'' is a
Broadway Musical . It opened
Off-Broadway at the
Vineyard Theatre in March
2003 (where it won that season's Lucille Lortel Award for Best Musical), and it has been on Broadway at the
Golden Theatre since
July 31 ,
2003 . It has risqué songs about
Racism ,
Internet Porn , and the difficulties of life, and all but three characters are portrayed by
Puppet s. It surprisingly won the 2004
Tony Award For Best Musical as well as Tony Awards for Best Score and Best Book of a Musical, defeating the much bigger-scale, front-runner musical of the season, ''
Wicked ''.
The show is largely inspired by (and in the style of)
PBS 's ''
Sesame Street '', with several characters that are recognizably
Parodies of classic
Muppet characters. For example, the roommates Rod and Nicky are clearly adult versions of Sesame Street's
Bert And Ernie , and
Trekkie Monster seems to be based on
Cookie Monster . Likewise, many of ''Avenue Q'''s musical numbers are in a style associated with classic Sesame Street songs.
Because of its adult content and "full puppet nudity" (including graphic simulated sex between puppets), ''Avenue Q'' may be inappropriate for children 12 years of age and under. Additionally, for this reason, the show specifically disclaims any connection to
Sesame Workshop or
The Jim Henson Company .
The music and lyrics are by
Robert Lopez and
Jeff Marx . The book is by
Jeff Whitty . The original production was directed by
Jason Moore and choreographed by
Ken Roberson . The puppets were designed and constructed by original cast member
Rick Lyon .
A second production of ''Avenue Q'' opened on September 8,
2005 in the Broadway Theatre, a $40 million, 1,200 seat venue built to house the production at the
Wynn Las Vegas hotel/casino. Instead of touring Avenue Q signed an exclusive deal with Wynn, but due to poor ticket sales and building conflicts the production will be replaced by ''
Spamalot '' after
May 28 ,
2006 .
'Spamalot' to replace 'Avenue Q' in Las Vegas
A third production will open in June system
Graphics , would have little resonance to a London audience.
.
The main character is Princeton (currently puppeteered on Broadway by
Barrett Foa ), who has just graduated from
College with a
B.A. in
English . He moves into an apartment in the only neighborhood he can afford, on Avenue Q, where his superintendent is actor
Gary Coleman (
Natalie Venetia Belcon , one of the three non-puppets). There, he and his neighbors cope with the struggles of real life, learning that you cannot necessarily count on things turning out as you would like.
The lights dim and the two television screens flanking the stage illuminate with an animated cartoon of Mr. Sun heading home to Avenue Q, parodying the introduction to Sesame Street as the cast sings the opening theme ("The Avenue Q Theme").
We first meet Princeton, a recent college graduate with the "useless" B.A. degree in English, who still remains optimistic that he will eventually be of use to the "whole human race." ("What Do You Do with a BA in English?") Brian (one of the three live characters) comes out of his apartment to talk to Kate Monster as they bemoan their respective situations in life, ten or so years out of college themselves: Brian is jobless with his dreams never realized, and Kate is just the perfect girl for any available guy but is still, for some reason, single. Rod and Nicky, the arguing roommates and best friends, declare that their lives are much worse than Kate's or Brian's because they spend almost every minute together in their very small apartment where everything they do irritates the other. Christmas Eve, Brian's
Japanese fiancée (and the second live character), comes outside and explains that she once tried working in a
Korean Deli and then earned two master's degrees in
Social Work as a
Therapist but has no clients. According to her, "it sucka-sucka-sucka-suck!" Princeton arrives, looking for a place to live and speaks with Avenue Q's superintendent, none other than
Gary Coleman (the third live character), who finally answers the question of whose life sucks more. ("It Sucks to be Me")
Rod is excited to have an afternoon alone to read up on some old Broadway shows without his meddlesome and talkative roommate Nicky there to bother him. His plan is thwarted when Nicky arrives home and recounts an experience on the subway to Rod about a guy that was definitely hitting on him. Rod gets very offended that he would bring this up, but Nicky thinks as roommates it should be an entirely open subject. Rod objects to this heatedly, and Nicky lets him know that if Rod was gay, he'd still like him ("If You Were Gay").
Princeton is struggling to find what to do with his life. The TV monitors explain to him that he needs to find a purpose because that's what everyone has. He finds a lucky
Penny and decides things are looking up in his search ("Purpose"). Kate comes out of her apartment, and Princeton decides to ask her a burning question, "Are you and Trekkie Monster related?" Kate takes great offense to this, believing Princeton was a little racist in assuming two monsters are automatically related. Princeton calls attention to the fact that Kate is also racist in wanting to build an exclusive school for monsters only. As they discover the fact that everyone tends to be a little racist, Gary Coleman learns that
Polack Jokes are just as racist as black jokes, Brian learns the correct term for Orientals is Asian-Americans, Christmas Eve declares the ways of the world ("The
Jew s have all the money and the whites have all the power!"), but it's still hard for everyone to believe
Jesus was actually Jewish. ("Everyone's a Little Bit Racist")
Princeton thinks he may have finally arrived at his purpose, but before he gets too close, The Bad Idea Bears arrive to spoil the fun in the most adorable way possible. So irresistible, the Bad Idea Bears can make any bad idea sound wonderful. They tell Princeton to forget about finding a job and use his parents' borrowed money to get
Drunk on some
Beer instead.
Kate gets called up by Mrs. Thistletwat, the ! But Trekkie Monster, the porn-loving monster, soon destroys any sort of positive credibility for "this new technology." ("The Internet is for Porn")
Christmas Eve springs the idea that Brian and she are going to
Marry soon. "Think of it as a surprise," she tells him. Rod has come to Christmas Eve for advice on a "friend." What should he do if he thinks he's gay? Christmas Eve says there's nothing wrong with being gay; he should
Come Out Of The Closet and embrace it. Rod complicates the matter though when he adds that his "friend" is a
Republican . And an
Investment Banker . "Oh. Then he should stay the hell the closet. He good for nothing!" reasons Christmas Eve.
Kate has a feeling Princeton has a crush on her, and when he comes over to deliver a
Mix Tape , she's sure of it. But then she starts reading the songs. What could this mean? Princeton, who was using her bathroom ("You may not wanna go in there for a while...") returns to read the second side of the tape which gives a much clearer signal. Princeton then asks Kate to go out with him to the Around the Clock Café that night. "He does like me!" Kate decides. ("Mix Tape")
Everyone is ready for the show to begin at the Around the Clock. Brian gives the opening act. It may be deemed a little too much information. ("I'm Not Wearing Underwear Today") With a lackluster response, Brian decides to go ahead and introduce the star of "Girls Gone Wild, parts 2, 5, and 7..." Lucy the
Slut . Lucy makes everyone feel a little better about themselves. (And she makes Trekkie feel quite a bit of himself.) ("Special") After the set, Kate and Princeton are ready to go home after an enjoyable evening, but the Bad Idea Bears arrive to suggest that they should have some harmless
Long Island Iced Tea and play some drinking games. After the first round, Kate says it's her treat for the next round. While Kate is away retrieving the next set of drinks, Lucy, tired from her set, comes and speaks to Princeton, telling him when he's ready for a real woman, she'll be around.
In their drunken state, Kate and Princeton are convinced by the Bad Idea Bears to go home and
Have Sex . Gary Coleman (backed up by the Bad Idea Bears) is called by other tenants to tell Princeton and Kate to stop making love so loudly. Gary refuses. Brian and Christmas Eve are also getting some action on the side. And Trekkie Monster seems to be enjoying himself just fine. ("You Can Be as Loud as the Hell You Want (When You're Making Love)")
An animated TV short illustrates the differing perspectives of a man and woman through an ''d male head on the left states very clearly, "come" while the silhouetted female head on the right stubbornly insists, "mitment." They repeat this several times until the female takes over and says, "commitment."
Rod cannot sleep, and Nicky snores loudly in the bed next to him. Before Rod can shake him to wake him up, Nicky begins to talk in his sleep...About Rod! Nicky is fantasizing about Rod, and Rod is jubilant because ''his'' dreams are finally coming true. Meanwhile, Kate and Princeton lie in bed and explain how happy they are with each other. Princeton gives Kate his lucky penny as a gift to let her know how much she means to him. Kate begins singing the same jubilant chorus as Rod but sadly for Rod, his is only a dream. "Rod, buddy?" Nicky shakes him, "You were talkin' in your sleep." "What? Oh...I thought you were talking in your sleep!" "No, I just came to bed! You were dreamin' is all." "Oh. Right..." "Must've been a nice dream, though." "Yes. Yes it was a nice dream." "Good night Rod!" Disappointment mounting in his voice, "Good night Nicky..." ("Fantasies Come True")
The next morning, Kate wakes to Mrs. Thistletwat's voice on the phone, yelling at her that she missed the morning classes she was supposed to teach. Kate, angered by all this, quits her job. Princeton calls her very brave and asks her to be his girlfriend and to accompany him to Brian and Christmas Eve's wedding.
Everyone is present for Brian and Christmas Eve (who is apparently dressing for
Christmas and
Independence Day in addition to the wedding), including the
Rabbi Gary Coleman (he apparently does everything in Avenue Q). Everyone calls over Nicky, wondering if there's any truth to the rumor that Rod is
Gay . Nicky confirms that without a doubt, Rod is a closeted homosexual; Rod overhears him and is dumbstruck. "I am not...a homo-whatever!" He in fact has a girlfriend no one has ever heard of or seen; he quickly creates a girlfriend named Alberta who lives in
Vancouver . ("My Girlfriend Who Lives in Canada") The wedding ends with some awkwardness, especially when Rod throws Nicky out of their apartment.
Princeton gets scared by the two TVs that animatedly transform the word "purpose" into "propose", and it doesn't help when Kate catches the bride's bouquet. Scared of commitment, Princeton breaks up with Kate. A disappointed Kate ends the first act with a note of defiance. ("There's a Fine, Fine Line")
At the top of act two, Princeton sits alone in his apartment. After two weeks, he is broke, in debt, unemployed, single, and purposeless. Brian arrives to cheer him up. When that doesn't work, an intervention is set in motion. Christmas Eve, Trekkie Monster, Nicky, and Gary Coleman arrive to take Princeton back outside to enjoy himself. On the way, they meet Lucy the Slut, and Princeton decides to take her home with him ("There is Life Outside Your Apartment"). Kate sees Princeton and Lucy on the way into his apartment. Angry at Princeton, Kate talks to Christmas Eve, wondering why she can be so angry with Princeton but does not hate him. Christmas Eve explains, in the musical's showstopping ballad, that the reason Kate is angry at Princeton is because she loves him so much ("The More You Ruv Someone"). Kate comes to Princeton's apartment to give him a letter, inviting him to meet her at the top of the
Empire State Building . He is in the
Shower when Kate arrives, so she gives the letter to Lucy, who promptly destroys it.
Nicky has been staying with Brian since he was kicked out, but Christmas Eve can't take having a puppet in the apartment anymore. They throw him out on the street, and Nicky has to beg for money. Gary Coleman sees Nicky's downtrodden state and laughs that he can't help feeling a weird sort of satisfaction from the sight. "Sorry Nicky, human nature!" ("
Schadenfreude ")
Lucy has abandoned Princeton, who goes out looking for her. Kate, angry that Princeton seems to have stood her up, throws the penny he gave her off the Empire State Building. Yards below, an unsuspecting Lucy being pursued by Princeton gets hit in the head by the falling penny. At the hospital, Kate visits Princeton and they attempt to work out their problems, but Princeton just has not matured; he is not ready for commitment. Nicky and Rod encounter each other, and Nicky tries to apologize, but Rod won't hear of it. He consults with Christmas Eve. "Why don't I have someone who loves me the way I love them?" Christmas Eve tells him everything is going to be okay. Nicky is out on the street, Kate is alone on the balcony, and Princeton sits at Lucy's bedside. All of them ponder what it would be like to go back to happier, easier times. ("I Wish I Could Go Back to College")
Passing Nicky in the street, Princeton has a big revelation: he should be worrying about other people. He's going to raise the money to build Kate's monster school. Nicky realizes too he shouldn't just be begging on the street; he needs to find a way to get back to his apartment. "I know! I'll find Rod a boyfriend!" Together with Gary Coleman, Brian, and Christmas Eve, they raise some money, even going out into the audience for it. ("The Money Song (You Can't Help Helping Yourself)") It's not enough, but there's one more person to hit up: Trekkie. He refuses to help, of course, until he finds out the cause is a monster school. He was not accepted at the simple public school he attended, where normal children pulled his fur and made fun of him. ("School for Monsters") He gives them US$10 million for the project. "Trekkie! Where did you get this kind of money!?" Trekkie answers, "In volatile market, only stable investment...is PORN!" ("The Money Song (Reprise)")
The school is complete, and everyone reveals it for Kate. Christmas Eve and Brian then announce that they are leaving Avenue Q (for a "nicer neighborhood:" . Lucy was saved and only the mean parts of her
Brain were removed. She's teaching
Yoga now. Kate cannot believe the monster school is finally a reality and definitely cannot believe it when they tell her Princeton devised the whole project. 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 fresh face arrives on Avenue Q and asks about the vacant apartment. Princeton realizes his purpose: take everything he's learned, teach naïve, fresh faces like this kid about the ways of the real world, and put everything into a show. "No" is the overwhelming response (to put it lightly) ("What Do You Do With a B.A. in English? (Reprise)").
Princeton moans that he may never find his purpose and the others sober him, saying that it may take a while or he may never find his purpose at all. But they remind him that everything in life is only temporary. ("For Now")
Avenue Q was nominated for 6
Tony Awards for the 2003
Broadway season. Avenue Q took home 3 awards.
- , a recently graduated English major; role originated by John Tartaglia , and currently puppeteered by Barrett Foa .
- , a lovelorn Kindergarten teaching assistant who wishes to create a school for monsters; role originated by Stephanie D'Abruzzo ; currently puppeteered by Mary Faber .
- , a Republican investment banker who is secretly gay; role originated by John Tartaglia , and currently puppeteered by Barrett Foa. Parody of Bert .
- , Rod's roommate, a messy Slacker ; originally puppeteered by Rick Lyon, and is currently puppeteered by Christian Anderson . Parody of Ernie .
- , who spends most of his time on the Internet looking at Porn ; Trekkie was originally puppeteered by Rick Lyon , and is currently puppeteered by Christian Anderson . Parody of Cookie Monster .
- , a nightclub singer who is as slutty as her name suggests; role originated by Stephanie D'Abruzzo ; currently puppeteered by Mary Faber . Possibly a parody of Prairie Dawn , although adult and slutty.
- , the former star of '' Diff'rent Strokes '', is the Building Superintendent of Avenue Q; a non-puppet character played by a female; portrayed by Natalie Venetia Belcon .
- , a down-on-his-luck 32-year-old who has trouble keeping steady employment and dreams of being a Stand-up Comedian ; a non-puppet character; role originated by Jordan Gelber and currently played by Evan Harrington.
- , a Japanese Immigrant . She is a therapist who has no clients; a non-puppet character; played by Ann Harada .
- ('Lavinia'), a Kindergarten teacher with Kate as her assistant.
- , the two adorable and sinister bears who can convince anyone to do something bad in the most adorable way.
- , the young man resembling Princeton that comes to Avenue Q planning to move into the vacant apartment.
- "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, and The Guys
- "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 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
- "There Is Life Outside Your Apartment" - Brian 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 and Company
- "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
So far, there are three Avenue Q songs that are not in the actual show itself.
- "Tear It Up and Throw It Away": the only originally cut number from the show. The plot of the song is that Kate Monster receives jury duty and won't be able to go to the aquarium with Nicky. However, Nicky tells her that jury duty is a load of crap and nobody will notice if you just don't go. The song was written back when the concept was rooted for cable TV, not Broadway. Since the number has no relevance to the plot as it is today (and Kate Monster and Trekkie Monster (the actor plays Nicky as well) have a duet anyway in "The Internet is for Porn"), it was the first thing thrown out, and they wrote Schadenfreude as Nicky's duet (this time with Gary Coleman). Even though it was cut out of the musical way before the show went on, Rick Lyon and Stephanie D'Abruzzo recorded the song with a full orchestra and released the mp3 (easily found on file-sharing programs). The song is not found as a bonus track on the cast recording, but it is included with a souvenir program.
- "Rod's Dilemma": Written for Tony voters, this song cleverly disguises the Tony's as Rod's choice for voting for his rotary club's president. He is largely undecided, and the residents of Avenue Q tell him to "vote his heart". Princeton reminds everybody that "it's a secret ballot, nobody knows what you put in!" The song even pokes fun at how it's trying to take the honest way to grab Best Musical, when the end chorus proclaims "Vote Your Heart! in the background (On Avenue Q!)" Many claim this song won them the Tony, and it is available to hear on the official website.
- "Only in Vegas": This song was written for Vegas promotion and even though an official mp3 exists, it's extremely hard to find. It features Steve Wynn (voiced by Rick Lyon) 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 is also noteworthy in that it is the first song written for Avenue Q to not try to bear similarties to Seasame Street songs, but rather pay tribute to Vegas showroom songs. It, as well, is the first Avenue Q recording to not feature the original Broadway cast.
On September 8th,
2005 , a second production of "Avenue Q" opened up at the Wynn Las Vegas hotel and casino in
Las Vegas . Steve Wynn saw the show three times on Broadway and immediately bought the exclusive rights to the show when it just won the Tony award for "Best Musical". This made Avenue Q unable to tour, and only available to be produced in Vegas, New York and outside North America (e.g. London, where it will open in June 2006).
From September 2005 to the end of the year, the show stayed in its original Broadway form, with two acts and an intermission, as on Broadway.
In Vegas, in a brand new 1,200 seat theater built specially for the show, there were some differences from the Broadway production, including new digital projection screens, a new reprise of "It Sucks To Be Me", a trimmed "The Money Song" and a whole new rock style "There Is Life Outside Your Apartment", as well as a few new jokes more suited to Vegas audiences.
In mid-January 2006, the show was cut to 90 minutes, removing the intermission and trimming 10-15 minutes of material:
- Cuts were made to the songs "Mix Tape", "Fantasies Come True" and "Schadenfreude".
- The scene after "Fantasies Come True", where Kate loses her job, but gains Princeton as a boyfriend, no longer existed. It was only implied that Kate and Princeton are a couple at the wedding.
- Since they deleted the intermission, Princeton breaks up with Kate, but instead of singing "There's a Fine, Fine Line", Kate simply walks back into her apartment. The TV screens then flashed "Three Weeks Later", zipping right to the scene (in what would be act two) that immediately follows the deleted "There Is Life Outside Your Apartment". Lucy simply showed up, now reading as that she's been seeing Princeton for a while.
- The Bad Idea Bears now showed up when Lucy tears up Kate's letter.
- The hospital scene between Kate and Princeton was extended with newly written dialogue, with Kate actually saying that she lost her job, and wondering why Princeton would want Lucy. Princeton's words only made her cry. She then sang "There's a Fine, Fine Line", which replaced the now-gone "I Wish I Could Go Back To College".
- The scene in which Rod tells Christmas Eve that he misses Nicky was thrown out.
The setting of the Vegas version of the show remained, of course, still New York.
Another difference between the Broadway and Vegas productions was that the merchandising in Vegas was far more extensive, including many souvenirs which were not available at all in New York.
Though the show was reported to have sold consistently at roughly 65% (of 1,200 seats, 10 performances a week) and to have been profitable, it was announced the Vegas production would close on May 28th, 2006, after only a 9 month run. The actual reason for closing was given as
Spamalot , which Wynn also bought the exclusive rights for, was originally going to be in a whole new theatre that would intrude on the golf course. The golf course proved to be insanely popular, and so it was decided that the Monty Python musical will move into the Broadway theater, removing Avenue Q.
This releases the Avenue Q producers from their exclusivity agreement, and since Avenue Q is now allowed to tour again, it is presumed that plans for a tour, and/or sit-down productions, with members of its two talented Vegas casts, will be announced shortly.
Avenue Q is a fictional street in a New York City location known only to be "somewhere out in
Queens or
Brooklyn ."
Manhattan has well-known Avenues A, B, C, and D, making up the
Alphabet City neighborhood (where
Rent takes place; 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 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, and the Kings Highway station is almost on Quentin Road.
The authors have stated that Avenue Q, the show's namesake, is fictional and is not related to this or any other particular street.
On September 30, 2004, the day of the first
Bush -
Kerry presidential debate, the cast of Avenue Q presented their version, called ''Avenue Q&A'', on a special stage set up in the middle of
Times Square . Eighteen television networks covered the event. Rick Lyon puppeteered George W. Bush while
Jennifer Barnhart puppeteered John Kerry. Each puppet sang to the other in response to questions from Avenue Q's concerned "residents", and then the whole cast sang to the rain-drenched crowds to "Vote your heart!".
Regis and
Kelly puppets hosted the first few minutes of an episode of ''
Live! With Regis And Kelly ''. Rod and John Tartagalia were "man-on-the-street"-style interviewers on the 2005 CBS broadcast of the
Macy's Day Parade .
Rod and John Tartagalia also appeared alongside
Michael Arden ,
Laura Benanti ,
Rosie O’Donnell ,
Ben Vereen and other Broadway superstars in a
World AIDS Day benefit concert of ''
Pippin '' held at the
Manhattan Theatre on November 29th, 2004. Rod played "The Head".
In November
2005 , Avenue Q's 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 thus, on March 10,
2006 , Andrew MacDonald Smith and his puppet Maurice Tipo appeared onstage during a show performance, appearing in a
Café scene, singing the opening song and
Curtain Call .