By Lynn Venhaus

One of the big-bang bursts in musical theater history, “Rent” is why transformative composer Jonathan Larson endures 30 years after his masterwork spoke to the dreamer in all of us.

Therefore, it’s disappointing when people entrusted to perform his deeply emotional and vocally demanding songs fall short because of repeated off-key issues.

After producing “Rent” in 2014, New Line Theatre has brought it back 11 years later as its 100th show, a milestone achievement in its 33 years. Artistic director Scott Miller, an early Rent-head, enthusiastically co-directed, with assistance from associate artistic director Chris Moore, who also amiably played good-natured anarchist Tom Collins.

Using Puccini’s opera “La Boheme” as his template, Larson set his Gen X characters in New York City’s East Village in the 1990s as they struggled with life, love and HIV/AIDS over the course of a year.

As a struggling artist for many years, Larson knew the world he wrote about, which was based on a concept by Billy Aronson. For making their doubts, anxiety and commitments relatable, emphasizing community and connection, Larson posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

He won three of the show’s four Tony Awards (Musical, Book, Score and Actor in a Featured Role – Wilson Jermaine Heredia as Angel Dumott Schunard) out of 10 nominations.

Tragically, Larson did not live to see the first Off-Broadway preview performance, because he died that day — Jan. 25, 1996, after suffering an aortic dissection. He was 35.

While intentions are noble, because this treasured show resonates with so many, the noticeable aural flaws marred this production’s overall effectiveness. The rock opera’s celebrated reputation, inevitable expectations and music challenges are hard to live up to if key performers can’t stay in tune.

These shortcomings made me wonder what rehearsals were like because the band is sensational, and some of the singers’ soar, but voices allowed to make repeated mistakes didn’t adjust or correct before opening. This performance was a week later.

As is customary, the New Line band was outstanding. Musicians John Gerdes on bass, Clancy Newell on drums, Adam Rugo and Zack Kempen on guitar, and music director Randon Lane and Jason Eschoflen on keyboards were a major asset. But they couldn’t be miracle workers rescuing in-trouble vocalists every time, no matter how often they tried.

Corrinna Redford and Nathan Mecey as Mimi and Roger, with Chris Moore as Tom Collins. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg.

“Rent” features various musical styles. The biggest hurdle were those singers who relied on belting to convey their emotions, but unable to stay on key, wound up screeching,

Corrinna Redford, who played exotic dancer-junkie Mimi Marquez, was erratic vocally and pushed out of her range in “Out Tonight” and “Goodbye Love.” They were messy, breathy and undisciplined, as was “Your Eyes.”

Shouting less, which resulted in a softer interpretation, helped in “Without You” and “I Should Tell You.” Portraying her love interest Roger, Nathan Mecey often went flat when they sang together, thus trying to achieve their spark was difficult.

As lovestruck Collins, Moore fared the best delivery-wise — a sweetly romantic “I’ll Cover You” shared with Angel (and later his heartbreaking reprise) and a hopeful, melodic “Sante Fe.”

With Aarin Kamphoefner as Angel, they displayed the most chemistry of the couple pairings. To their credit, starting with their introduction “You OK, Honey?,” then becoming the positive and compassionate pair did not seem like a stretch.

Chris Moore singing “I’ll Cover You” reprise, with Angel in background. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg.

Angel, a street musician and drag queen afflicted with AIDS, is the glue that holds all her friends together. She is such a vibrant life force that when Kamphoefner didn’t go full ebullient RuPaul, you wanted more oomph because she is the life of the party, especially in “Today 4 U” and “Happy New Year.” However, Kamphoefner gave the role its necessary warmth, and was achingly vulnerable in “Will I?”

A too-large circular centerpiece restricted movement, which didn’t help when it came time for the pivotal “Contact,” because Angel’s death was less impactful staged that way, pulling focus away.

In a different choice, he remained on stage afterwards, wearing a white-cream pants ensemble. Usually, Angel’s absence is a big hole that you feel, not see.

As roommates/best friends, aspiring documentary filmmaker Mark Cohen (J. David Brooks) and struggling musician and ex-junkie Roger Davis are tasked with delivering the show’s most dynamic numbers, including “Rent,” which started fine because of the cohesive band’s skills, but veered off-key.

As written, Mark is nerdy and quirky, and Brooks showed the brainy side, if not the skepticism. Roger is complicated because of recent traumas and initially more withdrawn. It’s a tough role to nail, and if there are vocal irregularities, that’s hard to overcome.

Jazmine Kendela Wade and J David Brooks as Joanne and Mark. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg.

The grand statement “What You Own” could be a vibrant exclamation —although an ongoing issue of their blocking behind the oversized table/platform hampered their delivery, for in that intimate confine, they seemed farther away, especially Roger

While bouncy Sarah Lueken, as self-centered Maureen Johnson, is appealing, capitalizing on being a flirt and using her sexuality, daring and sass, her big number “Over the Moon” could have been bolder and more defiant.  The cow print pants were inspired.

As Maureen’s Harvard-educated lawyer girlfriend Joanne Jefferson, Jazmine Kendela Wade was confident, but their song interpretations weren’t convincing.  

Because of Brooks’ foot injury, “Tango: Maureen” couldn’t be performed as expected, a playful dance, and “Take Me or Leave Me” lacked verve as well as pitch..

Aaron Tucker played an undistinguished Benjamin Coffin III, former friend turned foe who owns Mark and Roger’s building, married well, and had a fling with Mimi. It’s a stock villain character whose purpose is to advance several conflicts.

Brittany Kohl in ensemble.

Several fine singers played multiple roles  — as parents, marginalized citizens on the streets, AIDs patients, muggers, employers – and understood the complex demands of the music.

Both blending in and standing out were Rafael Da Costa, Lauren Gottreu, Chelsie Johnston, Brittany Kohl, Gabriel Scott Lawrence, Sofia McGrath, Tawaine Noah, and Rachel Parker. Lawrence and Noah were exceptional in “Will I?”

All performers projected earnestness and conviction, often giving off spirited summer camp energy in the ensemble numbers like “La Vie Boheme.”

But when it came time to express yearning, fear, and gut-wrenching sadness, it was not uniform in fervor, and supporting players brought more of the potency in those company numbers.

The signature piece “Seasons of Love” had some wobbly phrasing, but most soloists brought out its potency, especially daCosta and Noah. At first, it was hard to discern who was singing because of their placement.

The set, designed by Todd Schaefer, was a similar set-up that resident set designer Rob Lippert came up with when the first New Line “Rent” was staged at Washington University’s South Campus Theatre (the former CBC High School), which was effective. This tabletop swallowed up so much stage, it made transitions difficult.

Designers adding their personal touches to the overall effect included Zach Thompson, costumes; Ryan Day, sound; and Ryan Thorp, lighting.

The show is meant to be a celebration of life. In 2025 America, AIDS is no longer a death sentence, but because “Rent” captures a specific harrowing time and place, it can feel timeless and universal with its life-and-death themes.

Having seen Puccini’s opera twice, it was interesting to find out how the “Rent” characters closely resembled it – except in a different century and country, Paris in 1830.  

Sarah Lueken as Maureen. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg.

As a longtime fan who has seen “Rent” at least 12 times, starting with the first national tour in 1997, and experiencing chill-inducing Adam Pascal and Anthony Rapp reprise their roles in a 2009 national tour that remains one of the greatest highlights of my theater-going life, it is distressing to hear missteps.

New Line’s shaggy, raw, imperfect production still features moments so dear and emphasizes the evergreen message of “Measure your life in love.”

The cast believed in the dignity and acceptance aspect, that I’m certain of — if only they had devoted more effort to be in tune in service of that glorious score.

The rough spots hampered reaching the heights we expect with “Rent.” Had they all found their voices, this would have been a memorable show for all the right reasons.

New Line Theatre presents “Rent” May 30 – June 21, with Thursday through Saturday performances at 8 p.m. at the Marcelle Theatre, 3310 Samuel Shepard Drive. The musical contains adult content and language and deals with explicit sexual situations. For more information, visit www.newlinetheatre.org

Corrinna Redford and Nathan Mecey as Mimi and Roger. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg.

By Lynn Venhaus
At first glance, the daffy “Jesus & Johnny Appleweed’s Holy Rollin’ Family Christmas” takes us back to the fuddy duddy ‘50s, with the on-stage stylings of TV sitcom land when dads ruled the roost and moms vacuumed wearing pearls.

But it’s far more subversive than that, and with the book, music and lyrics crafted by New Line Theatre’s Artistic Director and provocateur Scott Miller, would you expect anything different in an original stoner musical comedy with that ripe-for-parody title?

For New Line fans, this is rooted in previous shows — the world premiere of “Johnny Appleweed” in 2006, so it is a 17-years-in-the-making sequel, and the regional premiere of “Reefer Madness the Musical” in 2004.

Only now cannabis is legal in Missouri, and there are dispensaries on many corners of our fair city. Yet, we can recall a time when it wasn’t mainstream – and Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong made a fortune. So, this show is more impish than shocking.

(Although we do live in Missouri, and ‘family values’ legislators have significant agendas, so that leads to a forever “Twilight Zone” feeling. But back to our jolly neighborhood cul-de-sac with shiny, happy people).

Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg

As a tongue-in-cheek response to the War on Drugs and the Culture Wars, Miller uses clever cultural references to make it clear how the bygone era, complete with hearty laugh-track type guffaws, was a white-bread wonderland where a middle-class suburban family has blinders on regarding diversity, inclusion, and sexual orientation.

For laughs, he’s mashed together the 1936 film “Reefer Madness” that was intended to scare straight those who may be tempted by the evil weed, Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” and 1950s musical comedies (with intentional references).

This flip side of “The Donna Reed Show,” “Father Knows Best” and “Leave It to Beaver” has a cardigan-wearing curmudgeon of a dad named Harry Goodson whose family secrets revealed on Christmas Eve 1959 will rock his world – and he’ll be visited by ghosts overnight in the second act.

The family establishes how “Heteronormative” they are in their opening number, setting up the spoof of what passed for a normal, average family 60 years ago.

Terrell Thompson plays Harry as a cross between Archie Bunker, George Jefferson, and Ebeneezer Scrooge. He finds fault with everything, and his dialogue is a series of rants. It’s a hefty, albeit one-note, role for Thompson, a veteran of local musical theater. Musically, he is well-suited for ensemble work, but as the anchor, line delivery wasn’t as polished on opening night. (However, after more performances, I am hoping the cast is just zipping along by now).

Presumably, the brazen material demands an improv troupe feel to the ensemble, with nimble performers who have an affinity for Kids in the Hall and Second City-type sketches necessary to puncture holiday traditions and ramp up the laughs. Daughter Tammy discloses she is pregnant by her black boyfriend Miles, son Chip’s secret is that he’s gay and has a boyfriend named Dick, and brother, Uncle Hugh, is a cross-dresser with an infinity for a blow-up doll.

Kay Love. Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg

Whew! A National Enquirer panoply of scandalous behavior that could be a laugh riot if everyone’s all-in on an over-the-top satire — but not as effective if the tone is lopsided depending on performer’s slickness. Because the lyrics and lines have enough zingers to elicit plenty of snickers.

It could be that the actor who played Chip was replaced on opening night by Tony L. Marr Jr., the assistant director and choreographer. Marr assumed the role with noteworthy aplomb.

Because this resembles the audacious dark comedy material that John Waters and Charles Busch specialize in, it should not be startling that longtime theatrical sweetheart Kay Love plays typical housewife Bess Goodson as more naughty than nice. She’s infused the Christmas cookies with pot, and lets loose in a defiant, liberating solo.

You know you’re in a bizarro world when you hear Love sing “Hoo-Hoo of Steel” without flinching or blushing. She can shimmy better than your aunt’s Jell-O salad slipping out of a decorative mold.

Love’s poise and classically trained voice, and vivacious Marlee Wenski’s silky, sultry vocals stand out in their numbers. Wenski doubles as teen movie icon Sandra Dee (the original “Gidget”), having a bawdy time in the number “Don’t Look at Me, I’m Sandra Dee,” and parodies a rebellious version of a good saddle-shoe-wearing daughter in “Miles and Miles.”

An unfazed Tawaine Noah leans in as Uncle Hugh, who leads a not-so-secret life, singing “Mary Jane and Mary Jane,” and as unborn twin Jerry, who returns as a ghost.

Can they live in comfort and joy or will their variations from the norm tear apart the family? I was reminded of the classic 1990 “Saturday Night Live” sketch called “Dysfunctional Family Christmas” about a compilation album of songs mocking less than ideal family gatherings.

Cheeky song titles include “Love Doesn’t Suck with My D**k,” “Daddy’s Talking S**t,” and “That Stick Up Your Ass.”

Here, dear old dad might need a comeuppance – his deceased twin brother, Jesus Christ, Sandra Dee and explorer and pot enthusiast Johnny Appleweed are the ghosts who visit. They force him to come to terms with recreational drug use: “Have Another Toke and Have a Merry Christmas.”

The family drama is offset by a quartet of cheery carolers who deliver “The Elves Get Stoned,” “Better Living Through Chemistry” and “Man in the Gray Flannel Life.” Stephanie Merritt, Robert Doyle, Matt Hill, and Lauren Tenenbaum merrily roll along with setting the mid-century tableau.

Mallory Golden’s music direction is breezy, with a fine-tuned machine of John Gerdes on bass, Joseph Hendricks and Alex Macke on reeds, Brad Martin on percussion, and Adam Rugo on guitar (and she’s on keyboard).

Lauren Smith Beardon has outfitted the carolers in festive attire, and the Goodsons in typical suburban family looks, complete with housewife aprons for Love. Lighting designer (and technical director) Matt Stuckel has fun inserting cannabis plant imagery in shadows – I haven’t revisited “Reefer Madness” since my college days, but I believe there was a lot of shadows to signify danger – so touché.

Photo by Jill Ritter Lindberg

As is customary, Rob Lippert’s scenic design is appropriate to the Mid-Century Modern décor of the period – and the height of sophistication with a retro artificial aluminum silver Christmas tree and the reflective color wheel, so tres chic back in the day. He has captured the tone and tenor of the show.

The vintage vibe is one of the most attractive qualities of the production. Miller has managed to include an impressive litany of every pop culture reference significant to the era – and even obscure little nuggets to prod recognition. Commendable wordplay, indeed.

Since founding New Line Theatre in 1991, he has written 11 musicals and two plays, including a rollicking “The Zombies of Penzance” in 2018. His penchant for irreverent theater and socially relevant material has served him well.

This show is basically a fun romp with some jabs on social mores, featuring stand-out performances by several spirited women. In days of yore, when Ladies’ Home Journal arrived in the mail, “The Ed Sullivan Show” was tuned in to every Sunday, and you might have had to make do with a TV dinner if mom was hosting her Bridge Club, everyone would have made a fuss over the “sassy lassies.”

A few nips and tucks, and more collaborative run-throughs, and “Jesus and Johnny Appleweed’s Holy Rollin’ Family Christmas” may be just the antidote to Hallmark movie marathons and wholesome holiday setlists on repeat. With Bess’s special-recipe brownies, it could be one of the hap-hap-happiest Christmas’ since Bing Crosby tap-danced with Danny Kaye.

New Line Theatre presents the world premiere musical “Jesus and Johnny Appleweed’s Holy Rollin’ Family Christmas” from Dec. 1 to Dec. 16, with performances Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8 p.m. at The Grandel Theatre, 3610 Grandel Square. For other information, visit New Line Theatre’s full-service website at www.newlinetheatre.com.

Tickets are $35 for adults and $30 for students/seniors/To charge tickets by phone, call MetroTix at 314-534-1111 or visit the Fox Theatre box office or the MetroTix website.

Discounts are available. Any high school student with a valid school ID can get a $10 ticket for any performance, with the code word, posted only on New Line’s Facebook page.

Ten free seats for every performance, open to any college student with a valid student ID.

New Line offers all currently employed educators half-price tickets on any Thursday night, with work ID or other proof of employment.

New Line offers all active-duty military personnel half-price tickets on any Thursday night, with ID or other proof of active-duty status.

All offers not valid in connection with other discounts or offers, available only at the door, and subject to availability.