No One's Gonna Pay Next Year's ‘Rent’

The original Broadway cast of Rent in 1996.Photo: AP
Even as we get further and further away from the affection we once felt for the show, it's not hard to feel a bit of sadness today at the news that Rent is closing in June, after twelve years on Broadway. When the show opened in 1996, it was a bona fide cultural event, a Broadway musical that tried, no matter how half-assedly, to present the lives of New York's artistic underclass.
It's always been easy to dump on Rent, and on Rent-heads (who kind of deserve it), but for us in 1996 — just graduated from college and visiting New York from the hinterlands of North Carolina — Rent seemed like a bolt from the blue. Even as we understood that the show was, on its face, fraudulent — that the down-and-dirty characters in the play would never listen to the pop-rock show tunes Jonathan Larson wrote for them to sing — we were entranced by the show, and invigorated by the notion that a kid not much older than us could get a show about his friends on Broadway. That Larson died the night before his opening, of course, only amplified the play's romantic appeal to us foolish 22-year-olds.
Even if, in the end, Rent never heralded a new revolution in theater — even if it was a cul-de-sac in the history of the American musical — it surely served the same purpose for many other young writers in the mid-nineties. Some of them will surely go on to write some truly great musicals themselves. So light a candle for Rent; we hope we'll see its like again, only a little bit better.

Todd Oldham Creates Art Nerds With New Book
Cruz Is Irresistible in Broken Embraces
Emily Blunt Trades Prada for Prudery
Sarah Ruhl's In the Next Room Is Pure Pleasure