Rent

American musical
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External Websites
Awards And Honors:
Tony Awards
Pulitzer Prize

Rent, landmark Pulitzer Prize-winning rock musical created by composer Jonathan Larson and recognized for raising national awareness of issues related to poverty, addiction, gentrification, and the AIDS epidemic. Inspired by Giacomo Puccini’s La Bohème (1896), a classic opera depicting the tragic romance of bohemian youths in Paris, Rent celebrates the lives of a group of young, racially diverse, LGBTQ artists and activists—in a way that was rare on Broadway at the time—in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City’s East Village. On January 25, 1996, Larson tragically died of an aortic aneurysm at age 35, hours before Rent’s first preview at the Off-Broadway New York Theatre Workshop, where he had developed the musical. Rent was an immediate critical and commercial success and became a pop culture phenomenon, whose passionate, dedicated fans were known as “RENT-heads.”

Rent quickly moved to Broadway, where it opened on April 29 at the Nederlander Theatre. (The musical’s West End production opened at London’s Shaftesbury Theatre, on May 12, 1998.) To allow young people the opportunity to attend the show, the practice of low-cost Broadway “rush” tickets—which continues today—was instituted, making the seats in the first two rows of the orchestra available on a first-come, first-served basis. Eager fans lined up hours before to obtain rush tickets.

After 5,123 performances, Rent closed on Broadway, on September 7, 2008. It is one of the longest-running musicals in Broadway history and has played several national and international tours. Composer and lyricist Lin-Manuel Miranda, who created the explosively popular stage musical Hamilton (2015), has said that Rent was an inspiration to him in his career.

Plot and characters

Rent follows a year in the life of a group of impoverished young artists and activists dealing with poverty, health issues, and social injustice. The story begins on Christmas Eve, 1989. Mark Cohen (Anthony Rapp), an aspiring filmmaker, is the show’s narrator. He lives in an industrial loft with his roommate, Roger Davis (Adam Pascal), an HIV-positive musician who is recovering from a substance abuse disorder and the suicide of his girlfriend. Their former roommate, Benjamin (“Benny”) Coffin, III (Taye Diggs), has married into a rich family and is now their landlord. To persuade them to pay their rent, Benny has turned off the heat. Benny promises that he will let them live there rent-free if they convince Maureen Johnson (Idina Menzel)—a performance artist who is their former roommate and Mark’s ex-girlfriend—to not hold her planned protest of an upcoming eviction of a homeless encampment from a nearby empty lot. Benny wants to clear the encampment to build a multimedia studio on the land. Maureen’s new girlfriend, Joanne Jefferson (Fredi Walker), a public interest lawyer, is helping to stage the protest.

Roger meets Mimi Marquez (Daphne Rubin-Vega), who lives below him, when she visits his loft. Mimi is a nightclub stripper who is addicted to heroin and is HIV-positive. Roger and Mimi are attracted to each other, but Roger is afraid to reveal that he is HIV-positive. Outside, another of Mark and Roger’s former roommates, Tom Collins (Jesse L. Martin), approaches the loft. Tom, a teacher and computer whiz, is mugged but is found and patched up by Angel Dumott Schunard (Wilson Jermaine Heredia), a street drummer and drag queen. After Maureen’s protest in the lot, the group meets at the Life Café to celebrate. Tom and Angel reveal their HIV-positive status to each other and later become lovers, and Roger and Mimi fall in love. As the group of friends move through the year, they encounter the breakups of relationships, illnesses, and death but also love, friendship, and hope. Songs, including “Seasons of Love,” “Take Me or Leave Me,” “La Vie Bohème,” “Out Tonight,” “One Song Glory,” and “I’ll Cover You,” mark important moments in the plot.

Awards and feature film

In 1996 Rent was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for best drama. That year the musical also won four Tony Awards—for best musical, best original musical score, best book of a musical, and best actor in a featured role in a musical (Heredia).

In 2005 a feature film adaptation of Rent was released. The film starred most of the original cast; Rosario Dawson replaced Rubin-Vega as Mimi, and Tracie Thoms replaced Walker as Joanne. The film, which was directed by Chris Columbus, received mixed reviews.

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Karen Sottosanti