Current:Home > NewsTradeEdge Exchange:'The Notebook' musical nails iconic Gosling-McAdams kiss, will trigger a 'good, hard cry' -Prime Capital Blueprint
TradeEdge Exchange:'The Notebook' musical nails iconic Gosling-McAdams kiss, will trigger a 'good, hard cry'
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-10 22:19:34
NEW YORK – “The TradeEdge ExchangeNotebook” might be the first show on Broadway to sell tissue boxes at the merch stand. And trust us, you’ll need them.
“Very much so,” jokes Ryan Vasquez, one of the stars of the heart-tugging new Broadway musical, which opens Thursday at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre. “I’m a believer that a good, hard cry is good for you.”
Romantic and life-affirming, the show is ingeniously adapted from Nicholas Sparks’ 1996 bestseller with songs by Ingrid Michaelson. It tracks the decadeslong love story between Allie and Noah, who are torn apart by class, war and ailing health, but always find each other again. The musical brilliantly casts six different actors in the two lead roles, made famous by Rachel McAdams and Ryan Gosling in the 2004 big-screen phenomenon.
"It's a fresh, new take on something you've already fallen in love with," says cast member John Cardoza. "It's just more to love."
Broadway's 'The Notebook' takes a 'gentle approach' to love and loss
Adapted by writer Bekah Brunstetter (NBC’s “This Is Us”), Broadway’s “The Notebook” seamlessly weaves together three distinct timelines, beginning with Younger Allie (Jordan Tyson) and Younger Noah (Cardoza). The starry-eyed couple meets one summer and bonds over art and the ocean. But Allie’s wealthy parents disapprove of the penniless, free-spirited Noah, and take drastic measures to sever ties between them.
Signing onto the project, Cardoza was moved by the nuance that Michaelson and Brunstetter brought to the story.
“My mother had just passed maybe a year before at that time, and one of the first major moments I have in the show is Noah discussing the loss of his mother,” Cardoza recalls. “I just remember sitting there listening to these two incredible poets talking about the different ways that young people, in particular, handle grief. They just have such a gentle approach to the human experience of love.”
Tyson was similarly impressed with the ways that the show’s creators “let Allie be this powerful young woman, and not just melt into somebody else,” she says. “You watch her make some really hard decisions and get to know where her power comes from.”
Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams' passionate, rain-soaked kiss comes to life
“The Notebook” movie was a touchstone for many millennials, who may have watched it while crying into tubs of ice cream over their first teenage crush. The show features some of the film’s most memorable lines (“It’s not that simple!”), as well as a subtle lyrical nod to Gosling’s iconic “If you’re a bird, I’m a bird.”
Then, of course, there’s the rain scene. The musical recreates Noah and Allie’s heated reunion with a real onstage downpour – a stunning feat of theatrical magic that draws gasps and applause from the audience.
Although it may look sexy, “I can’t really see when I’m lifting her up,” says Vasquez, who plays Middle Noah. “I’m just closing my eyes because I’m getting completely pelted by rain.”
“It’s very cold once the rain stops,” adds Joy Woods, who portrays Middle Allie. Backstage, it’s “all hands on deck” to get dried off. “We have almost choreography of taking off the wig, putting on new clothes and jewelry, and toweling off my face while somebody’s putting a new mic in. It’s a really well-oiled machine.”
McAdams comes to Broadway next month in the new play “Mary Jane,” and the cast hopes she pays a visit to “The Notebook” while she’s in New York. “I would be a very happy camper,” Woods says with a laugh. “She is queen and I would love to shake her hand and thank her for being the culture.”
Like the movie, the show is a heartbreaking portrayal of dementia
As fans of the book and movie will know, the poignant throughline of the show is Older Noah (Dorian Harewood) visiting Older Allie (Maryann Plunkett) in a nursing home. Suffering from dementia, she no longer remembers Noah or their love story, and he routinely reads from her old notebook to try and jog her memory.
One of the musical’s most poignant songs is “Iron in the Fridge,” as Older Noah duets with younger versions of himself about trying to “bring her back,” Harewood says. The show’s tear-jerking last 10 minutes, in particular, are “very challenging and very grueling. It's hard to explain, but it also renews me at the same time it’s draining me.”
Older Allie, too, gets a gorgeous number called “I Wanna Go Back,” in which she dances with her younger selves. “My mom lived with dementia and the phrase ‘I am still in here’ is so resonant,” Plunkett says. “There were moments where you’d see the 16-year-old (inside). It was like a flash, where you know there’s a coherence there for just a moment, and then it’s gone.”
Through this show, Plunkett feels she gets to pay tribute to her mom every night on stage. “She played trumpets in big bands when she was young. She just had music inside of her.” Toward the end of her life, “in her fear, she would lash out at times. But in a strange, sad way, there’s something marvelous about that really. She’s saying, ‘I’m still alive. I’m still fighting for myself.’”
veryGood! (7141)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Alexey Navalny's widow says Russia hiding his body, refusing to give it to his mother
- Daytona 500 grand marshal Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, Denny Hamlin embrace playing bad guys
- Teams combine for three hat tricks in Wild's record-filled 10-7 victory over Canucks
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Trump fraud ruling adds to his string of legal losses in New York
- Driver in Milwaukee crash that killed 5 people gets 25 years in prison
- LE SSERAFIM members talk 'EASY' album, Coachella performance: 'A dream moment'
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Here are the top moments from the 2024 People's Choice Awards
Ranking
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- First federal gender-based hate crime trial starts over trans woman's killing
- Nikki Haley hasn’t yet won a GOP contest. But she’s vowing to keep fighting Donald Trump
- Republican Eric Hovde seeks to unseat Democrat Baldwin in Wisconsin race for US Senate
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Can kidney dialysis be done at home? We can make treatment more accessible, so why aren't we?
- Daytona 500 highlights: All the top moments from William Byron's win in NASCAR opener
- First federal gender-based hate crime trial starts in South Carolina over trans woman’s killing
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
These Tarte Cosmetics $10 Deals Are Selling out Rapidly, Plus There's Free Shipping
US Supreme Court won’t hear lawsuit tied to contentious 2014 Senate race in Mississippi
Mississippi grand jury decides not to indict ex-NFL player Jerrell Powe on kidnapping charge
Travis Hunter, the 2
Indiana lawmakers vote to lift state ban on happy hours
Woman arrested nearly 20 years after baby found dead at Phoenix airport
Vermont governor seeks disaster declaration for December flooding