Food & Drink

Grunge Musical Coming to Seattle Repertory Theatre

Nirvana's former manager is reportedly involved in the play set in 1990s Seattle.

By Michael Rietmulder July 7, 2017

Soundgarden Roof 87_3 001

Put on your best flannel and favorite ripped jeans, kids. Grunge is coming to the theater.

According to Variety, the Seattle Repertory Theater has commissioned a musical set in grunge-era Seattle, with an ex-Nirvana manager reportedly involved. It sounds like the project is still very much in the early stages, but the fictional story plans to incorporate songs from 1990s stars like Soundgarden and Alice in Chains.

Spearheading the project is Wendy C. Goldberg, the artistic director of the O’Neil Theater Center’s National Playright’s Conference in Connecticut, the most rock ‘n’ roll state in America. Goldberg will direct and co-create with composer and playwright Matt Schatz.

Former Nirvana and Hole manager Janet Billig Rich, who now runs a Los Angeles-based licensing company, is involved, as is BMG executive Elyse Cogan. BMG owns the publishing rights to Soundgarden and Alice in Chains’ music.

According to Cogan, the as-yet-untitled musical is targeted for development workshop late this year and the script and storyline are still in the works.

This certainly isn’t the first time rock ‘n’ roll and the theater have crossed paths in recent years. In 2010, a musical adapted from Green Day’s American Idiot album nabbed a pair of Tony Awards. The following year Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark hit Broadway with music penned by Bono and The Edge. Just this year saw the premiere of a musical inspired by Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell, and if Meat Loaf can have his own musical, we suppose grunge can, too?

It’s unclear when this grunge musical might hit the stage. But if this doesn’t get your nostalgic juices flowing, check out the recently unearthed footage of Nirvana rocking an Aberdeen Radio Shack.

 

Follow Us

Finding Place in Pictures

Finding Place in Pictures

Artist Sky Hopinka’s first solo museum exhibit in the northwest showcases his creative approach to language and identity

“I had cassette tapes and workbooks, but it was hard because I was living in Washington, and my tribal language has roots in Wisconsin,” Sky Hopinka says. Learning alone, he could listen to prerecorded Hocak phrases and practice writing letters and words, but an essential component was missing — another person to speak with. Photo

Feeding Ghosts to Free Them

Feeding Ghosts to Free Them

Artist Tessa Hulls creates a revealing graphic novel to help her deal with childhood trauma

Seattle artist Tessa Hulls’ new graphic novel Feeding Ghosts is a deeply stirring narrative of loss, mental illness, and intergenerational trauma. She says that she wrote it to answer this question: What broke my family? Much of the book is about repetition, and how three generations of women in Hulls’ family were emotionally crippled by

Seattle Launches Public Poetry Campaign

Seattle Launches Public Poetry Campaign

Short poems on sustainability will crop up across the city in April

Poetry installations will appear across Seattle starting April 1 as part of the city’s Public Poetry campaign...

Beauty and Diversity in Art

Beauty and Diversity in Art

Seattle's art scene is embracing more voices and viewpoints than ever

Seattle has become something of a hot spot for diversity in the arts...