I saw the new musical adaptation of the 1959 comedy classic film Some Like It Hot on Broadway in 2023, and loved it more than I expected to. I was unfamiliar with the film at the time, but have since learned that the musical stays fairly true to the plot of the film, but with a few tweaks that make it feel refreshingly modern and relevant. When I saw it on Broadway I wrote, "this is a show that is perfect for touring." It is at its heart an old-fashioned musical comedy show, with a fabulous score, thrilling dance numbers, and hilarious comedy that I heard an audience member refer to as "corny as hell." But it's almost subversive in the way that it works in issues of trans acceptance, feminism, and overcoming racism. I'm thrilled that it's touring around America in this time when we need more of all of that, and that one of the first stops on the tour is right here in Minneapolis. So don't walk, don't run, but tap briskly down the street as if gangsters were chasing you to get to the Orpheum Theatre to see this fantabulous new musical before Joe, Daphne, and the gang tap on out of town! Click here for tickets, including student/educator rush tickets.
Tony-winning playwright Matthew Lopez and very funny writer/performer Amber Ruffin wrote the book of the musical, adapting Billy Wilder's screenplay about two prohibition era musicians who don drag to escape from the mob. Song-and-dance partners Joe and Jerry witness a murder in Chicago, and need to get out of town, and the club, fast. After Joe becomes Josephine and Jerry becomes Daphne, they join an all-woman band led by Sweet Sue traveling across the country to California. Serial dater Joe (there's a joke about him not remembering any woman's name) falls in love with Sugar, the lead singer with Hollywood dreams. After befriending her as Josephine, Joe dons the disguise of a German screenwriter to woo her, but he's anxious to escape to Mexico and safety. Unlike Joe, Jerry slowly discovers that he feels more like himself as Daphne than he ever has, and revels in this life. The bad guys eventually catch up to our merry band of musicians, but this is a musical, so of course our heroes win out in the end.
"brothers" Jerry (Tavis Kordell) and Joe (Matt Loehr) (photo by Matthew Murphy) |
Daphne (Tavis Kordell) and her millionaire (Edward Juvier) dancing in Mexico (photo by Matthew Murphy) |
the cast of Some Like It Hot (photo by Matthew Murphy) |
In many ways the movie was ahead of its time, with the famous final line that is both hilarious and endearing. This musical adaptation is a great example of how you take a classic and beloved piece of art, stay true to what's great about it, and add layers to it that make it more modern and relevant. But also still true to the period, because transgender people and people of color were always there, they just didn't make it into all of our stories because of the people telling them. We have the opportunity to right some of those wrongs now. Some Like It Hot does all that, wrapped up in a big shiny wonderfully entertaining package.