EXTENDED BY POPULAR DEMAND!
NOW AT THE NEW M&T BANK EXCHANGE AT
THE FRANCE-MERRICK PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

RENT

Book, Music, & Lyrics

Jonathan Larson

EXTENDED BY POPULAR DEMAND!

NOW AT THE M&T BANK EXCHANGE AT THE FRANCE-MERRICK PERFORMING ARTS CENTER!

RENT

The cast of RENT featuring Jeremy Allen Crawford (Mark) and Carter Crosby (Roger), along with Artistic Director Sean Elias, join CBS News WJZ Baltimore in the studio to discuss the critically acclaimed and award-winning production on stage now at Iron Crow Theatre.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY WILSON FREEMAN

Experience the pop culture phenomenon and electrifying pulse of Jonathan Larson's masterpiece – RENT! In this daringly reenvisioned production set against the raw canvas of New York City's Lower East Side at the height of the squatter movement and decimated by the ravages of HIV/AIDS, drugs, and homelessness, RENT is a celebration of love, a testament to human resilience, and a rallying cry for seizing the moment and making your dreams a reality.

Recipient of the Tony Award for Best Musical and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, RENT draws loose inspiration from Puccini's La Boheme. The musical chronicles a year in the life of a chosen family of struggling young artists, musicians, and activists struggling to survive long enough to leave something behind. The musical exploration of how these vibrant bohemians negotiate their art, authenticity, and time left on earth weaves a groundbreaking tale that transcends generations, resonating with audiences of all ages.

Get your tickets now for the musical that defined an era, ignited the spirit of a generation, and compels us all to measure our lives in love.

“…reinvigorate[d] with welcome bursts of theatricality…make it, again, feel genuinely fresh.

— MD Theatre Guide

Read the full review

“A thrilling, stunningly realized,
fully inhabited production. Baltimore small theatre at its best!”

— WYPR

Listen to the full review

Skillful direction…Revitalized…This production has moments that you simply should not miss.”

— DC Theatre Arts

Read the full review

“…an overwhelming swirl of light, action, sound, and emotion, it should be a discordant cacophony, but instead it’s gorgeous chaos.

— BroadwayWorld Baltimore

Read the full review

“…purchase tickets to see this wonderful theatrical production that will make you laugh, cry and reflect. Do it today!”

— TheatreBloom

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BOOK, MUSIC, LYRICS

JONATHAN LARSON

HE / HIM

STAGE MANAGER

MONIQUE CHAMBERS-SLEDJESKI

SHE / HER

DIRECTOR

SEAN ELIAS*+

HE / HIM

ASST. STAGE MANAGER

EMILY COCCOVIZZO

SHE / HER

CHOREO & ASST. DIRECTOR

QUAE SIMPSON*+

HE / HIM

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/27 - 2/18)

JJ. NICHOLS

THEY / THEM

LIGHTING DESIGN

THOMAS P. GARDNER+

HE / HIM

TECHNICAL DIRECTOR

BRUCE KAPPLIN+

HE / HIM

COSTUME DESIGN

CAMILLE LERNER

SHE / HER

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/19 - 21)

BRAD J. RANNO

HE / HIM

ASST. COSTUME DESIGN

APRIL FORRER+

SHE / HER

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/26)

THOM WOODWARD

HE / HIM

SET DESIGN

THOMAS JENKELEIT

HE / HIM

MUSIC DIRECTOR

RACHEL SANDLER

SHE / HER

JOANNE JEFFERSON

BREANNE SENSENIG

BENJAMIN COFFIN, III

ANWAR THOMAS

ENSEMBLE & ROGER U/S

LANDON BLACK

ENSEMBLE & MARK U/S

SAM SLOTTOW

ENSEMBLE & BENNY,COLLINS U/S

TYLER WHITE

TOM COLLINS

TERRELL CHAMBERS

MARK COHEN

JEREMY ALLEN CRAWFORD

MIMI MARQUEZ

NATALIA FYFE

MAUREEN JOHNSON

RACHEL CAHOON

ANGEL DUMOTT SCHUNARD

NICHOLAS MILES+

ENSEMBLE & MAUREEN, JOANNE U/S

TEDDY WRIGHT

ROGER DAVIS

CARTER CROSBY

INTIMACY DIRECTOR

SHAWNA POTTER+

SHE / HER

ENSEMBLE & MIMI U/S

JESSICA RAMON

+ denotes Iron Crow Theatre Resident Artist
* denotes Member, Actors’ Equity Association. The professional union for actors and stage managers in the United States.

CREATIVE TEAM


PHOTOGRAPHY BY WILSON FREEMAN

+ denotes Iron Crow Theatre Resident Artist

ROGER DAVIS

CARTER CROSBY

MIMI MARQUEZ

NATALIA FYFE

MARK COHEN

JEREMY ALLEN CRAWFORD

TOM COLLINS

TERRELL CHAMBERS

ANGEL DUMOTT SCHUNARD

NICHOLAS MILES+

MAUREEN JOHNSON

RACHEL CAHOON

JOANNE JEFFERSON

BREANNE SENSENIG

BENJAMIN COFFIN, III

ANWAR THOMAS

ENSEMBLE & ROGER U/S

LANDON BLACK

ENSEMBLE & MIMI U/S

JESSICA RAMON

ENSEMBLE & MARK U/S

SAM SLOTTOW

ENSEMBLE & BENNY, COLLINS U/S

TYLER WHITE

ENSEMBLE & MAUREEN, JOANNE U/S

TEDDY WRIGHT

CREATIVE TEAM


BOOK, MUSIC, LYRICS

JONATHAN LARSON

HE / HIM

DIRECTOR

SEAN ELIAS+

HE / HIM

CHOREOGRAPHY & ASST. DIRECTOR

QUAE SIMPSON+

HE / HIM

MUSIC DIRECTOR

RACHEL SANDLER

SHE / HER

STAGE MANAGER

MONIQUE CHAMBERS

SHE / HER

ASST. STAGE MANAGER

EMILY COCCOVIZZO

SHE / HER

INTIMACY DIRECTOR

SHAWNA POTTER+

SHE / HER

TECHNICAL DIRECTOR

BRUCE KAPPLIN+

HE / HIM / HIS

LIGHTING DESIGN

THOMAS P. GARDNER+

HE / HIM

COSTUME DESIGN

CAMILLE LERNER

SHE / HER

ASST. COSTUME DESIGN

APRIL FORRER+

SHE / HER

SET DESIGN

THOMAS JENKELEIT

HE / HIM

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/27 - 2/4)

JJ NICHOLS

THEY / THEM

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/19 - 1/21)

BRAD J. RANNO

HE / HIM

AUDIO ENGINEER (1/26)

THOM WOODWARD

HE / HIM

Welcome to the Season of the Unorthodox! We are so excited to welcome you back to the theatre for our most daring season yet, and what other show to start with than the musical that dared to defy American musical theatre itself, RENT! What always struck me about RENT was the true depths of despair in which these characters are living - both emotionally and physically.

Today, RENT carries a sense of deep history, nostalgia, and sometimes rigid expectations. Most revivals largely adhere to the musical’s original Broadway staging from 1996. For me, these staging conventions often overshadow the musical’s intent to exist as a form of agitational propaganda. RENT was created as a vehicle to highlight the socio-political upheaval of the late 1980s and early 1990s, the devastation of the early days of the AIDS epidemic, and to serve as a warning of what happens when we lose sight of our shared humanity. It also serves as a testament to the ways that love and living in community can defy great odds.

It was important for me to re-envision this piece in a way that would allow what gets lost in the production’s “baggage” to be experienced anew. What emerged was a staging and theatrical language that resists the allure of nostalgia, and urges our audiences to confront uncomfortable truths while inspiring us all to be agents of change in our own communities.

Without you, our audience and supporters, Iron Crow Theatre, could not exist. Thank you for supporting queer theatre and small professional theatre here in Baltimore. I promise you that it means so much to so many here in Maryland and across the country: those we love and those we’ve lost.

Warmly,

Sean Elias, M.A., B.F.A.
Director, RENT
Artistic Director, Iron Crow Theatre

“What emerged was a staging and theatrical language that resists the allure of nostalgia, and urges our audiences to confront uncomfortable truths while inspiring us all to be agents of change in our own communities.”

— SEAN ELIAS
Director, RENT

RUN TIME:
Approximately 3 hours, including a 15-minute intermission.

CONTENT:
The production includes sexual themes, jokes, and undertones, kissing, simulated intercourse, violence, mentions of suicide and addiction, disease, and death. The production design includes the use of loud sound effects, haze, the use of props that sound similar to that of a gunshot, and bright, strobing, reflective lighting.

 

M&T BANK EXCHANGE AT THE
FRANCE-MERRICK PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

401 W FAYETTE ST.
BALTIMORE, MD 21201

WWW.MTBANKEXCHANGE.COM

SUNDAY, JANUARY 21

Iron Crow Theatre is honored to partner with Free State Justice, Maryland’s leading state-based non-profit, working to improve the lives of Maryland’s LGBTQ+ communities through free legal services, legislative advocacy, and education and outreach programs. Join us during pre-show for a special conversation on decriminalizing HIV with special guest Delegate Kris Fair in partnership with FreeState Justice.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26

This date marks the 28th anniversary of the first performance of RENT at New York Theatre Workshop which is also the day after Jonathan Larson tragically passed away. Join us for a Seasons of Love Sing-Along after the show to honor Jonathan Larson’s legacy. Lyrics provided.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4

This date marks what would have been Jonathan Larson’s 64th birthday. Join us pre-show for a special Happy Birthday Sing-Along for Jonathan and after the show for one final Seasons of Love Sing-Along to honor Jonathan Larson’s legacy and the closing night of RENT. Lyrics provided.

THE NATIONAL AIDS MEMORIAL

Iron Crow Theatre is honored to have received special permission to display a block of the National AIDS Quilt in our lobby and to be a supporter of the National AIDS Memorial’s efforts to bring the Quilt to communities across the United States to raise greater awareness and education about HIV/AIDS and to remember those lost to the AIDS pandemic.

WHOSE STREETS? OUR STREETS!”: NYC 1980 - 2000

New York City streets were turbulent and often violent as residents responded to the AIDS epidemic and social changes in their city, as well as to national and international developments. What began as part of our production’s dramaturgical research has now been brought to life in the Baltimore Theatre Project’s gallery through a partnership with the Rochester Institute of Technology. 37 photographers documented ordinary New Yorkers as they rallied, marched, and demonstrated. The exhibition was curated by Tamar W. Carroll, Meg Handler, Mike Kamber, and Josh Meltzer.

“Turn Anger, Fear, Grief into Action”: ACT UP New York

The early years of the HIV/AIDS epidemic were marked by uncertainty, false information, and fear about the cause and transmission of the disease. Though it is likely that IV drug users were dying of AIDS in New York City in the 1970s from what was then known as “junkie pneumonia, (Pneumocystis), AIDS came to medical attention in the United States in 1981 when otherwise healthy gay men in New York and San Francisco contracted Kaposi’s sarcoma, an unusual form of skin cancer that caused purple skin lesions. Although evidence showed that others exhibited the same symptoms as gay men, scientists termed the syndrome Gay-Related Immune Deficiency (GRID), leading to the linkage of the disease with homosexuality and dramatically increasing the stigma surrounding it.

Homophobia, along with rising economic inequality, shaped public responses to the unfolding epidemic. Frightened parents tried to keep kids with AIDS out of public schools, while city officials closed bathhouses and other meeting places for gay men. People with AIDS suffered from social isolation, including the loss of homes, jobs, and relationships with partners or family members. Despite having roughly half of the country’s reported cases, New York City did not mount a systematic response to the emerging epidemic. Patients experienced stigma and neglect in the city’s health care system. Some private hospitals, overwhelmed by the rapidly increasing numbers of patients, and sensitive to the general public’s fears of the spread of the disease, began refusing to admit AIDS patients; hospitals that did admit them, especially public institutions, had too few resources to care for them properly. AIDS activist Keith Cylar recalled, “New York City literally had hospital gridlock and that was when they were keeping people out on hospital gurneys in the hallways. That was when people were not being fed, bathed or touched. It was horrendous.” Volunteer groups such as the Gay Men’s Health Crisis (formed in 1982) took on caring for and housing AIDS patients.

The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), a direct-action group founded in 1987 after a fiery speech by playwright Larry Kramer, used stunning visual art, spectacular street theater, and civil disobedience to draw attention to government inaction and the need for effective treatment and prevention to end the AIDS epidemic. The organization targeted both medical and public health authorities, the pharmaceutical sector, and the financial industry, demanding faster drug development and testing, and more affordable drug pricing. ACT UP also targeted the media for their inaccurate portrayal of the epidemic and who was at risk, luxury real estate developers like Donald Trump for exacerbating homelessness, and city hall for its failed response to the epidemic.

ACT UP’s membership included artists and designers, some of whom had extensive experience in marketing, and they created iconographic images including the Silence = Death Project, which urged viewers to “turn anger, fear, grief into action” on AIDS. Other members were veterans of prior social movements including the civil rights and feminist peace movements, and orchestrated elaborate civil disobedience actions, such as disrupting trading on Wall Street and occupying the Food and Drug Administration headquarters. Photographer Thomas McGovern recalled covering ACT UP protests, and the ways in which they were strategically planned to ensure they would be documented and disseminated to a much broader audience via the media. Like ACT UP itself, McGovern hoped to change the public’s perception of people with AIDS through his portraiture, “showing the horrors of what people with AIDS suffered through politically and medically,” but also, “celebrating people’s strengths and the indomitable human spirit.”


ACT UP’s legacy includes many tangible policy accomplishments, including making experimental drugs more widely accessible at a time when no effective drug treatments for HIV/AIDS had been approved (and would not be until the mid-1990s). The group also brought together formerly isolated gay men and allies and provided life-affirming support at a critical time. Perhaps the group’s most consequential accomplishment of all, though, was indeed changing the public’s perception of HIV/AIDS. No longer sinners deserving of their fate, as some conservative religious leaders had suggested, the public came to see instead that “All People With AIDS Are Innocent.” Like McGovern’s photographs, Johathan Larson’s Rent shared in that worthy effort.

— Dr. Tamar Carroll, Ph.D.
Rochester Institute of Technology

This essay is adapted from Tamar W. Carroll, Mobilizing New York: AIDS, Antipoverty, and Feminist Activism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2015) and www.whosestreets.photo. See also https://actuporalhistory.org/.

Image: Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library. “Silence = Death [Poster]” The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1986. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e4-1035-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99