arts & life theate r Actors Celia Keenan-Bolger and Gavin Creel lead the pack in a recent musical theater department promo. Maize & Blue On Broadway Brent Wagner Alice Burdick Schweiger | Special to the Jewish News A host of talented and accomplished University of Michigan musical- theater grads will be honoring longtime department chair Brent Wagner on Broadway. The one- night benefit, marking Wagner’s retirement and celebrating his 32 years at Michigan, will be held May 16 at the August Wilson Theatre in Manhattan. “It’s going to be a spectacular evening on Broadway and we are hoping that people will come to A recent U-M production of Guys & Dolls details Maize & Blue on Broadway takes place 7 p.m. Monday, May 16, at the August Wilson Theatre in New York City. $50-$250. (212) 239-6200; mmtaef.com/events. New York City to see it,” says actor and artistic director Gavin Creel, who graduated from U-M in 1998 and is currently starring in She Loves Me on Broadway. “There have been 540 graduates from the program over the years, averag- ing about 22 kids a year, and there hasn’t been a Broadway show in that past 20 years that hasn’t in some way been represented by a Michigan graduate.” Many of them, too, are Jewish. The benefit concert is produced by the alumni of the Department of Musical Theatre within the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance. The com- mittee includes Tony Award win- ner Matthew Rego (Urinetown); writer, composer and lyricist David Kirshenbaum; faculty member Linda Goodrich; director and choreographer Josh Rhodes; and many more. Performers for the evening include Tony nominees Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Tuck Everlasting), David Burtka (It Shoulda Been You) and Hunter Foster (The Producers, Million Dollar Quartet.) “We have a lot of fun surprises,” Creel says. “We will be doing both contemporary and classic songs.” Accompanied by a 24-piece orchestra, the concert will include songs from Rent, Jersey Boys, The Music Man, Guys and Dolls and Sunday in the Park with George. There will be special appearances from award-winning composer Jeff Marx (Avenue Q), lyricist Sheldon Harnick (Fiddler on the Roof) and Tony Award nominees Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (Dear Evan Hansen). Oak Park native and U-M grad Andrew Lippa will play the piano, dance and sing a song from his Broadway show Big Fish. Each spring, the graduating class of the Michigan musical theater program comes to NYC to showcase their work. That will take place the Monday before Maize & Blue on Broadway, and those stu- dents will be staying in the city to perform at the concert. Proceeds for Maize & Blue on Broadway will benefit the Michigan Musical Theatre Ambassador Endowment Fund (MMTAEF), created by the musical theater department alumni to pro- vide a source of financial support for the program. “Every single penny we make from this benefit will go to the fund, which will help the future of the department and all the stu- dents who attend,” Creel says. One of the MMTAEF’s endeav- ors is to create the Brent Wagner Speaker Series, which entails bringing influential speakers to Ann Arbor’s campus to teach a master class for the students. They are hoping the creative team behind Hamilton will be on the speaker series schedule. Putting a production on Broadway is extremely costly, and this huge undertaking couldn’t have materialized with- out the financial help from their “angels.” Oak Park native Jeffrey Seller (producer of the mega-hit Hamilton) is one of those generous benefactors. “Maize & Blue on Broadway has been a load of work and stressful at times because something this size takes a lot of planning, money and time,” Creel says. “But it’s done with so much heart. It’s very important to us to put on a won- derful show, make it a special night on Broadway, honor Brent and celebrate the alumni.” * May 5 • 2016 49