The black comedy rock musical comes to the Midlands.
Although far from being an unqualified success with the critics, Heathers The Musical did great business in the West End and is proving popular on its first-ever UK tour. Based on the cult 1989 movie starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater, the show follows the character of Veronica Sawyer, a high school student who’s tired of being part of a feared and popular clique with three girls named Heather. Eager to opt out, she finds herself drawn to new student Jason ‘JD’ Dean, a rebellious young man with murder in mind...
Black comedy Heathers might not have been a box-office smash on its release in 1988, but Michael Lehmann’s movie has gone on to become a cult classic, with a clutch of memorable lines and a high-school story that connects with teenagers the world over. The musical version is doing much the same thing, but with a bit more hope, a little less hate, and even more fun - as its director, Andy Fickman, explains to What’s On...
Director Andy Fickman is out of breath. He’s broken off from running two sets of rehearsals for Heathers The Musical - one with the West End cast, one with the touring company - and is scampering around trying to get a phone signal, as well as a bit of quiet, to speak to me about taking the hugely successful show on the road. He says he’s happy to take a break, but it’s evident that he’s happiest when working.
Which is just as well, as he’s a man very much in demand. He helped devise and launch the musical in Los Angeles, then took it to New York, and has been at the helm ever since it transferred to London in 2018, where it proved an instant success and has been running on and off (Covid, you know…) ever since. And if that wasn’t enough, he’s continued to direct movies and TV shows - he’s worked with everyone from Billy Crystal and Bette Midler to Matthew Perry and Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson. He has one film due for release - One True Loves - and another in pre-production: Tension Ring. Oh, and there’s a brand-new stage musical (13 Going On 30) in the works too.
“I’m someone who loves to keep working,” he understates cheerily, in an accent becoming more and more mid-Atlantic the longer he spends in the UK. If he had any cowboy drawl from growing up in Texas, then he’s definitely lost it, but the passion for TV and movies that developed during those childhood years has certainly never left him.
“I was a child of the ’80s and all the John Hughes movies were my favourites. I remember seeing Heathers at the movies and was just blown away by the darkness of the comedy and the message.
“Cut to years later, and [writer] Kevin Murphy and I had just finished doing another cult musical called Reefer Madness and were looking to see what our next project would be. Two producers in Los Angeles called to ask what we thought about Heathers, and I just jumped.”
The duo tracked down composer and lyricist Larry O’Keefe and got to work, but not before having lengthy discussions about how to tackle the source material and reposition the piece that spawned such quotable lines as ‘greetings and salutations’, ‘how very’, ‘I love my dead gay son’ and ‘Did you have a brain tumour for breakfast?’
“We spent a lot of time trying to figure out how we would pull off Heathers and what changes we would make. We got very lucky, in that the original movie’s creative team - Dan Waters, who wrote the script, Michael Lehmann, who directed, and Denise Di Novi, who produced it - became wonderful creative partners of ours. So we found a way to do the movie but not end it quite so nihilistically, as there’s not a great deal of hope at the end!
“So it was kind of a dream come true. And all these years later, it’s still a dream come true.”
All these years later is right. The original stage show opened in 2010, and the film came 20 years before that. The movie would largely have been forgotten by now if not for a core cult following that has grown exponentially over the years.
“When the movie came out, it wasn’t a smash hit, but over the years, aside from launching great careers - Christian Slater, Winona Ryder, Shannen Doherty [all of whom have seen and lauded the stage version] - it has remained a cult film. When we launched the musical it was the same thing - it too started with a cult following, but by the time we shut down in New York, the amateur rights were going left and right.”
During Heathers’ New York run, the cast recorded an album of songs from the show which not only proved hugely popular in the US but across the Atlantic as well. A call from Paul Taylor Mills, from London’s Other Palace Theatre - at the time owned by Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber - saw the show relocate to the UK, much to Andy’s bafflement.
“We were like, honestly? Will anybody in London know anything about this movie? And will they care about the late ’80s in Sherwood, Ohio, the waning years of the Reagan administration, the heart of MTV? Will they connect?
“What we didn’t realise was that the album we’d done in New York did gangbuster business here as well, and a lot of actors were using songs from the show for auditions. So the audience in London knew the music before they knew the show.
“We started selling out immediately, and our fans, who we call the Corn Nuts, started dressing up in costumes. It took on a Rocky Horror Picture Show vibe. That movie is my favourite of all time. Growing up, I went to see it every weekend in Texas, so I loved it. “The cult following started to grow and the UK quickly claimed the show as its own - ‘Heathers is ours’ - and we’re very happy with that.”
Beyond minor alterations to a couple of lines (references too obscure for UK audiences), the musical stayed the same after crossing the pond. The bigger differences are between the stage and movie versions, with the former adding an element of hope to the latter’s pitch-black plot. Andy and his team were determined not to water down the potential horrors of the student experience, even in the wake of high school violence witnessed in the years since the film was made.
“In the States we unfortunately live day to day with school violence, and we didn’t want to shy away from that. I always think one of art’s great opportunities is to put [that kind of thing] in front of people and not hide behind it.
“So we kept the bomb in the school, we kept the violence, but what we did differently - and which Kevin and Larry were really insistent upon - was make sure we ended with an element of hope. We’re not wishy-washy about it; the message isn’t ‘Hey everybody, good people will always win and bad people will be vanquished’. We point out that high school’s never gonna go away; there’s always gonna be challenges, there’s always gonna be assholes and horrible people - but if you’re a good person and you stand together, there’s a chance you can make it a little better.”
Andy is determined to make things better for the UK theatre scene too, with in-progress musical 13 Going On 30 set to launch here rather than in his homeland.
“What I love about the UK, having been here since 2017 on and off, is that there’s such a tremendous core of acting talent that every time I read a new script, I’m like ‘There’s 20 people I can think of for this right now.
“The reception to Heathers has been so lovely that I want to experience that again and again. As long as your country will have me, I will be happy to be here.”
by Steve Adams
on Tue, 21 Feb 2023
High School shootings have become such a regular occurrence since the film version of Heathers came out in 1988 that the producers of the musical version have probably given up worrying that performing in the wake of yet another tragedy could be in especially bad taste.
The story is always in bad taste of course – that’s the point. It’s what made the jet-black comedy such a cult (if not box office) hit, alongside star turns from Winona Ryder and Christian Slater as the teen misfits Veronica and JD, and a slew of quotable lines that are mostly present and correct in the musical remake. Whether a musical remake is appropriate for such source material is another matter of course, since the murder of school bullies, faked suicides, genuine suicide attempts, date rape, body shaming and homophobia hardly lend themselves to a cheery sing-song.
But that’s exactly what co-writers Lawrence O’Keefe and Kevin Murphy have done, and with considerable success judging by sold out signs in the West End and packed houses on the current tour, including this night at the Belgrade, where the audience whooped and cheered every set-piece. That was probably as much for the West End-quality production values as the show itself, which although risky and risqué in equal measure, toned down some of the movie’s darkness as well as moral ambiguities to make for a colourful romp through teen-angst USA.
As a result we get a Veronica (the energetic Jenna Innes) who’s more innocent than conflicted, a JD (Jacob Fowler) more damaged than creepy, and a Heather Chandler (the scene-stealing Verity Thompson) more witty than evil. Oh, and murders that are more comic than criminal – not least because the victims are instantly brought back to life as ghosts. That device is one of the co-writers’ smartest moves, and alongside some terrific set-pieces and expanded characters (hippy teacher Ms Fleming briefly comperes proceedings) brings a crucial, if unlikely (and some might argue inappropriate) degree of frivolity to proceedings.
Most musicals are supposed to be frivolous of course, and this one is ultimately no exception. The 80s-style show tunes are lively but largely forgettable – a couple of the lead vocals sadly the opposite, but for all the wrong reasons – but the energetic cast, dynamic choreography and colourful costumes make for a rollicking good night out. Particularly if you had a brain tumour for breakfast.
3 stars
Reviewed by Steve Adams at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry on Tuesday 19 September. Heathers The Musical continues to show at the Belgrade Theatre until Sat 23 September.
The stage version of Heathers is not for the faint-hearted. It is a harrowing and deeply disturbing rock musical, closely based on the 1989 film of the same name - a teen cult classic starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater.
Although dark and shocking - it deals with distressing and controversial issues including bullying, bulimia, homophobia, teen suicide, sexual assault and school violence - it is nevertheless an oddly likeable, humorous musical. It also boasts an extremely catchy soundtrack - including Beautiful, Candy Store, My Dead Gay Son and Seventeen - which serves to balance its bright, bold and brash tone with its significantly more sinister subplot.
Seventeen-year-old Veronica Sawyers - played by Jenna Innes - is initially thrilled to be accepted into the ruling high-school clique - ‘The Heathers’. However, she soon discovers that there is a high price to pay for awesome popularity. The trio of Heathers are certainly beautiful but also manipulative and cruel. Veronica grows to loathe being a part of their clique, as it means mocking and bullying the very same students she used to call her friends. At the same time, she fears the loss of social status that would result from not conforming to their power games.
Veronica’s life gets even more complicated when she begins a dangerous romance with Jason Dean (JD) - played by Jacob Fouler - a school rebel with murder in mind. She finds herself inadvertently involved in the death of three classmates, helping JD pass off their deaths as apparent suicides. Before too long she feels hopelessly torn between the Heathers, JD - whose desire, with her assistance, is to rid their high school of the cruel elite - and her own conscience.
The majority of the show’s songs are performed by or with Veronica, which must be demanding in the extreme for Innes but is a challenge she takes in her stride. There is an impressive chemistry between Veronica and JD as their relationship develops and deepens. Innes and Fouler are talented actors with great vocals and admirable comic timing.
The sinister and twisted characters of the three Heathers, played by Verity Thompson, Summer Priest and Eliza Bowden, are flamboyantly portrayed throughout. The trio very much own the stage, and along with the rest of the cast produce passionate performances that give the show a real sense of momentum and energy.
Choreography, set design and costumes are all excellent.
Heathers has been given an age recommendation of 14-plus due to its challenging subject matter and use of offensive language, but it was clear from last night’s audience reaction that it’s a show with a strong cult following. Many of those who came to see it were dressed in primary colours, just like the Heathers. The standing ovation at the end was truly enthusiastic - this is evidently a show that many, many people have really come to love.
If you’re not familiar with the film or the musical, don’t be put off. This stage adaptation makes for a strangely uplifting and thought-provoking theatrical experience that’s well worth catching. And who knows... you might even love it so much that you become the latest fully paid-up member of Heathers’ cult following!
5 stars
Reveiwed by Sue Hull at Birmingham’s The Alexandra, Tuesday 16 May.
The black comedy rock musical comes to the Midlands.
Although far from being an unqualified success with the critics, Heathers The Musical did great business in the West End and is proving popular on its first-ever UK tour. Based on the cult 1989 movie starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater, the show follows the character of Veronica Sawyer, a high school student who’s tired of being part of a feared and popular clique with three girls named Heather. Eager to opt out, she finds herself drawn to new student Jason ‘JD’ Dean, a rebellious young man with murder in mind...
Black comedy Heathers might not have been a box-office smash on its release in 1988, but Michael Lehmann’s movie has gone on to become a cult classic, with a clutch of memorable lines and a high-school story that connects with teenagers the world over. The musical version is doing much the same thing, but with a bit more hope, a little less hate, and even more fun - as its director, Andy Fickman, explains to What’s On...
Director Andy Fickman is out of breath. He’s broken off from running two sets of rehearsals for Heathers The Musical - one with the West End cast, one with the touring company - and is scampering around trying to get a phone signal, as well as a bit of quiet, to speak to me about taking the hugely successful show on the road. He says he’s happy to take a break, but it’s evident that he’s happiest when working.
Which is just as well, as he’s a man very much in demand. He helped devise and launch the musical in Los Angeles, then took it to New York, and has been at the helm ever since it transferred to London in 2018, where it proved an instant success and has been running on and off (Covid, you know…) ever since. And if that wasn’t enough, he’s continued to direct movies and TV shows - he’s worked with everyone from Billy Crystal and Bette Midler to Matthew Perry and Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson. He has one film due for release - One True Loves - and another in pre-production: Tension Ring. Oh, and there’s a brand-new stage musical (13 Going On 30) in the works too.
“I’m someone who loves to keep working,” he understates cheerily, in an accent becoming more and more mid-Atlantic the longer he spends in the UK. If he had any cowboy drawl from growing up in Texas, then he’s definitely lost it, but the passion for TV and movies that developed during those childhood years has certainly never left him.
“I was a child of the ’80s and all the John Hughes movies were my favourites. I remember seeing Heathers at the movies and was just blown away by the darkness of the comedy and the message.
“Cut to years later, and [writer] Kevin Murphy and I had just finished doing another cult musical called Reefer Madness and were looking to see what our next project would be. Two producers in Los Angeles called to ask what we thought about Heathers, and I just jumped.”
The duo tracked down composer and lyricist Larry O’Keefe and got to work, but not before having lengthy discussions about how to tackle the source material and reposition the piece that spawned such quotable lines as ‘greetings and salutations’, ‘how very’, ‘I love my dead gay son’ and ‘Did you have a brain tumour for breakfast?’
“We spent a lot of time trying to figure out how we would pull off Heathers and what changes we would make. We got very lucky, in that the original movie’s creative team - Dan Waters, who wrote the script, Michael Lehmann, who directed, and Denise Di Novi, who produced it - became wonderful creative partners of ours. So we found a way to do the movie but not end it quite so nihilistically, as there’s not a great deal of hope at the end!
“So it was kind of a dream come true. And all these years later, it’s still a dream come true.”
All these years later is right. The original stage show opened in 2010, and the film came 20 years before that. The movie would largely have been forgotten by now if not for a core cult following that has grown exponentially over the years.
“When the movie came out, it wasn’t a smash hit, but over the years, aside from launching great careers - Christian Slater, Winona Ryder, Shannen Doherty [all of whom have seen and lauded the stage version] - it has remained a cult film. When we launched the musical it was the same thing - it too started with a cult following, but by the time we shut down in New York, the amateur rights were going left and right.”
During Heathers’ New York run, the cast recorded an album of songs from the show which not only proved hugely popular in the US but across the Atlantic as well. A call from Paul Taylor Mills, from London’s Other Palace Theatre - at the time owned by Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber - saw the show relocate to the UK, much to Andy’s bafflement.
“We were like, honestly? Will anybody in London know anything about this movie? And will they care about the late ’80s in Sherwood, Ohio, the waning years of the Reagan administration, the heart of MTV? Will they connect?
“What we didn’t realise was that the album we’d done in New York did gangbuster business here as well, and a lot of actors were using songs from the show for auditions. So the audience in London knew the music before they knew the show.
“We started selling out immediately, and our fans, who we call the Corn Nuts, started dressing up in costumes. It took on a Rocky Horror Picture Show vibe. That movie is my favourite of all time. Growing up, I went to see it every weekend in Texas, so I loved it. “The cult following started to grow and the UK quickly claimed the show as its own - ‘Heathers is ours’ - and we’re very happy with that.”
Beyond minor alterations to a couple of lines (references too obscure for UK audiences), the musical stayed the same after crossing the pond. The bigger differences are between the stage and movie versions, with the former adding an element of hope to the latter’s pitch-black plot. Andy and his team were determined not to water down the potential horrors of the student experience, even in the wake of high school violence witnessed in the years since the film was made.
“In the States we unfortunately live day to day with school violence, and we didn’t want to shy away from that. I always think one of art’s great opportunities is to put [that kind of thing] in front of people and not hide behind it.
“So we kept the bomb in the school, we kept the violence, but what we did differently - and which Kevin and Larry were really insistent upon - was make sure we ended with an element of hope. We’re not wishy-washy about it; the message isn’t ‘Hey everybody, good people will always win and bad people will be vanquished’. We point out that high school’s never gonna go away; there’s always gonna be challenges, there’s always gonna be assholes and horrible people - but if you’re a good person and you stand together, there’s a chance you can make it a little better.”
Andy is determined to make things better for the UK theatre scene too, with in-progress musical 13 Going On 30 set to launch here rather than in his homeland.
“What I love about the UK, having been here since 2017 on and off, is that there’s such a tremendous core of acting talent that every time I read a new script, I’m like ‘There’s 20 people I can think of for this right now.
“The reception to Heathers has been so lovely that I want to experience that again and again. As long as your country will have me, I will be happy to be here.”
by Steve Adams
on Tue, 21 Feb 2023
High School shootings have become such a regular occurrence since the film version of Heathers came out in 1988 that the producers of the musical version have probably given up worrying that performing in the wake of yet another tragedy could be in especially bad taste.
The story is always in bad taste of course – that’s the point. It’s what made the jet-black comedy such a cult (if not box office) hit, alongside star turns from Winona Ryder and Christian Slater as the teen misfits Veronica and JD, and a slew of quotable lines that are mostly present and correct in the musical remake. Whether a musical remake is appropriate for such source material is another matter of course, since the murder of school bullies, faked suicides, genuine suicide attempts, date rape, body shaming and homophobia hardly lend themselves to a cheery sing-song.
But that’s exactly what co-writers Lawrence O’Keefe and Kevin Murphy have done, and with considerable success judging by sold out signs in the West End and packed houses on the current tour, including this night at the Belgrade, where the audience whooped and cheered every set-piece. That was probably as much for the West End-quality production values as the show itself, which although risky and risqué in equal measure, toned down some of the movie’s darkness as well as moral ambiguities to make for a colourful romp through teen-angst USA.
As a result we get a Veronica (the energetic Jenna Innes) who’s more innocent than conflicted, a JD (Jacob Fowler) more damaged than creepy, and a Heather Chandler (the scene-stealing Verity Thompson) more witty than evil. Oh, and murders that are more comic than criminal – not least because the victims are instantly brought back to life as ghosts. That device is one of the co-writers’ smartest moves, and alongside some terrific set-pieces and expanded characters (hippy teacher Ms Fleming briefly comperes proceedings) brings a crucial, if unlikely (and some might argue inappropriate) degree of frivolity to proceedings.
Most musicals are supposed to be frivolous of course, and this one is ultimately no exception. The 80s-style show tunes are lively but largely forgettable – a couple of the lead vocals sadly the opposite, but for all the wrong reasons – but the energetic cast, dynamic choreography and colourful costumes make for a rollicking good night out. Particularly if you had a brain tumour for breakfast.
3 stars
Reviewed by Steve Adams at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry on Tuesday 19 September. Heathers The Musical continues to show at the Belgrade Theatre until Sat 23 September.
The stage version of Heathers is not for the faint-hearted. It is a harrowing and deeply disturbing rock musical, closely based on the 1989 film of the same name - a teen cult classic starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater.
Although dark and shocking - it deals with distressing and controversial issues including bullying, bulimia, homophobia, teen suicide, sexual assault and school violence - it is nevertheless an oddly likeable, humorous musical. It also boasts an extremely catchy soundtrack - including Beautiful, Candy Store, My Dead Gay Son and Seventeen - which serves to balance its bright, bold and brash tone with its significantly more sinister subplot.
Seventeen-year-old Veronica Sawyers - played by Jenna Innes - is initially thrilled to be accepted into the ruling high-school clique - ‘The Heathers’. However, she soon discovers that there is a high price to pay for awesome popularity. The trio of Heathers are certainly beautiful but also manipulative and cruel. Veronica grows to loathe being a part of their clique, as it means mocking and bullying the very same students she used to call her friends. At the same time, she fears the loss of social status that would result from not conforming to their power games.
Veronica’s life gets even more complicated when she begins a dangerous romance with Jason Dean (JD) - played by Jacob Fouler - a school rebel with murder in mind. She finds herself inadvertently involved in the death of three classmates, helping JD pass off their deaths as apparent suicides. Before too long she feels hopelessly torn between the Heathers, JD - whose desire, with her assistance, is to rid their high school of the cruel elite - and her own conscience.
The majority of the show’s songs are performed by or with Veronica, which must be demanding in the extreme for Innes but is a challenge she takes in her stride. There is an impressive chemistry between Veronica and JD as their relationship develops and deepens. Innes and Fouler are talented actors with great vocals and admirable comic timing.
The sinister and twisted characters of the three Heathers, played by Verity Thompson, Summer Priest and Eliza Bowden, are flamboyantly portrayed throughout. The trio very much own the stage, and along with the rest of the cast produce passionate performances that give the show a real sense of momentum and energy.
Choreography, set design and costumes are all excellent.
Heathers has been given an age recommendation of 14-plus due to its challenging subject matter and use of offensive language, but it was clear from last night’s audience reaction that it’s a show with a strong cult following. Many of those who came to see it were dressed in primary colours, just like the Heathers. The standing ovation at the end was truly enthusiastic - this is evidently a show that many, many people have really come to love.
If you’re not familiar with the film or the musical, don’t be put off. This stage adaptation makes for a strangely uplifting and thought-provoking theatrical experience that’s well worth catching. And who knows... you might even love it so much that you become the latest fully paid-up member of Heathers’ cult following!
5 stars
Reveiwed by Sue Hull at Birmingham’s The Alexandra, Tuesday 16 May.
3 Stars on Tue, 16 May 2023