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The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals | |
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Music | Jeff Blim |
Lyrics | Jeff Blim |
Book | Nick Lang Matt Lang |
Premiere | October 11, 2018: Matrix Theater, Los Angeles |
The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals is a horror comedy musical with music and lyrics by Jeff Blim and a book by Matt and Nick Lang. The show is the first installment in StarKid's Hatchetfield series. Loosely inspired by 1956 horror film Invasion of the Body Snatchers , it is the 11th stage show produced by StarKid Productions. The show follows Paul, an average guy who “doesn’t like musicals,” as the citizens of his town are gradually overcome by an alien hive mind that makes them sing and dance as if they are in a musical.
The show ran from October 11, 2018 to November 4, 2018 at the Matrix Theater in Los Angeles, California. A recording of the musical was uploaded to YouTube on December 24, 2018, which has since amassed over 8 million views as of May 2024. [1]
Like other recent Starkid musicals, funding for the show was done through Kickstarter. The project raised US$127,792 through 3,419 backers out of its $60,000 goal. [2]
A group of singing "zombies" addresses the audience, setting the scene in the small town of Hatchetfield and introducing the eponymous "Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals", unremarkable everyman Paul Matthews. They proclaim that "The apotheosis is upon us!" ("The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals").
Paul works at an office with his coworkers Bill, Charlotte, and Ted. Bill invites Paul to a production of Mamma Mia! at the local Starlight Theater, but Paul declines based on his musical-based principles. He heads to the local coffee shop, Beanie's, to see Emma Perkins, a barista he has a crush on. Emma is forced to follow Beanie's' new Cold Stone-inspired "tip for a song" policy, which she laments about to Paul, as they bond over their shared dislike of musicals. As he leaves the shop, Paul is hounded by a Greenpeace advocate about donating to save the planet. During their argument, an approaching storm forces them to take shelter as an explosion can be heard.
The next day, Paul encounters a group of people, led by the Greenpeace advocate from the day before, singing and dancing ("La Dee Dah Dah Day"). Paul heads to work and Bill recounts that a strange meteor struck the Starlight Theater during the previous night's performance of "Mamma Mia!". Their boss, Mr. Davidson, calls Paul into his office, and Paul runs away after Mr. Davidson sings an "I Want" song at him ("What Do You Want, Paul?").
Paul rushes to Beanie's and tells Emma that he fears the world is becoming a musical. Emma, unconvinced, is called by her coworkers Nora and Zoey to perform the Beanie's tip song ("Cup of Roasted Coffee"). Nora and Zoey continue singing and dancing after the song is supposed to end, and the shop's customers join the baristas in song after drinking coffee contaminated with a mysterious blue substance ("Cup of Poisoned Coffee"). Paul and Emma flee the shop and head into an alleyway where they find Paul's coworkers, who tell them that the entire town has started to behave the same way.
Charlotte calls her husband Sam for help, but he has already been infected. Sam and two other police officers attack the group ("Show Me Your Hands") until Ted hits him over the head, knocking him out and exposing his brain, which is bright blue. Emma proposes that they seek help from her eccentric biology teacher Professor Hidgens. They follow her and take the unconscious Sam with them.
The group arrives at Hidgens' fortified home on the edge of town. Hidgens believes that the behavior of the townsfolk is the result of an alien invasion brought to Earth by the meteor, and restrains Sam. Hidgens leads Paul, Emma, and Bill off to get drinks, leaving Charlotte and Ted with Sam. They argue, and as Ted leaves, Sam wakes up. He convinces Charlotte to untie him with a love song ("You Tied Up My Heart"), then kills and infects her.
Meanwhile, Emma and Paul grow closer, and they discover that Paul's hatred of musicals was inspired by seeing Emma perform in Brigadoon in high school. Emma tells Paul that she hates living in Hatchetfield and left after graduating high school, but returned due to the death of her sister. Their conversation is interrupted when Sam and Charlotte enter and attack the group ("Join Us (And Die)"). Hidgens shoots and kills them both with a shotgun.
Bill receives a call from his daughter Alice, saying that she is trapped in the choir room at Hatchetfield High School. Paul goes with Bill to rescue her.
Paul and Bill search for Alice at Hatchetfield High. They find her and her girlfriend Deb already infected, and Alice tells Bill that she blames him for her death and has always resented him ("Not Your Seed"). The infected group kills Bill, then corners Paul, determined to make him suffer for his defiance. Before they can kill him, the Army arrives and fends off the group, before knocking Paul unconscious.
Paul wakes up and is greeted by General John MacNamara, who leads a special unit of the US Army that deals with the strange and paranormal, called PEIP ( /ˈpiːp/ PEEP). MacNamara has been ordered to kill any survivors, but tells Paul that if he can rescue Emma, they are both welcome to join PEIP on the rescue helicopter.
Meanwhile, at Hidgens' compound, Hidgens determines that the aliens are a hive mind that communicates through music. Emma theorizes that the meteor acts as the hive's central brain and that destroying it would end the invasion, but Hidgens has decided to embrace the hive's unity as a method to achieve world peace, and so sedates her to avoid her idea getting out. Emma wakes up tied to a chair alongside Ted as Hidgens deactivates his house's defences and reveals his hidden passion for musical theatre. Intending to draw the hive's attention, he performs the opening number of his self-penned musical Workin' Boys, glorifying his college undergrad experience (“Show Stoppin' Number”). The zombies arrive and join in the performance, and Hidgens, caught up in the song, believes them to be his old college friends, allowing them to disembowel and infect him.
Paul arrives to rescue Emma and Ted and they head for the pickup site, but one of the infected attacks Paul. Ted abandons the others and continues to the pickup site alone. There he finds the army waiting, but is shot and assimilated by an infected General MacNamara ("America Is Great Again"). Paul and Emma manage to escape to the helicopter, but the pilot reveals herself to be Zoey, Emma's infected coworker. Zoey attempts to shoot them, but Paul kicks away the gun, causing the helicopter to crash and severely injure Emma. She tells Paul to leave her and destroy the meteor to end the invasion. Paul arms himself with grenades from the helicopter and leaves.
Paul enters the collapsed Starlight Theater and is confronted by a group of the infected. They encourage Paul to express his feelings through song. His proximity to the meteor begins to infects him, and he fights for control over the musical virus, eventually managing to pull the pin on a grenade and throw it at the meteor ("Let It Out").
Two weeks later, Emma is recovering in a hospital in Clivesdale and is placed in witness protection with the help of PEIP. She is told there are no other survivors, but she will be escorted to her new life by someone she knows. Paul enters, and the two reunite, before Paul begins to sing: the virus has finally infected him. He and the rest of the infected implore her to join the hive, with Paul echoing the sentiment from the opening number: "The apotheosis is upon us!" ("Inevitable").
As the cast take their bows at the end of the show, Emma realizes she is trapped on stage in a musical and cannot escape. She cries and begs the audience for help until the cast drag her backstage at the end of the curtain call.
Character | Los Angeles (2018) |
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Paul Matthews | Jon Matteson |
Emma Perkins, et al. | Lauren Lopez |
Ted Spankoffski, et al. | Joey Richter |
Charlotte Sweetly / Nora / Deb, et al. | Jaime Lyn Beatty |
Bill Woodward, et al. | Corey Dorris |
Professor Hidgens, et al. | Robert Manion |
Alice Woodward / Zoey Chambers, et al. | Mariah Rose Faith Casillas |
Sam Sweetly / General MacNamara / Mr. Davidson, et al. | Jeff Blim |
Crew member [3] | Job |
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Nick Lang | Producer, Director |
Ilana Elroi | Sound Design, Engineering |
Brian Rosenthal | Sound Design |
Corey Lubowich | Scenic Design, Producer |
Amy Plouff | Scenic Charge |
Sarah Petty | Lighting Design |
June Saito | Costume Design |
James Tolbert | Choreography |
Lauren Lopez | Additional Choreography |
Jade Svenson | Wardrobe/Deck Hand |
Paul Gabriel | Stage Manager |
Matt Dahan | Music Direction, Keyboard 1 |
Josh Fleury | Bass |
Sam Johnides | Guitar, Keyboard 2 |
Ryan McDiarmid | Drum |
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A cast recording was released on December 24, 2018.
The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals served as the first installment in StarKid's horror-comedy series, the Hatchetfield series. A second musical entitled Black Friday was produced and performed by Team Starkid in the fall of 2019. The show takes place in Hatchetfield, and features several recurring characters from The Guy Who Didn’t Like Musicals. Since all the characters in said musical are known to have died, many theorize that Black Friday takes place in an alternate dimension, secondary timeline, or time loop, with the final song indeed posing the question of whether "tomorrow will come" as characters from The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals fill the stage. The show ran between October 31 and December 8, 2019 and featured most of the original cast and crew members.
As a result of plans being postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, StarKid Productions premiered a series of live-readings as a new installment in the Hatchetfield series named Nightmare Time. [4] The first season of was announced on October 1, 2020 [5] with the entire casts of both The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals and Black Friday returning. The series featured several returning characters from both series. The first episode of the series was streamed live to YouTube on October 10, 2020 featuring two stories: The Hatchetfield Ape-Man and Watcher World. [6] The final two episodes were performed live on October 17 and October 24, 2020 featuring the stories Forever & Always, Time Bastard, Jane's A Car and The Witch in the Web. [6] These episodes were then released on YouTube on February 14, 2021. A second season was announced on October 8, 2021. [7] The series featured 4 episodes with six stories: Honey Queen, Perky's Buds, Abstinence Camp, Daddy, Killer Track and Yellow Jacket. The entire cast of the original series returned apart from Kendall Nicole and Robert Manion and they were joined by Jae Hughes and Bryce Charles. [8] The episodes were announced to be released weekly on YouTube from May 20, 2022 to June 10, 2022. [9]
A short film titled Workin’ Boys was announced in 2019 as a reward for Black Friday’s Kickstarter campaign. Production of the film was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
A third musical, entitled Nerdy Prudes Must Die , written by the same writing team of Black Friday, was released on Youtube on October 13, 2023. It was to be performed sometime during 2020 but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it had been postponed indefinitely. In September 2022 it was announced that the musical would be performed in February 2023 at the El Porto theatre in Hollywood, with some of the cast and crew returning as part of "Starkid Returns". [10]
The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals received fifteen nominations in twelve categories at the 2019 BroadwayWorld.com Los Angeles Regional Awards. It was nominated in every category for which it was eligible, or in other words, every local (non-touring) musical category. It won in every category except three. Every actor in the musical was nominated for their performance except for Jeff Blim. Every nominee in the category Best Featured Actor in a Musical was from The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals.
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
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2019 | BroadwayWorld.com Los Angeles Regional Awards [11] [12] | Best Musical - Local | Nominated | |
Best Leading Actor in a Musical - Local | Jon Matteson | Won | ||
Best Leading Actress in a Musical - Local | Lauren Lopez | Nominated | ||
Best Featured Actor in a Musical - Local | Robert Manion | Won | ||
Corey Dorris | Nominated | |||
Joey Richter | Nominated | |||
Best Featured Actress in a Musical - Local | Jaime Lyn Beatty | Won | ||
Mariah Rose Faith | Nominated | |||
Best Director of a Musical - Local | Nick Lang | Nominated | ||
Best Choreography - Local | James Tolbert | Won | ||
Best Musical Director - Local | Matt Dahan | Won | ||
Best Scenic Design - Local | Corey Lubowich | Won | ||
Best Costume Design - Local | June Saito | Won | ||
Best Lighting Design - Local | Sarah Petty | Won | ||
Best Sound Design - Local | Ilana Elroi and Brian Rosenthal | Won |
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