’ve additionally written screenplays. I’ve written for tv. Musicals are by far the toughest kind I’ve ever labored in—by far. They’re unimaginable, mainly, to make work.
Could you articulate what makes them so unimaginable?
It’s only a Frankenstein kind that shouldn’t work. It doesn’t make any sense. Every single time you transition from speech to music it’s like a magic trick, after which nobody actually understands find out how to make a music work. It’s an “I Want” music. Okay, however the music has to advance the motion. Well, what do you imply by motion? And something you’ll be able to consider as a rule, you’ll be able to give you 10 counter-examples that work. So on a craft degree, it’s simply this extremely sophisticated piece of equipment. Every single musical is totally different. Almost nothing you realized in your final musical will aid you on the following one.
Then, producerially, with a play, if I’ve a draft of a play and there aren’t 50 individuals in it, I can get 5 – 6 mates who’re actors over to my house and they’re going to simply learn it chilly, and I’ll give all of them pizza and I just about know what I’ve. You can’t know what you’ve gotten with a musical. You want every week or two weeks of rehearsal and tens of 1000’s of {dollars}, and even then there are belongings you don’t find out about whether or not a musical works till you’re in previews, at which level it’s too late to alter something besides 5 or 10 % of it. So they’re actually laborious to get proper, and it’s actually laborious to know what you bought incorrect till it’s too late.
Yeah, the economics of musicals no person actually talks about. I additionally write musicals.
I can see from the ache in your face that you simply acknowledge every thing I’m saying.
So no person mentored you within the craft of e-book writing?
Yeah, I didn’t have a selected mentor—Gaby initially, after which Michelle Tattenbaum, who directed Nobody Loves You. She’s an important dramaturg and somebody who understands the mechanics of find out how to put collectively a musical and might articulate it in a sensible approach. Then I realized lots engaged on Fortress of Solitude in kind of a trial-by-fire approach, as a result of capturing that narrative dramatically was so laborious, and Michael Friedman simply beamed this otherworldly rating at me that was beautiful however nearly fully anti-narrative. And so my mentor on Fortress was the impossibility of the duty, which is why I failed at it. In a approach, nothing will ever be as laborious as making an attempt to make Fortress of Solitude work.
So you might be formally saying you failed at that job?
I feel issues about that present labored rather well. I feel that what we opened with on the Public Theater, I wasn’t utterly happy with, however we’ve continued to work on it. It’s clearly enormously sophisticated now by Michael’s dying, however the three of us, Daniel Aukin and Michael and I, had already achieved one other incarnation of it with the grad college students at NYU. It was extra stripped down. So we nonetheless discuss how we are able to transfer that ahead.
What was that writing expertise like, particularly working with Michael?
It was quite a lot of issues. It was actually inspiring. It was actually tough as a result of it’s a dense 500-page novel, and going from a novel to stage is de facto laborious. And Fortress is a really inner novel, so to even work out what the principles of that present had been was actually laborious and a course of that’s not over. But I respect Daniel and Michael a lot and so it created this actually highly effective, particular bond between the three of us. The materials was so tough and upsetting—it’s a really unhappy story—and that feeling, that bond prolonged, I feel, to quite a lot of the actors who had been with it from early workshops. I met my spouse on that present.
So it’s very momentous.
It was a extremely necessary, impactful expertise in my life, however one I had quite a lot of emotions about even earlier than Michael died. And then, as soon as Michael died—there’s one thing tragic about how individuals who know his work broadly regard [Fortress] as perhaps his greatest rating, and so aside from simply the impossible-to-articulate tragedy of his dying and the concept of all of the unwritten exhibits, after which the broader sense of like—it sounds so petty and small to be like, “He didn’t get his due,” as a result of his life was about all types of issues. But it foreclosed one thing. It foreclosed him attending to see that rating being embraced in the way in which that I feel it deserves.
Just to the touch on Nobody Loves You, which is a few actuality relationship present and somebody who’s writing their dissertation on actuality TV—the place did that concept come from?
An concept I had at one level was, nicely, we should always parody actuality TV, as a result of it offers you an important motive to sing. Anything that has actuality, after which a heightened degree of actuality, is nice for a musical, as a result of everytime you’re within the heightened world, that’s what earns you the songs. So I used to be like, when persons are on digital camera, they’ll sing.
After Nobody Loves You closed there have been TV exhibits like UnREAL, which was behind the scenes of a actuality TV relationship present. Did that deliver again any curiosity to your present?
I really feel just like the query behind your query, to which the reply is sure, is: Was your present weirdly prescient and forward of the instances? What’s humorous, once we had been first writing it, we’d inform individuals the concept and so they’d say, “Oh, you’d better hurry up and finish that because this reality TV phase is going to go away,” and I keep in mind pondering, “This thing’s never going away.” The darkness I feel the present is investigating guidelines all of our lives now, so that’s a part of the argument we make once we pitch it to individuals for bringing it again. I don’t know for those who ever really feel a musical is finished. I by no means really feel like a play is totally achieved.
I additionally needed to ask, since you co-wrote the lyrics for that present—
I like writing lyrics.
And now you’re writing lyrics once more.
It’s only a totally different problem and it’s enjoyable. You get a bit bit extra management over how the factor unfolds. It relies upon who you’re working with. Even if I would need to write lyrics, it’s not a good suggestion with each lyric author. I don’t assume Yazbek and I might complement one another as a lyric-writing crew, whereas Gaby and I do, as an example.
Would you ever be the only real lyricist on a venture?
Yeah, I might try this. I’d be a bit extra afraid of that, as a result of it’s helpful to have somebody who pulls again a few of my extra byzantine—like, in my collaboration with Gaby, he’s the one who’s at all times like, “What is the emotional content that we’re trying to get across?” And I’m like, “How many internal rhymes can we fit in this one line?”
Well, you want that too, particularly for those who’re doing comedy. And are your plans to do extra e-book writing or playwriting?
I’ve pivoted extra again towards playwriting. I’ve kind of signed on to a few musicals, however the bar is about fairly excessive now for me to say sure to them. So my place continues to be that I don’t need to write musicals, so I’m solely going to jot down like three extra.
It’s good to listen to you’ve gotten some in your future.
Maybe 5. [Laughter] Although I do acknowledge that the possibilities of something fairly like what occurred with The Band’s Visit ever taking place once more are basically zero. But it’s extra in regards to the individuals than the rest. If you decide individuals you need to work with on stuff that you simply care about, you’ll be able to’t go too incorrect.
Shoshana Greenberg (she/her) is a author based mostly in New York City.