Jonathan Larson January 21. The time is around 6:45 PM. A writer and composer, Jonathan Larson, sat down on this line and chose "Broadway musical actor" of "Coming Soon", "Rent" experienced the last rehearsal of the New York Theater Studio. When Larson began to feel chest pain, he and "Rent" director Michael Grief began singing songs. The pain increased. Mr. Larson (as an obsessive worry and a gloomy close friend and relatives knows him) turned to the actor and said, "You should call 911.
Jonathan Larson's RENT is one of the most symbolic musicals ever. Larson was urged to use RENT as a response to his personal AIDS epidemic. Prior to 1996, former Broadway actor opened RENT for the first time at Nederlander Theater on April 29th. Larsson had lost some of his friends to AIDS. He decided to tell the story as a tribute to their lives and their love for them. If you understand musicals, members of Life Support Venue - Steve, Gordon, Ali, Pam, Su - are the names of friends of Larsen (11).
The rent was written and created by Bohemian artist Jonathan Larson, one of the more creative corners of Manhattan. Sadly, Larson did not witness his success. He died in his Greenwich Village apartment on the last rehearsal night of Rent in January 1996. In his last interview, two hours before his death, he told the New York Times 35 years ago that he wrote the "hair of the '90s". Over 30 years ago, the two unemployed artist's hair from Dongcun caught the spirit of the entire generation completely and is trying to be the most successful work of the hippie movement. In search of similar blows, Larson used a hair formula to make contemporary rock music a story about East Village Bohemians. And it ridiculed material success and backed up personal and artistic freedom, friendship and love.
Jonathan Larson wrote these words shortly before his death at the age of 35. His family found these words on their computer after their death. They are his only Broadway musical, the most popular rent. Larson, a diligent, long-suffering, unrecognized composer, in the rock / pop concert of Puccini's favorite opera "La Bohm" in the 1950s, has been active for seven years. This time it was filmed in New York. East Village For many people, the rent is just that. This is a musical that the first young audience has agreed for decades, talking in their own voice, expressing concern, and solving the problem. It injected a new business life into the musical of Broadway, it may tell the end of the big gap between pop music and dramatic music that existed since the advent of rock music in the 1950s. Even titles have different meanings for different people.