Holy Musical B@man!
Holy Musical B@man! | |
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Holy Musical B@man! soundtrack art | |
Music |
Nick Gage Scott Lamps |
Lyrics | Nick Gage |
Book |
Matt Lang Nick Lang |
Productions | 2012 Chicago |
Holy Musical B@man! is a musical with music and lyrics by Nick Gage and Scott Lamps, and a book by Matt Lang and Nick Lang.[1][2][3]
Holy Musical B@man! is a parody musical based upon DC Universe's Batman. The name "Holy Musical B@man!" is a reference to the 1960s television series, Batman with Adam West and Burt Ward. Robin (Burt Ward) would often make a pun related to the related conflict by saying "Holy ____!" which gave inspiration to the play's name. After the brutal murder of his parents, Bruce Wayne commits his life to waging a one-man war on crime. But when he realizes that life isn't fun when you're alone, he sets out to find a super friend.
The musical was performed March 22–25, 2012, at the Hoover-Leppen Theatre in Chicago, Illinois. It was produced by StarKid Productions and directed by Matt Lang. The musical stars an ensemble cast featuring Joe Walker as the Batman, and Nick Lang as his sidekick Robin. The group put the entire musical up on YouTube on April 13, 2012.
Synopsis
Act 1
The show opens with young billionaire Bruce Wayne witnessing his parents get mugged and shot by a nameless villain. As he grows up, Bruce vows to seek out and destroy evil so that what happened to him will never happen again, deciding to dress up as a giant bat and fight crime as the masked vigilante "Batman" ("Holy Musical B@man!"). Batman is universally loved by the citizens of Gotham City for being a dark and angsty anti-hero. This is despite the fact that Batman irrationally hates them all, holding the people of Gotham responsible for letting his parents die and considering them all (potential) criminals. After a final battle with his arch-nemesis, The Joker, in which the villain falls to his death, Batman partakes in a ceremony to receive the Key To The City from Commissioner Gordon, but clashes with Superman, a smug and all-powerful superhero from Metropolis who constantly upstages Batman (but is secretly jealous of his popularity). After leaving the ceremony in a huff and arriving home, Batman comes to the realization that he doesn't have any real friends, and fires his loyal butler Alfred after he discovers that he was pretending to be Lucius Fox. Alfred immediately returns disguised as "O'Malley, the Irish butler" and both he and Batman lament ("Dark, Sad, Lonely, Knight"). Superman, also feeling lonely due to his lack of popularity, calls Batman and leaves an apologetic voicemail, inviting him to an upcoming battle with Solomon Grundy that he's trying to organize with other heroes.
The Council of Rogues, a group of Gotham's most famous super-villains - The Penguin, Catwoman, Poison Ivy, Scarecrow, Mr. Freeze and the Riddler - meet to discuss how Batman is foiling all of their crimes ("Rogues Are We"). After a brief interruption from Two-Face, who is promptly refused membership on the council by the other annoyed villains, Sweet Tooth, the newest villain in town, arrives and swiftly seizes control of the Rogues. He then hatches a plan to rouse every villain in Gotham, no matter how lame or derivative, and kill Batman by overwhelming him with sheer numbers ("Rogues Are We (Reprise)"). Batman is crying in his room when Alfred introduces him to a visitor: the orphaned acrobat Dick Grayson. Batman and Dick realize they have a lot in common and quickly strike up a friendship. Bruce reveals his secret identity as Batman, to which Dick reveals that he wishes to become his sidekick, Robin. Together they set out and take on the hordes of lame new villains plaguing Gotham, both happier than they have ever been. ("Dynamic Duet").
Act 2
The citizens of Gotham react badly to Robin, feeling that his wisecracking and light-hearted antics detract from Batman's image as a lone, dark anti-hero ("Robin Sucks"). Meanwhile, Superman grows even more jealous of Batman and his new friendship after no-one showed up to his Solomon Grundy battle. "O'Malley" tells Batman he agrees with Gotham's opinion on Robin and Batman fires him; he returns yet again as "Quon Li, the Chinese butler". While rescuing Rachel Dawes, Robin is captured by Sweet Tooth and his new accomplice and lover, Candy, who also take three thousand people hostage in Gotham Square. Sweet Tooth then sets up a Facebook poll, letting the people of Gotham decide whether he kills Robin or poisons the water supply with a lethally-sour Warhead. Seeing Batman torn between saving Gotham or Robin, Alfred "returns" and comforts him. Batman, believing that Gotham will choose to sacrifice Robin to save themselves, decides to rescue Robin and let Gotham City suffer the consequences. In response to this, President Barack Obama enlists Superman to defeat Batman before he can rescue Robin and doom the citizens of Gotham ("The American Way").
Batman breaks through Sweet Tooth's barricade around Gotham Square and confronts the supervillain, who flees with Robin. Batman's pursuit is interrupted by Superman, and the two heroes fight each other ("To Be A Man"). Superman dominates the fight until Batman brings out a chunk of Kryptonite, weakening Superman and leaving him lying powerless in the street. Batman corners Sweet Tooth, but the villain attempts to throw Robin into a vat of boiling hot chocolate. Batman saves Robin and lets Sweet Tooth fall into the vat instead, but not before Sweet Tooth activates the Warhead launch and successfully poisons the water supply. Robin is appalled that Batman would leave Gotham City to die, and after checking the Facebook poll, it is revealed that the people of Gotham chose to sacrifice themselves instead of killing Robin.
Realizing that he can believe in the people of Gotham City after all, Batman puts aside his pride and calls on Superman to save the day, mending the rift between them. Superman travels back in time by flying around the world until he reverses the rotation of the Earth, which allows him to intercept the Warhead before it can be deployed and throw it into the Sun. With their new friendship established, Superman and Batman form the Super Friends with various other superheroes ("Super Friends"), including Spider-Man (who is really Alfred in another disguise).
Cast and characters
Actor/Actress | Character |
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Nico Ager | Sluggers Sherlock Holmes Citizen Mercury Plastic Man |
Julia Albain | Vicki Vale Evil Mother Goose Martha Wayne Zatanna |
Chris Allen | Alfred Pennyworth/Lucius Fox/O'Malley/Qwang Li/Spider-Man Two-Face |
Jaime Lyn Beatty | Candy Poison Ivy The Sun The Flash |
Jeff Blim | Sweet Tooth Aquaman Joe Chill |
Denise Donovan | Catwoman Pizza Girl Venus Black Canary |
Brian Holden | Superman/Clark Kent Evil Huckleberry Finn |
Nick Lang | Robin Barack Obama Mobster |
Lauren Lopez | Commissioner Gordon Calendar Man Evil King Arthur Green Arrow |
Jim Povolo | Matches Malone Mr. Freeze Hawkman Photoshop Downloader Joe |
Dylan Saunders | Scarecrow Green Lantern Narrator Mobster Construction Worker Egghead Gob |
Meredith Stepien | Riddler TGI Fridays Worker Chase Meridian Geek Rachel Dawes Hostage Earth Wonder Woman |
Nicholas Joseph Strauss-Matathia | Penguin Police Chief O'Hara Hoodie Teen Thomas Wayne Mr. Mxyzptlk Captain Marvel |
Joe Walker | Batman Chilly Willy |
All actors performed minor ensemble roles.
This is the first StarKid-related Production since 2007's Little White Lie in which Chris Allen has performed a major role (he had a cameo role in Starship).
This is the second StarKid production (the first being Little White Lie) in which Joey Richter is not involved (he was filming for Disney Channel's Jessie).
This is also the first StarKid production in which Darren Criss is not involved in any way, neither acting nor songwriting (due to his involvement with FOX's Glee).
Musical numbers
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Productions
The musical was performed March 22–25, 2012, at the Hoover-Leppen Theatre in Chicago, Illinois. The group put the entire musical up on YouTube on April 13, 2012.
Recording
A cast recording of the production was released on two separate albums on April 13, 2012, alongside the YouTube premiere of the musical, through Bandcamp. That's What I Call StarKid! contained seven of the nine musical numbers, as well as instrumentals for all nine numbers, and four demo versions performed by Nick Gage. The Holy Musical B@man! soundtrack contained the other two numbers.
See also
References
- ↑ "‘Holy Musical B@man!’ Is a Catchy Tribute to a Surprisingly Bitter and Murderous Dark Knight" Chris Sims, Comics Alliance, April 20, 2012 3:00 PM
- ↑ "Holy Musical Batman! The Caped Crusader Gets A Song And Dance Spectacular" Cinema Blend
- ↑ "Team StarKid Will Debut New Superhero Show Holy Musical B@man! in Chicago" Broadway.com, February 23, 2012
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Holy Musical B@man! |
- StarKid Productions Official website