New musical exploring the singer’s life both on and off stage.
Coming 25 years after Frank Sinatra’s death, Sinatra The Musical is the first production of its kind to explore the singer’s life both on and off stage. Produced by the Rep with an award-winning creative team and featuring more than 25 of Frank’s best-loved songs, the show focuses on his 1940s rise and fall, as his skyrocketing popularity is dramatically undermined by his headline-making affair with actress Ava Gardner...
Casting includes Matt Doyle as Frank, Ana Villafañe as the movie goddess Ava Gardner and Phoebe Panaretos as Frank’s first wife, Nancy Sinatra.
A brand-new stage show about (and featuring the music of) Frank Sinatra receives its world premiere in Birmingham this month. Tony Award-winning writer Joe DiPietro tells What’s On why he jumped at the chance to work on Sinatra The Musical, a production which is promising to shed new light on the life and loves of the legendary singer...
A brand-new show about legendary crooner Frank Sinatra premieres at The Rep in Birmingham this month.
Titled Sinatra The Musical, the show is already raising plenty of eyebrows across the globe, thanks in no small part to the Tony Award-winning credentials of its key players.
Matt Doyle, who took home the 2022 Tony for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (for his performance as Jamie in the Broadway revival of Company), plays Sinatra. Two-time Tony-winning writer Joe DiPietro has penned the script, and three-time Tony winner Kathleen Marshall will direct.
Frank’s youngest daughter, Tina Sinatra, is one of the producers, ensuring the show offers a unique insight into the life and times of the celebrated singer and actor. Alongside her duties as producer, Tina has shared with writer Joe DiPietro a number of stories about her father which had never really been heard before.
These unique elements give the musical a truly exciting edge, according to New Jersey-born DiPietro, who says that working with Tina made the experience even more special for him.
“We have a very open dialogue,” he reveals. “She’s very supportive and she loves the show. Just the other night, she said: ‘This is the book that my father never wrote.’ Frank never wrote an autobiography, and there’s so much personal stuff about his life, and his life with his family, that Tina told me that’s never been told anywhere else.
“It’s hard writing a show about your beloved mother and father and his troubles and peccadilloes, but she’s been very open and honest about it. I think it’s gonna surprise people how deeply we explore Frank. It’s not a watered-down version of his life; it’s really about the demons he faced and overcame, and how he put all that into his songs.”
The show will feature more than 25 of Frank’s best-known tunes - likely to include such classics as My Way, Strangers In The Night, Fly Me To The Moon and New York, New York. And with a cast of 20 actors and 17 musicians, Sinatra The Musical is set to be a big event in more ways than one. Which begs the question: Why hold the world premiere in Birmingham? It turns out Joe has history with The Rep, as his last musical, What’s New Pussycat?, premiered there last year.
“It was a big success. I loved Birmingham, I thought the theatre was beautiful, Sean Foley [The Rep’s artistic director] is great, and we had terrific audiences. One of the producers of Sinatra came to see the show and really loved the theatre, so when we were looking for a place that was neither New York nor London to premiere it - a regional theatre with some prominence and the ability to produce a big, splashy musical - Birmingham Rep came up.”
And even though the show is inescapably very American - although the cast is British bar the two leads - Joe is quick to point out that its story has global appeal.
“The interesting thing about Sinatra is that he’s so worldwide. When I started this project, I knew he was huge obviously, but I was amazed about how he crosses cultures and generations. Once we started looking around for where to start the show, there was interest from all over.”
Despite his burgeoning reputation as the go-to writer for major musicals - his next project will be a show about the work of songwriter Dianne Warren - Joe thinks his family roots were a major reason he was invited to script Sinatra.
“I got a phone call from a producer I knew, who I think thought ‘Oh, Joe’s an Italian-American, he’ll know about all this!’ What Sinatra meant to the Italian-American community in the 1940s and ’50s was huge; beyond his role as an entertainer. He really was the embodiment of the American dream for Italians.
“When they asked if I’d be interested in meeting Tina and writing a musical, I said absolutely! It was a dream come true - I knew all the songs and I knew a lot about him, but Sinatra had a long life with lots of very different parts to it, so I also learned a lot in the process.
“The first time I met Tina, I told her my Italian grandmother, who lived in a little town in New Jersey, had two pictures hanging up on her kitchen wall - the Pope and Frank Sinatra. They were the real cultural touchstones for me growing up.”
The musical covers a specific - and dramatic - 10-year period in Sinatra’s life, during which he’d become a teen idol and his career was really taking off but his family life and marriage to wife Nancy were suffering. When he began an affair with Ava Gardner, his records stopped selling, the press turned against him and he endured a huge fall from grace - setting the scene for one of the greatest comebacks in showbusiness history.
Joe knows a dramatic scenario when he sees one (“no conflict, no play - and Frank definitely had conflict in his life”), but admits he’s tinkered with the timeline to ensure the show contains a wide selection of Sinatra’s classic tunes.
“It’s a musical, not a documentary. The show ends in 1952, but I took songs that were recorded after that. I really wanted to use songs from various parts of his life [because] even though he didn’t write them, they were very personal to him and made perfect sense for a lot of the drama that happened during this period of his life.
“He was clearly a complicated, emotional man who had many demons, and he took all of these emotions and feelings and put them into his music. When he sings about being in a bar at 3am, you know this guy didn’t have to do research. He’s experienced it; he’s lived that song.”
Joe also believes the show will appeal to audiences beyond Sinatra’s fans and those already familiar with the iconic singer and his songs, not least because, while he was very much a one-off, his story is universal.
“He was a tough guy - what we used to call a ‘man’s man’. He loved women, got into fights, drank too much, but also supported his family and cared about what happened in the world. So there’s a lot in his story for everyone, and even though he wasn’t a rock & roller, he was one of the original rebels of music. He stood his ground - and not to use a cliché, did things his way.
“In many ways he was the precursor to Mick Jagger and all the folks who came after. The word I keep using is swagger - he was vulnerable in many ways and could access that place in his music, but he had swagger when he walked into a room, and I think that makes him a really compelling character for an evening of theatre.”
by Steve Adams
on Wed, 23 Aug 2023
Sinatra was the musical just begging to be made. One of the recording world’s biggest stars, a gutsy
story and some amazing songs lay the groundwork for a surefire hit - and it’s Birmingham Rep who
have made it.
Written by Joe DiPietro, Sinatra The Musical takes us to the early days of Ol’ Blue Eyes’ career. We
see him building a family with his wife Nancy and building a career as he gradually works his way
through fronting bands and orchestras to singing solo. Then he crashes spectacularly until his private
life and his musical career are in tatters.
But Sinatra tells us that what matters is not how many times you get knocked down but how many
times you get back on your feet again and he lives up to those words - achieving what is often called
the biggest showbusiness comeback in history.
The musical needs the perfect showman as Sinatra and Matt Doyle epitomizes this. He oozes charm,
even when he is behaving intolerably, he has bucketloads of charisma and, even more importantly,
he wins the audience over so that we are rooting for him no matter what.
Doyle, whose career features a string of hit musicals including Company, Book of Mormon, Spring
Awakening, Sweeney Todd and West Side Story, also has a hugely expressive singing voice, picking
up both the sadness and the joy of Sinatra’s songs.
He is supported by a really strong cast across the show. Phoebe Panaretos is the stalwart first wife
Nancy, who falls for the young Sinatra, believes in him and even supports him travelling to
Hollywood despite knowing his weakness for women. We all feel for her as he heads for the bright
lights leaving her to care for three children while her husband romances Hollywood actresses.
But DiPietro’s genius is that we also feel sympathy for Ana Villafañe’s Ava Gardner despite her role
as the other woman. In Villafañe’s Gardner we see a woman who is only too aware of the fragility of
her fame and yet who fights for it ruthlessly and selfishly - prepared to sacrifice anything for her
next movie.
The show has some great other roles, not least Dawn Buckland as Frank’s savvy mother. Packed full
of humour, here is an Italian mamma who pushes her son no matter what. But we also see her soft
side when she dances to You Make Me Feel So Young with husband Marty played by Vincent Riotta.
Directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall with sets designed by Peter McKintosh, there are
some wonderful moments of theatre dotted throughout the show. Sinatra’s first foray as a
womanizer in Hollywood is brilliantly portrayed as a series of stars appear and disappear in his
double bed. And there is a lovely cameo from Ryesha Higgs as Billie Holliday meeting Frank when
he’s down and out in a bar in the early hours of the morning and joining with him to sing One For My
Baby.
It all looks luscious, from the kitchens of 1930s New Jersey through to the excitement of a
Hollywood set. Jon Morrell’s costumes remind us of the days when dressing up really meant
something with women in beautifully structured dresses and the guys always with a jacket within
reach.
Central to the musical are, of course, the songs made famous by Frank and more than 25 are packed
in one after the other including All of Me, Come Fly With Me, Love and Marriage, That’s Life, The
Way You Look Tonight and New York, New York.
Produced by Birmingham Rep in association with Universal Music Group Theatrical and Frank Sinatra
Enterprises, this is ultimately a sympathetic tale of Sinatra and yet one which isn’t afraid to show his
faults. What comes through above all is the fractured human being behind the face and voice we all
know so well.
Birmingham Rep should be justly proud of staging the world premiere of this musical. Bursting with
glamour and glitz but also grit, hopefully it’s only a matter of time before we see it transfer to the
West End and Broadway, taking the name of Birmingham with it.
New musical exploring the singer’s life both on and off stage.
Coming 25 years after Frank Sinatra’s death, Sinatra The Musical is the first production of its kind to explore the singer’s life both on and off stage. Produced by the Rep with an award-winning creative team and featuring more than 25 of Frank’s best-loved songs, the show focuses on his 1940s rise and fall, as his skyrocketing popularity is dramatically undermined by his headline-making affair with actress Ava Gardner...
Casting includes Matt Doyle as Frank, Ana Villafañe as the movie goddess Ava Gardner and Phoebe Panaretos as Frank’s first wife, Nancy Sinatra.
A brand-new stage show about (and featuring the music of) Frank Sinatra receives its world premiere in Birmingham this month. Tony Award-winning writer Joe DiPietro tells What’s On why he jumped at the chance to work on Sinatra The Musical, a production which is promising to shed new light on the life and loves of the legendary singer...
A brand-new show about legendary crooner Frank Sinatra premieres at The Rep in Birmingham this month.
Titled Sinatra The Musical, the show is already raising plenty of eyebrows across the globe, thanks in no small part to the Tony Award-winning credentials of its key players.
Matt Doyle, who took home the 2022 Tony for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (for his performance as Jamie in the Broadway revival of Company), plays Sinatra. Two-time Tony-winning writer Joe DiPietro has penned the script, and three-time Tony winner Kathleen Marshall will direct.
Frank’s youngest daughter, Tina Sinatra, is one of the producers, ensuring the show offers a unique insight into the life and times of the celebrated singer and actor. Alongside her duties as producer, Tina has shared with writer Joe DiPietro a number of stories about her father which had never really been heard before.
These unique elements give the musical a truly exciting edge, according to New Jersey-born DiPietro, who says that working with Tina made the experience even more special for him.
“We have a very open dialogue,” he reveals. “She’s very supportive and she loves the show. Just the other night, she said: ‘This is the book that my father never wrote.’ Frank never wrote an autobiography, and there’s so much personal stuff about his life, and his life with his family, that Tina told me that’s never been told anywhere else.
“It’s hard writing a show about your beloved mother and father and his troubles and peccadilloes, but she’s been very open and honest about it. I think it’s gonna surprise people how deeply we explore Frank. It’s not a watered-down version of his life; it’s really about the demons he faced and overcame, and how he put all that into his songs.”
The show will feature more than 25 of Frank’s best-known tunes - likely to include such classics as My Way, Strangers In The Night, Fly Me To The Moon and New York, New York. And with a cast of 20 actors and 17 musicians, Sinatra The Musical is set to be a big event in more ways than one. Which begs the question: Why hold the world premiere in Birmingham? It turns out Joe has history with The Rep, as his last musical, What’s New Pussycat?, premiered there last year.
“It was a big success. I loved Birmingham, I thought the theatre was beautiful, Sean Foley [The Rep’s artistic director] is great, and we had terrific audiences. One of the producers of Sinatra came to see the show and really loved the theatre, so when we were looking for a place that was neither New York nor London to premiere it - a regional theatre with some prominence and the ability to produce a big, splashy musical - Birmingham Rep came up.”
And even though the show is inescapably very American - although the cast is British bar the two leads - Joe is quick to point out that its story has global appeal.
“The interesting thing about Sinatra is that he’s so worldwide. When I started this project, I knew he was huge obviously, but I was amazed about how he crosses cultures and generations. Once we started looking around for where to start the show, there was interest from all over.”
Despite his burgeoning reputation as the go-to writer for major musicals - his next project will be a show about the work of songwriter Dianne Warren - Joe thinks his family roots were a major reason he was invited to script Sinatra.
“I got a phone call from a producer I knew, who I think thought ‘Oh, Joe’s an Italian-American, he’ll know about all this!’ What Sinatra meant to the Italian-American community in the 1940s and ’50s was huge; beyond his role as an entertainer. He really was the embodiment of the American dream for Italians.
“When they asked if I’d be interested in meeting Tina and writing a musical, I said absolutely! It was a dream come true - I knew all the songs and I knew a lot about him, but Sinatra had a long life with lots of very different parts to it, so I also learned a lot in the process.
“The first time I met Tina, I told her my Italian grandmother, who lived in a little town in New Jersey, had two pictures hanging up on her kitchen wall - the Pope and Frank Sinatra. They were the real cultural touchstones for me growing up.”
The musical covers a specific - and dramatic - 10-year period in Sinatra’s life, during which he’d become a teen idol and his career was really taking off but his family life and marriage to wife Nancy were suffering. When he began an affair with Ava Gardner, his records stopped selling, the press turned against him and he endured a huge fall from grace - setting the scene for one of the greatest comebacks in showbusiness history.
Joe knows a dramatic scenario when he sees one (“no conflict, no play - and Frank definitely had conflict in his life”), but admits he’s tinkered with the timeline to ensure the show contains a wide selection of Sinatra’s classic tunes.
“It’s a musical, not a documentary. The show ends in 1952, but I took songs that were recorded after that. I really wanted to use songs from various parts of his life [because] even though he didn’t write them, they were very personal to him and made perfect sense for a lot of the drama that happened during this period of his life.
“He was clearly a complicated, emotional man who had many demons, and he took all of these emotions and feelings and put them into his music. When he sings about being in a bar at 3am, you know this guy didn’t have to do research. He’s experienced it; he’s lived that song.”
Joe also believes the show will appeal to audiences beyond Sinatra’s fans and those already familiar with the iconic singer and his songs, not least because, while he was very much a one-off, his story is universal.
“He was a tough guy - what we used to call a ‘man’s man’. He loved women, got into fights, drank too much, but also supported his family and cared about what happened in the world. So there’s a lot in his story for everyone, and even though he wasn’t a rock & roller, he was one of the original rebels of music. He stood his ground - and not to use a cliché, did things his way.
“In many ways he was the precursor to Mick Jagger and all the folks who came after. The word I keep using is swagger - he was vulnerable in many ways and could access that place in his music, but he had swagger when he walked into a room, and I think that makes him a really compelling character for an evening of theatre.”
by Steve Adams
on Wed, 23 Aug 2023
Sinatra was the musical just begging to be made. One of the recording world’s biggest stars, a gutsy
story and some amazing songs lay the groundwork for a surefire hit - and it’s Birmingham Rep who
have made it.
Written by Joe DiPietro, Sinatra The Musical takes us to the early days of Ol’ Blue Eyes’ career. We
see him building a family with his wife Nancy and building a career as he gradually works his way
through fronting bands and orchestras to singing solo. Then he crashes spectacularly until his private
life and his musical career are in tatters.
But Sinatra tells us that what matters is not how many times you get knocked down but how many
times you get back on your feet again and he lives up to those words - achieving what is often called
the biggest showbusiness comeback in history.
The musical needs the perfect showman as Sinatra and Matt Doyle epitomizes this. He oozes charm,
even when he is behaving intolerably, he has bucketloads of charisma and, even more importantly,
he wins the audience over so that we are rooting for him no matter what.
Doyle, whose career features a string of hit musicals including Company, Book of Mormon, Spring
Awakening, Sweeney Todd and West Side Story, also has a hugely expressive singing voice, picking
up both the sadness and the joy of Sinatra’s songs.
He is supported by a really strong cast across the show. Phoebe Panaretos is the stalwart first wife
Nancy, who falls for the young Sinatra, believes in him and even supports him travelling to
Hollywood despite knowing his weakness for women. We all feel for her as he heads for the bright
lights leaving her to care for three children while her husband romances Hollywood actresses.
But DiPietro’s genius is that we also feel sympathy for Ana Villafañe’s Ava Gardner despite her role
as the other woman. In Villafañe’s Gardner we see a woman who is only too aware of the fragility of
her fame and yet who fights for it ruthlessly and selfishly - prepared to sacrifice anything for her
next movie.
The show has some great other roles, not least Dawn Buckland as Frank’s savvy mother. Packed full
of humour, here is an Italian mamma who pushes her son no matter what. But we also see her soft
side when she dances to You Make Me Feel So Young with husband Marty played by Vincent Riotta.
Directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall with sets designed by Peter McKintosh, there are
some wonderful moments of theatre dotted throughout the show. Sinatra’s first foray as a
womanizer in Hollywood is brilliantly portrayed as a series of stars appear and disappear in his
double bed. And there is a lovely cameo from Ryesha Higgs as Billie Holliday meeting Frank when
he’s down and out in a bar in the early hours of the morning and joining with him to sing One For My
Baby.
It all looks luscious, from the kitchens of 1930s New Jersey through to the excitement of a
Hollywood set. Jon Morrell’s costumes remind us of the days when dressing up really meant
something with women in beautifully structured dresses and the guys always with a jacket within
reach.
Central to the musical are, of course, the songs made famous by Frank and more than 25 are packed
in one after the other including All of Me, Come Fly With Me, Love and Marriage, That’s Life, The
Way You Look Tonight and New York, New York.
Produced by Birmingham Rep in association with Universal Music Group Theatrical and Frank Sinatra
Enterprises, this is ultimately a sympathetic tale of Sinatra and yet one which isn’t afraid to show his
faults. What comes through above all is the fractured human being behind the face and voice we all
know so well.
Birmingham Rep should be justly proud of staging the world premiere of this musical. Bursting with
glamour and glitz but also grit, hopefully it’s only a matter of time before we see it transfer to the
West End and Broadway, taking the name of Birmingham with it.
Reviewed by Diane Parkes at The Rep, Birmingham on Tuesday 3 October. Sinatra The Musical continues to show at the venue until Saturday 28 October.
5 Stars on Wed, 04 Oct 2023