Jukebox musical premiered in 2004
Jersey Boys
is a
jukebox musical
with a book by
Marshall Brickman
and
Rick Elice
. It is presented in a
documentary
-style format that dramatizes the formation, success and breakup of the 1960s
rock 'n' roll
group
The Four Seasons
. The musical is structured as four "seasons", each narrated by a different member of the band who gives his own perspective on its history and music. Songs include "
Big Girls Don't Cry
", "
Sherry
", "
December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)
", "
My Eyes Adored You
", "
Stay
", "
Can't Take My Eyes Off You
", "
Walk Like A Man
", "
Who Loves You
", "
Working My Way Back to You
" and "
Rag Doll
".
The musical premiered at the
La Jolla Playhouse
in 2004 and ran on
Broadway
from 2005 to 2017. Since its debut it has been on two North American national tours and two national tours of the UK and Ireland. The show has been produced in London's
West End
, Las Vegas, Chicago, Toronto, Melbourne and other Australian cities, Singapore, South Africa, the Netherlands, Japan, Dubai, and China.
Jersey Boys
won four 2006
Tony Awards
, including Best Musical, and the 2009
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical
.
Development
[
edit
]
In the early 2000s,
Bob Gaudio
, an original
Four Seasons
member, sought to make a musical from the band's discography; he noted in a 2008 interview that he was inspired by the success of
Smokey Joe's Cafe
and
Mamma Mia!
into believing that a rock-and-roll musical with existing songs could work.
[1]
He hired book writers
Rick Elice
and
Marshall Brickman
, who had difficulty finding a willing director until
Michael David
of Dodger Theatricals recommended them to
Des McAnuff
. Brickman suggested creating a show about the band's history, instead of repurposing their songs for an independent story the way
ABBA
did with
Mamma Mia!
;
[2]
Gaudio liked the idea, noting that although
biopics
were a common format in film, such a story format was still relatively rare on stage and that, to his knowledge, none had been tried at the time.
[1]
Brickman was drawn to the project because "it's a classic American story. It's rags to riches, and back to rags."
[3]
McAnuff was initially lukewarm to the project and did not like the idea of naming the project after a Four Seasons song, fearing it would look like a
cash grab
instead of a legitimate artistic work; Gaudio came up with the title on a plane ride, reasoning that the band members were all just a bunch of Jersey boys, and the name stuck.
[1]
Little was known to the public about the Four Seasons' history before the musical, because magazines of the era did not write much about them.
[3]
[4]
In their research, Brickman and Elice were surprised to find that the members had prison records, which might have prevented their music from being played if it had been publicized when they were active.
[2]
[4]
According to Gaudio, "Back then, things were a little clean-cut, don't forget, so the idea of our story getting out was horrifying to us."
[5]
Other bands of the time projected street-tough images, but The Four Seasons cleaned themselves up to be palatable to mainstream listeners.
[3]
Brickman and Elice also used material from interviews with surviving Four Seasons members Gaudio,
Frankie Valli
and
Tommy DeVito
.
Nick Massi
was aware of Gaudio's plans to make a musical in the last months of his life and enthusiastically approved of the project, but died in December 2000 before he could contribute any interviews.
[6]
While the Four Seasons as a group made headlines, as individuals they did not receive much press, as groups like
the Beatles
dominated the media.
[7]
Brickman noted that each member had his own perspective on what happened during their tenure as a group. Of the three surviving members, they approached DeVito last, who told them: "Don't listen to those guys. I'll tell you what really happened." Elice said that getting DeVito's version was a "eureka moment" and the contradiction in their stories was incorporated in the musical for a
Rashomon effect
.
[2]
[8]
Family members of the late
mob boss
Gyp DeCarlo
also contacted the writers to ensure that he would be portrayed respectfully.
[5]
[9]
[10]
Gaudio was part of the initial development team, but was not involved in the creative process during tryouts, and met the cast only after the show had premiered.
[11]
He, Valli, and DeVito decided to step back from the show's creative process because they lacked objectivity, leaving it to Brickman, Elice, and McAnuff to take the story to the stage.
[4]
But Gaudio and Valli still had the right to end the show if they did not like it; they ultimately recommended some minor changes (mainly to respect the
personality rights
of still-living people who were portrayed).
[8]
Productions
[
edit
]
Jersey Boys
premiered at the
La Jolla Playhouse
at
University of California, San Diego
, in an out-of-town tryout on October 5, 2004, and ran through January 16, 2005.
[12]
Christian Hoff
,
David Norona
, Daniel Reichard and
J. Robert Spencer
played The Four Seasons.
[13]
At the end of the tryout, Norona, who originated the role of Frankie Valli, was replaced by
John Lloyd Young
, who originally had auditioned for the role of Tommy DeVito.
[14]
Broadway
[
edit
]
The musical began previews on
Broadway
on October 4, 2005, and officially opened on November 6, 2005, at the
August Wilson Theatre
. The cast starred Young as Valli, Hoff as DeVito, Reichard as Gaudio, and Spencer as Massi. The musical was directed by
Des McAnuff
, at the time the artistic director at La Jolla Playhouse, with choreography by
Sergio Trujillo
. The Broadway production had 38 previews.
[15]
It reached its 4093rd performance on September 22, 2015, making it the 12th-longest-running show on Broadway.
[16]
Notable cast replacements include
Andy Karl
and
Richard H. Blake
as DeVito;
Sebastian Arcelus
and
Drew Gehling
as Gaudio; and Micheal Longoria, who originated the role of Joe Pesci, and
Ryan Molloy
, who originated the role in the West End production, both as Valli. The Broadway production closed on January 15, 2017, after 4,642 performances, with
Mark Ballas
as the final Valli.
[17]
[18]
Off-Broadway
[
edit
]
Only months after closing on Broadway, it was announced that the musical would reopen
off-Broadway
, following the example of shows such as
Avenue Q
. It opened November 22, 2017, at
New World Stages
.
[19]
[20]
The production featured the same script and score as the Broadway production, but four fewer cast members, a smaller theater, and lower ticket prices. Dodger Theatricals produced the off-Broadway
Jersey Boys
, and handled the show's Broadway and touring productions.
[21]
On March 12, 2020, production was suspended due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
; it remained suspended until November 2021. The musical reopened on November 15, 2021, and announced on April 22 that it would close on May 22, 2022.
[22]
[23]
U.S. tour
[
edit
]
The musical's first U.S. tour began on December 10, 2006, at the
Curran Theatre
in
San Francisco
, and went to 38 cities. The cast starred Christopher Kale Jones as Valli, Deven May as DeVito,
Erich Bergen
as Gaudio, and Micheal Ingersoll as Massi.
Jersey Boys
played at the
Forrest Theatre
in
Philadelphia
, where it broke the box office record eight times before moving on to a return engagement in Boston.
[24]
In May 2007, while the first national tour continued (with Steve Gouveia from the original Broadway cast as Massi), a second company debuted at the Curran and ended as an open-ended run at
Chicago
's
Bank of America Theatre
, beginning on October 5, 2007.
[25]
The Chicago cast appeared on stage in the
2007 Emmy Awards
in a tribute to HBO's
The Sopranos
.
[26]
A special holiday return engagement played at the Curran Theatre from November 20 to December 30, 2007, starring Rick Faugno as Valli, Andrew Rannells as Gaudio, Bryan McElroy as DeVito, and Jeff Leibow as Massi. Most of this cast became the original cast in the Las Vegas production, which debuted at
The Palazzo
Hotel on May 3, 2008,
[27]
in the newly built Jersey Boys Theatre. The show temporarily closed on January 1, 2012, and reopened on March 6, 2012, at
Paris Las Vegas
.
[28]
[29]
On June 7, 2016, it was announced that the Las Vegas production would end on September 18, 2016.
[30]
In late 2014, a touring production performed in several U.S. cities, including Denver in December.
[10]
Another production toured 19 U.S. cities from March 2016 to March 2017.
[31]
West End
[
edit
]
The musical made its
West End
debut at London's
Prince Edward Theatre
in February 2008. The creative team were the same as for the Broadway production. Principal cast were
Ryan Molloy
as Frankie Valli,
Stephen Ashfield
as Bob Gaudio,
Glenn Carter
as Tommy DeVito,
Philip Bulcock
as Nick Massi,
Stuart Milligan
as DeCarlo and
Tom Lorcan
as Donnie/Knuckles.
[32]
The production won the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical
.
[33]
Molloy performed the lead role for six years, making him the "longest-running star in a West End musical" and "longest-serving Frankie Valli".
[34]
[35]
The production moved to the
Piccadilly Theatre
on March 15, 2014, the same day that
John Lloyd Young
assumed the role of Frankie Valli.
[36]
[37]
The production closed after nine years on March 26, 2017.
[38]
In October 2020, it was announced that
Jersey Boys
would return to the
West End
at the
Trafalgar Theatre
in April 2021.
[39]
Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom
the production was postponed, with previews finally beginning 28 July and opening night set for 10 August 2021.
[40]
A new cast was also announced.
[41]
The musical lasted until January 4, 2024.
[42]
UK Tour
[
edit
]
A national UK tour was launched in autumn 2014, opening at
Palace Theatre, Manchester
, where it ran from September 4 to October 4. This production has the same creative team as the Broadway and West End productions.
[43]
The cast includes
Tim Driesen
reprising his role from the Dutch production as Frankie Valli, with Stephen Webb as Tommy DeVito, Sam Ferriday as Bob Gaudio and Lewis Griffiths as Nick Massi.
[44]
A second national tour began in December 2017 at the
New Alexandra Theatre Birmingham
until May 2019.
[38]
A third UK and Ireland tour will begin at the
New Wimbledon Theatre
from November 2021 with dates until November 2022.
Australia and New Zealand
[
edit
]
The Australian production opened at the
Princess Theatre
in
Melbourne
on July 4, 2009. Principal cast members were
Bobby Fox
as Frankie Valli,
Stephen Mahy
as Bob Gaudio,
Scott Johnson
as Tommy DeVito and Glaston Toft as Nick Massi.
[45]
The Melbourne production closed on July 25, 2010 and the Sydney production opened in September 2010.
[46]
The Sydney production closed on December 18, 2011.
Jersey Boys
then opened in
Auckland
in April 2012 with the new touring cast.
Jeff Madden
from Canada starred as Frankie Valli, with Declan Egan as Bob, Ant Harkin as Tommy, and Glaston Toft continuing on as Nick. The Jersey girls were: Francine and others played by
Kat Hoyos
, Lorraine and others played by Michelle Smitheram and Mary Delgado and others played by Lisa Adam. running through June 17, 2012. Following from New Zealand, the same cast then returned to Australia starting a national tour - Brisbane, return season of Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth. The show ran until June 30, 2013.
[47]
An Australian tour played in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane between 2018 and 2019. The initial cast announcement had Bernard Angel as Frankie Valli, Cameron MacDonald as Tommy DeVito, Thomas McGuane as Bob Gaudio and Glaston Toft as Nick Massi.
[48]
However, due to unforeseen personal circumstances, Angel pulled out of the show and was replaced with the Frankie alternate, Ryan Gonzalez, with Daniel Raso as the new Frankie alternate.
[49]
A "re-imagined, semi-staged concert production" of the show ran 8-11 February 2024 in Brisbane in the QPAC Concert Hall, again directed by Martin Croft, and with Glaston Toft again playing Nick (the only professional to have played the role in Australia, according to the program). In place of scenery, 10 large vertical LED screens behind the stage showed designs or impressionistic settings.
[50]
Canada
[
edit
]
Due to the success of the national tour's long stop at
Toronto Centre for the Arts
in Toronto, Ontario, in autumn 2008, a Toronto production opened on December 12, 2008 with a new, mostly Canadian cast that included
Jeremy Kushnier
and Jenny Lee Stern from the first national tour.
[51]
This production closed on August 22, 2010, on the show's second anniversary.
[52]
The Netherlands
[
edit
]
A Dutch production, produced by
Stage Entertainment
, opened at the Beatrix Theatre in
Utrecht
on September 22, 2013. This production features the songs performed in English and the dialogue performed in Dutch, making it the first time the show has been performed in a language other than English. The cast includes
Tim Driesen
as Frankie Valli, Rene van Kooten as Tommy DeVito, Dieter Spileers as Bob Gaudio and Robbert van den Bergh as Nick Massi.
Japan
[
edit
]
A Japanese production, directed by Shuntaro Fujita, opened at the Theatre Crea in
Tokyo
on July 1, 2016.
[53]
The cast includes
Akinori Nakagawa
as Frankie Valli.
[54]
International tours
[
edit
]
An international tour with an all-South African cast ran in
Singapore
at the
Marina Bay Sands
resort from November 23, 2012, to January 27, 2013.
[55]
The production then performed in Johannesburg, South Africa, at the Teatro at Montecasino on April 3, 2013, and at Artscape
Cape Town
on June 19, 2013.
[56]
This company also performed at the
Zorlu Center PSM
, the Performing Arts Center in
Istanbul
,
Turkey
from November 13?24, 2013
[57]
and in South Korea from January 17 to March 23, 2014.
[58]
The same production performed an edited family-friendly version without profanity at
Istana Budaya
,
Malaysia
from April 15 to 27, 2014.
[59]
This cast includes Grant Almiral as Frankie Valli, Daniel Buys as Tommy DeVito, Kenneth Meyer as Bob Gaudio and
Emmanuel Castis
as Nick Massi.
An international tour of
Jersey Boys
opened at the
Dubai Opera
in October 2017.
[60]
This production then embarked on a tour of China from November 2017 - January 2018.
[60]
For both legs of this tour, The Four Seasons were played by Luke Street/Jonathan Vickers (alternating the role of Frankie Valli), Andrew Bryant (Tommy Devito), Matt Blaker (Bob Gaudio), and Nick Martland (Nick Massi).
[61]
Jersey Boys
is currently playing on Norwegian Cruise Liner, Norwegian Bliss. The show premiered on the new ship in 2018.
Synopsis
[
edit
]
Act I
[
edit
]
- Spring
"
Ces soirees-la
" is performed. Tommy DeVito introduces himself and explains that the song, a number-one hit in France in 2000, is an adaptation of "
December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)
", a song his group, The Four Seasons, originated. He begins to tell the band's story, explaining that each of the four members has his own version, but that they all begin in
Belleville, New Jersey
, in the early 1950s ("
Silhouettes
").
Tommy is a member of the
cover group
"
The Variety Trio
" with his brother Nick DeVito and friend Nick Massi ("You're the Apple of My Eye"). They bring on Frankie Castelluccio ("I Can't Give You Anything but Love"), whom Tommy takes under his wing. The DeVito brothers are sent to
Rahway Prison
for a robbery ("
Earth Angel
"), leaving Frankie in the care of Massi, who works with him on vocal technique ("
A Sunday Kind of Love
") until Massi is himself taken to Rahway for a parole violation. Once Tommy is released, he rejoins Frankie, reluctantly setting Frankie up with Mary Delgado, who convinces Frankie to change his last name (which he had intended to change to "Valley") to the more Italian "Valli;" Mary and Frankie soon marry. A year later, Frankie falls prey to a fake murder scam, which Tommy defuses by calling his boss, mobster Gyp DeCarlo; Frankie is pressured into singing a song he had not done since age 15 ("My Mother's Eyes") and pleases DeCarlo, who offers a "claim check" for any future favor. Tommy constantly changes the group's name, lineup and style in an effort to keep up with fads, playing in small clubs to almost no success; one particular incident has the trio adding comedian Hank Majewski, whose monkey act ("I Go Ape") ends in disaster. One day, while running a pin-setting scam at a bowling alley, Tommy's co-conspirator
Joe Pesci
introduces the group to a singer-songwriter from
Bergenfield
who he thinks will be a great fit: Bob Gaudio.
- Summer
Bob takes over the narration, telling the audience that no matter what Tommy says, he was not plucked from obscurity by him, since he already had a hit single with "
Short Shorts
". Bob goes with Joe to see the band perform, and is immediately impressed by Frankie's voice on "
Moody's Mood for Love
". In an on-the-spot audition, Bob plays his song "Cry for Me" with the band and agrees to join if he is granted equal partnership and gets to keep his songwriting rights, to which Tommy (at Frankie and Nick's prodding) grudgingly agrees. Frankie and Bob go to the
Brill Building
and, after some rejections, meet Frankie's friend
Bob Crewe
, who signs them to a contract as a studio backing group ("Backup Sessions"). Crewe insists that the band, upset at the poor pay and not being able to record their own material, has an "identity crisis" and needs to make a firm decision on a name and a sound. The band names itself after The Four Seasons bowling alley, and Bob writes three songs that finally propel them to stardom: "
Sherry
", "
Big Girls Don't Cry
", and "
Walk Like a Man
". With the band's newfound success, Bob cuts Frankie in on his songwriting royalties, while Nick takes Bob under his wing, helping him buy a new Cadillac and setting him up with a woman at a Christmas party, to whom Bob loses his virginity ("
December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)
"). The band takes on a new opening act, the New Jersey girl group
The Angels
("
My Boyfriend's Back
"), who become the band's paramours; by this point, Tommy's debts have escalated into the tens of thousands. Frankie's constant touring and his wife Mary's alcoholism eventually lead them to divorce ("
My Eyes Adored You
"). The band survives the
British Invasion
("
Dawn (Go Away)
"), and Bob begins looking toward the future when loan shark Norm Waxman confronts Tommy and the band after a concert to collect Tommy's unpaid debt ("Walk Like a Man (reprise)").
Act II
[
edit
]
- Fall
Nick, taking over as narrator, backtracks the story to cover some incidents Bob had overlooked that led to the group's breakup. In Ohio, the quartet is thrown in jail after a concert because Tommy neglected to pay a hotel bill, infuriating Bob ("
Big Man in Town
"). Nick is then seen inspecting the band's accounting records and discovers Frankie's and Bob's side partnership. He feels betrayed but reluctantly lets it slide for the sake of the band. Frankie begins dating Lorraine, a newspaper reporter, and when Tommy makes a pass at her, Frankie loses what little remaining respect he has for Tommy, who in revenge escalates his gambling even further. Returning to DeCarlo, Frankie redeems his claim check and calls a meeting with Waxman and DeCarlo ("
Beggin'
") to resolve Tommy's situation. After the other three confront Tommy, they decide that Tommy will move to Las Vegas under the mob's watch, and the remainder of the band will assume Tommy's $162,000 debt and the roughly $500,000 tax bill Tommy never paid. Increasingly homesick and upset about being excluded from group decisions, Nick abruptly quits ("
Stay
").
- Winter
Frankie takes over narration ("
Let's Hang On!
"), admitting he had tolerated Tommy's embezzling out of loyalty, but that he was hurt and baffled by Nick's departure ("
Opus 17 (Don't You Worry 'Bout Me)
"). Frankie and Bob find replacements to keep the band a quartet, fellow New Jersey natives
Charlie Calello
and
Joe Long
, but Frankie balks when Bob wants to hire
a replacement for himself
and
a new drummer
so he can move into a background role; they compromise, as Bob agrees to stay and Frankie takes on a solo
side project
to make more money. Back in New Jersey, Frankie's daughter Francine has run away to the city, prompting renewed fighting between Frankie, Mary and Francine; when Frankie asks Lorraine to take Francine in, she refuses and breaks up with him ("
Bye, Bye, Baby (Baby, Goodbye)
"). The group hits the jackpot with "
C'mon Marianne
," which Bob and Crewe leverage to launch Frankie's solo career with "
Can't Take My Eyes Off You
", a song the industry is initially reluctant to release. Along with the success of "
Working My Way Back to You
", Frankie and Bobby finally pay off Tommy's debts, and Frankie's life is good until his daughter Francine dies from a drug overdose ("
Fallen Angel
").
- Finale
Crewe reunites the original quartet to be inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
in 1990 ("
Rag Doll
"); at the reunion, Tommy mentions his new life after settling in Las Vegas and invites Frankie, who looks forward to a second chance at fatherhood with three young sons, to a party in Nick's suite, which Frankie ultimately cannot bring himself to join. Each band member closes with a monologue explaining their lives at the time
Jersey Boys
was written: Tommy works for Joe Pesci; Bob has retired to
Nashville, Tennessee
; Nick stayed in New Jersey with his children until he died on Christmas Eve in 2000; and Frankie continues to tour, reflecting that the band's early days were his favorite and that he continues "chasing the music, trying to get home" ("
Who Loves You
").
Principal roles and casts
[
edit
]
Original casts
[
edit
]
Character
|
Description
|
Broadway
|
First U.S. National Tour
|
West End
|
International Tour
|
West End Revival
|
UK Tour
|
2005
|
2006
|
2008
|
2017
|
2021
|
Frankie Valli
|
Lead vocalist of the Four Seasons, noted for his short stature and powerful upper range.
|
John Lloyd Young
|
Christopher Kale Jones
|
Ryan Molloy
|
Luke Street / Jonathan Vickers
|
Ben Joyce
|
Michael Pickering / Luke Suri
|
Bob Gaudio
|
Songwriter and keyboardist of The Four Seasons. The youngest and last member to join the group, more intellectual and middle-class than the other three.
|
Daniel Reichard
|
Erich Bergen
|
Stephen Ashfield
|
Matt Blaker
|
Adam Bailey
|
Blair Gibson
|
Nick Massi
|
Bassist and arranger of The Four Seasons, recognized as a savant by the other members of the group.
|
J. Robert Spencer
|
Michael Ingersoll
|
Philip Bulcock
|
Nick Martland
|
Karl James Wilson
|
Lewis Griffiths
|
Tommy DeVito
|
Founder, guitarist and manager of the Four Seasons from its beginnings until being bought out to cover his gambling debts.
|
Christian Hoff
|
Deven May
|
Glenn Carter
|
Andrew Bryant
|
Benjamin Yates
|
Dalton Wood
|
Joe Pesci
[a]
|
An excited teenager who works at the Four Seasons bowling alley and helps introduce Gaudio to the group. He later hires Tommy after Tommy is banished to Las Vegas.
|
Michael Longoria
|
Rick Faugno
|
Jye Frasca
|
Christian Tyler-Wood
|
Matteo Johnson
|
George Salmon
|
Bob Crewe
|
A Brill Building producer and composer who gives the quartet its break into the business and begins writing songs with Gaudio. Portrayed as openly gay
[62]
and having a fondness for astrology.
|
Peter Gregus
|
John Altieri
|
Simon Adkins
|
Ryan Bennett
|
Ben Irish
|
Michael Levi
|
Gyp DeCarlo
|
The head of New Jersey's organized crime syndicate and proprietor of the Sea Breeze Lounge, who employs Tommy in the band's early days and helps bail the group's members out of trouble.
|
Mark Lotito
|
Joseph Siravo
|
Stuart Milligan
|
Neil Stewart
|
Mark Isherwood
|
Jordan James
|
Norm Waxman
|
Tommy's loan shark.
|
Donnie Kehr
|
Miles Aubrey
|
Joseph Prouse
|
Joe Leather
|
Carl Douglas
|
Norton James
|
Mary Delgado
|
Frankie Valli's first wife, and mother to his daughters, of whom only one (Francine) is seen. A tempestuous, "type A" personality who divorces Frankie at the peak of the group's success.
|
Jennifer Naimo
|
Jackie Seiden
|
Suzy Bastone
|
Lisa Anne Lynch
|
Melanie Bright
|
Emma Crossley
|
Francine Valli
|
Frankie's daughter with Mary. Frankie is especially fond and protective of her, despite difficulties posed with his career as a touring singer, which Francine hopes to emulate.
|
Sara Schmidt
|
Melissa Strom
|
Michelle Francis
|
Chloe Carrington
|
Helen Ternent
|
Daisy Steere
|
Lorraine
|
A reporter from Detroit who begins dating Frankie after he splits with Mary. Later splits when she refuses to take in Francine.
|
Erica Piccininni
|
Sandra DeNise
|
Amy Pemberton
|
Kate Leiper
|
Koko Basigara
|
Ellie Seaton
|
Barry Belson
|
The radio disc jockey who breaks "Sherry" to fame with a day-long marathon. Belson is based on
Joey Reynolds
,
[63]
who "bitterly resent(ed)" not being named.
[64]
|
Tituss Burgess
|
Brandon Mattheius
|
Tee Jaye
|
Unknown
|
Jacob McIntosh
|
Damien Winchester
|
- ^
Actors are also understudies for Frankie Valli.
The ensemble?portrayed by various actors from the supporting cast, depending on the production?includes group members Nick DeVito, "Handsome Hank" Majewski, Charles Calello and Joe Long; various police officers, an unnamed "
French rap star
," the three members of The Angels, the woman who helps Bob lose his virginity (based on
Judy Parker
[65]
but billed only as "Bob's Christmas Present"), one of Nick's girlfriends, a goon, a judge, priest, accountant, nurse, Albert Finney (a record label executive), a radio program director named Davis (based on
CKLW
's Paul Drew),
[66]
and singers
Hal Miller
, Miss Frankie Nolan, and Billy Dixon, among various unnamed onlookers.
Notable replacements
[
edit
]
West End Revival (2021-2024)
[
edit
]
- Frankie Valli:
Luke Suri, Joey Cornish (Alt), Matteo Johnson (Alt), Elliot Allinson (Alt), Andy Smith (u/s), Danny Knott (u/s), Olly Manley (u/s), Pearce Barron (u/s)
- Bob Gaudio:
Declan Egan, Andy Smith (u/s), Danny Knott (u/s), Olly Manley (u/s), Elliot Allinson (u/s), Pearce Barron (u/s)
- Tommy DeVito:
Peter Nash, Carl Douglas (u/s),Tom Oliver (u/s), Oliver Tester (u/s), Huon Mackley (u/s), Jack Campbell (u/s), Daniel Parkinson (u/s), Matthew Lawrence (u/s)
- Nick Massi:
Mark Isherwwod (u/s), Matthew Goodgame (u/s),
- Joe Pesci:
Joey Cornish
- Bob Crewe:
Joseph Peters
- Gyp DeCarlo:
Matthew Goodgame, Andy Barke
- Norm Waxman:
Tom Oliver, Oliver Tester
- Mary Delgado:
Carolyn Maitland, Kirsty Whelan
- Francine Valli:
Rosie Needham
- Lorraine:
Gracie Lai
Music
[
edit
]
Musical numbers
[
edit
]
- Act I
- "
Ces soirees-la
(Oh What a Night) - Paris, 2000" ? French Rap Star
Yannick
and Backup Group
- "
Silhouettes
" ? Tommy DeVito, Nick Massi, Nick DeVito and Frankie Valli ☆
- "
You're the Apple of My Eye
" ? Tommy DeVito, Nick Massi and Nick DeVito ☆
- "
I Can't Give You Anything But Love
" ? Frankie Valli ☆
- "
Earth Angel
" ? Tommy DeVito and Full Company ☆
- "
A Sunday Kind of Love
" ? Frankie Valli, Tommy DeVito, Nick Massi and Nick's Date ☆
- "
My Mother's Eyes
" ? Frankie Valli ☆
- "I Go Ape" ? The Four Lovers ★
- "
(Who Wears) Short Shorts
" ?
The Royal Teens
☆
- "
I'm in the Mood for Love
" / "
Moody's Mood for Love
" ? Frankie Valli ☆
- "Cry for Me" ? Bob Gaudio, Frankie Valli, Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi
- "An Angel Cried" ? Hal Miller and The Rays □
- "I Still Care" ? Miss Frankie Nolan and The Romans □
- "Trance" ? Billy Dixon and The Topix □
- "
Sherry
" ? The Four Seasons
- "
Big Girls Don't Cry
" ? The Four Seasons
- "
Walk Like a Man
" ? The Four Seasons
- "
December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)
" ? Bob Gaudio and Full Company
- "
My Boyfriend's Back
" ? The Angels
- "
My Eyes Adored You
" ? Frankie Valli, Mary Delgado and The Four Seasons
- "
Dawn (Go Away)
" ? The Four Seasons
- "Walk Like a Man" (reprise) ? Full Company ★
|
- Act II
☆ On the cast album in "The Early Years: Scrapbook"
★ Not on the cast album
□ On the cast album in "Backup Sessions"
■ On the cast album in "Medley: Stay/Let's Hang On/Opus 17 (Don't You Worry 'Bout Me)/Bye, Bye, Baby"
|
Instrumentation
[
edit
]
The score for
Jersey Boys
requires a small orchestra with ten musicians: three keyboards, two guitars, bass, drums, two woodwind players, and trumpet. The first woodwind player doubles on alto and tenor saxophone, clarinet, flute, and oboe. The second woodwind part doubles on tenor and baritone sax, clarinet, and bass clarinet. The trumpet also doubles on flugelhorn.
Critical response
[
edit
]
Ben Brantley
of
The New York Times
wrote, "...the crowd goes wild. I'm talking about the real, mostly middle-aged crowd at the August Wilson Theater, who seem to have forgotten what year it is or how old they are or, most important, that John Lloyd Young is not Frankie Valli. And everything that has led up to that curtain call feels, for just a second, as real and vivid as the sting of your hands clapping together."
[67]
Charles Spencer from
The Daily Telegraph
wrote: "Overpaid, over-sexed and over here, it will, I suspect be some time before London says Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye) to the PHENOMENAL
Jersey Boys
."
[68]
Benedict Nightingale from
The Times
said, "Oh What a Night. There were times when I felt that the performers were making even the Beatles sound somewhat lacking in musical texture."
[69]
Recording and adaptations
[
edit
]
An original cast recording was made by Rhino Entertainment,
Jersey Boys: Original Broadway Cast Recording
(Rhino R2 73271), released in November 2005, which won the 2007
Grammy Award
for Best Musical Show Album.
[70]
[71]
[72]
In February 2008, the album was certified Gold, having shipped more than 500,000 copies in the US.
[73]
In October 2009, the cast album was certified Platinum, selling over 1,000,000 copies in the United States.
[74]
A
movie adaptation
of the musical, with John Lloyd Young reprising his role as Frankie Valli, and directed by
Clint Eastwood
, was released in 2014. A ProShot taping of the musical starring
Nick Jonas
as Frankie Valli,
Andy Karl
as Tommy DeVito, CJ Pawlikowski as Bob Gaudio, and Matt Bogart as Nick Massi is currently in the works.
[75]
Charity performances
[
edit
]
The
West End
cast of
Jersey Boys
appeared as a guest act for the
Royal Variety Performance
2008, which was staged at the
London Palladium
on December 11 in the presence of senior members of the
Royal family
. The Royal Variety Performance is a gala event held annually at a major British theatre, to raise money for the
Entertainment Artistes' Benevolent Fund
.
[76]
In 2010, The
West End
cast of
Jersey Boys
performed a show, with the profits going to
Children in Need
. The show ended with
Pudsey Bear
joining in to sing a medley, and raised £60,150 for the charity. In 2009 the cast also appeared as a guest act for Children in Need.
Jersey Boys
Chicago has been honored two years in a row at the Broadway Cares event for being the top fundraiser in the Tour category. In 2008,
Jersey Boys
Chicago raised $220,000 for BC/EFA.
[77]
For every ticket sold for every Broadway performance in the month of October 2010, $1 was donated to the
VH1 Save the Music Foundation
.
Jersey Boys
aimed to raise funds to restore one full music education program in a New York City school.
[78]
The show eventually raised $43,521, enough to restore the instrumental music education program at PS 85 in the Bronx.
[79]
Plans were made to donate additional funds raised to a second
VH1 Save The Music Foundation
grant recipient school.
[79]
The Boys in Concert
[
edit
]
Four actors of the original Broadway production, Christian Hoff, Michael Longoria, Daniel Reichard and J. Robert Spencer, launched a concert tour titled
The Boys in Concert
in 2010. Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice sued the production, claiming that it "steals songs, stage elements and copyrighted logo" that imply that it is an authorized spin-off of
Jersey Boys
.
[80]
The production was rebranded as
The 4 Hitmen
, and Hoff, Longoria, Reichard and Spencer counter-sued, claiming that the accusations were false, and alleging the use of "bully tactics" in an "effort to injure the livelihood and the reputations" of the actors.
[81]
On September 23, 2010, Valli and company dropped the original suit, on the condition that the name of the performance is changed to distance itself from
Jersey Boys
.
[82]
As of March 2024, this production is still active, and is named
The Midtown Men
.
[83]
Awards and honors
[
edit
]
Original Broadway production
[
edit
]
Original London production
[
edit
]
In popular culture
[
edit
]
The
HBO
series
The Sopranos
made several nods to
Jersey Boys
. For example:
In the 2010 comedy
The Other Guys
, NYPD detectives Hoitz and Gamble, played by
Mark Wahlberg
and
Will Ferrell
accept two Jersey Boys tickets as a bribe and attend the show.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Ghomeshi, Jian (October 20, 2008).
Bob Gaudio on QTV
(Radio broadcast).
Q
.
Toronto
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,
Canada
:
CBC Radio One
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August 1,
2023
.
- ^
a
b
c
Pressley, Nelson (October 5, 2009).
"Stages: Frankie Valli, the 'Jersey Boys' Soprano, Still Happy to Take a Bow"
.
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2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
Rotella, Mark
(October 2, 2005).
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c
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"
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b
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.
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.
Archived
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. Retrieved
February 1,
2013
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- ^
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- ^
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"
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b
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.
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.
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- ^
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- ^
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.
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2013
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- ^
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. The Broadway League.
- ^
"
Jersey Boys
Surpasses
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on Long-Run List Tonight"
.
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2015
.
- ^
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.
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. September 6, 2016.
- ^
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.
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- ^
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Playbill
, August 10, 2017
- ^
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.
Playbill
. Retrieved
December 26,
2017
.
- ^
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"
'Jersey Boys' Is to Reopen Off Broadway"
.
The New York Times
.
ISSN
0362-4331
. Retrieved
December 24,
2018
.
- ^
Evans, Greg (May 11, 2021).
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'Jersey Boys' Musical Sets November For Off Broadway Return"
.
Deadline
. Retrieved
July 16,
2021
.
- ^
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.
TheaterMania
. Retrieved
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2022
.
- ^
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broadwayworld.com, December 6, 2010
- ^
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.
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January 18,
2008
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- ^
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'Sopranos' goes out on high note"
. CNN
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2013
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- ^
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Archived
February 1, 2008, at the
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shnsf.com
- ^
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.
Lvrj.com
. May 4, 2008
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May 31,
2013
.
- ^
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.
The Star
. Toronto
. Retrieved
May 6,
2010
.
- ^
"
'Jersey Boys' to close at Paris Las Vegas on Sept. 18"
.
Las Vegas Sun
. June 7, 2016
. Retrieved
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2018
.
- ^
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.
Jerseyboysinfo.com
. Retrieved
October 5,
2018
.
- ^
Shenton, Mark; Nathan, John.
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Playbill
, February 28, 2008
- ^
"2009 Olivier award winners"
.
The Guardian
. March 8, 2009
. Retrieved
February 1,
2013
.
- ^
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.
WhatsOnStage.com
. Retrieved
February 12,
2014
.
- ^
"Ryan Molloy: 'I fear leaving Jersey Boys'
"
.
WhatsOnStage.com
. October 27, 2013
. Retrieved
October 26,
2023
.
- ^
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.
Playbill
. June 14, 2013. Archived from
the original
on June 18, 2013
. Retrieved
June 20,
2013
.
- ^
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.
Broadway.com
. February 14, 2014
. Retrieved
March 10,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
"JERSEY BOYS to close in London's West End 26th March 2017"
.
LondonTheatre1
. September 28, 2016
. Retrieved
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2016
.
- ^
Hershberg, Marc.
"
'Jersey Boys' To Return To West End As Producer Strives To Save Theatre Industry"
.
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. Retrieved
October 31,
2020
.
- ^
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.
Bestoftheatre.co.uk
. Retrieved
March 19,
2021
.
- ^
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.
Londonboxoffice.co.uk
. June 22, 2021
. Retrieved
June 24,
2021
.
- ^
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"Jersey Boys the musical is extending its run at the Trafalgar Theatre London until January 2024"
(Nov. 28, 2022).
- ^
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.
Whatsonstage.com
. January 29, 2014
. Retrieved
January 30,
2014
.
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
October 31,
2014
.
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
May 31,
2013
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- ^
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.
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- ^
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.
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2013
.
- ^
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.
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. Australia. October 21, 2017
. Retrieved
June 26,
2019
.
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
June 26,
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- ^
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.
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, Jersey Boys South Africa official website
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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b
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.
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.
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- ^
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.
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.
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.
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- ^
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,
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,
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[
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]
,
Playbill
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, theatermania.com, October 13, 2009
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.
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- ^
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- ^
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"
.
USA Today
.
External links
[
edit
]
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Albums
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Singles
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Related topics
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Awards for
Jersey Boys
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1949?1975
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1976?2000
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2001?present
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