THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE: Now Available for Licensing!

THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE: Now Available for Licensing!

NOW AVAILABLE

NOW AVAILABLE

 


The Tony Award winning musical, THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE, is now available for licensing!  The William Finn/Rachel Sheinkin comedy opened on Broadway in the spring of 2005, where it delighted audiences, received critical acclaim, and earned three Drama Desks (Outstanding Book of a Musical, Outstanding Director of a Musical, and Outstanding Ensemble Performance) and two Tony Awards (Best Book and Best Featured Actor).  The story focuses on six quirky young competitors at a spelling bee who learn that they don't have to win to be winners.

THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE is a great choice for community and regional theatres.  Its small cast and almost lack of a set-the show could be done in a school gym or cafeteria without adding a thing-make it ideal for those working with a tight budget.  Moreover, the material for each character is so strong-and because no one character gets a disproportionate amount of stage time-so it's very much an ensemble piece.  Three or four audience members are invited to take part of every performance, bringing the entire audience into the show. Another unique characteristic of the show is its heavy use of improvisation.  For example, the character of Vice Principal Panch, who provides words to the students, improvises a sentence for each word, as well as fun facts about the contestants.  This would be a perfect role for a male actor who is more of a comic than a singer.

The show also features flexible casting.  Although the original Broadway cast included two Asian-American actors and an African-American actor, nothing in the script specifies the ethnicity of any character.  In fact, casting actors of different ethnicities brings out different aspects of the material.  The relationship between Rona Peretti, who supervises the bee, and an over-achieving student, Marcy, is very different when Asian-American actresses play both characters, for example; on Broadway Rona was played by a white actress, but her understudy was Asian-American.  Similarly, an African-American, Latina, or white actress would each color the role of Marcy in fascinating ways, and this is also true of any of the other characters.

Original Broadway Cast--from playbill.comTo license THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE, check out its MTI show page. To share your thoughts on the show, visit THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE's MTI ShowSpace page. Learn more about the show at its official website.