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Flying Over Sunset
View on Wikipedia| Flying Over Sunset | |
|---|---|
| Music | Tom Kitt |
| Lyrics | Michael Korie |
| Book | James Lapine |
| Premiere | 2015: Martha's Vineyard |
| Productions | 2015 Martha's Vineyard Reading 2016 Edgartown Reading 2021 Broadway |
Flying Over Sunset is a musical with music by Tom Kitt, lyrics by Michael Korie, and a book by James Lapine.[1] The musical is a fictional account of a meeting between Aldous Huxley, Clare Boothe Luce and Cary Grant, who all used the drug LSD.
Productions
[edit]Readings (2015 and 2016)
[edit]The musical had a reading in August 2015 at the Vineyard Arts Project (Martha's Vineyard) with Christine Ebersole playing Luce, and a cast featuring Boyd Gaines, Julia Murney, Tam Mutu and David Turner.[2][3]
A second reading was held on July 29, 2016 in Edgartown, Massachusetts. Performers who took part in the reading included the late Marin Mazzie, Boyd Gaines, Betsy Wolfe, Tam Mutu and Jennifer Simard.[4]
Broadway (2021)
[edit]The production was originally scheduled to open on April 16, 2020, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][6]
The musical premiered on Broadway at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on November 11, 2021 in previews with the official opening on December 13, 2021.[7][8]
The cast included Carmen Cusack as Clare Boothe Luce, Harry Hadden-Paton as Aldous Huxley Tony Yazbeck as Cary Grant, and Robert Sella as Gerald Heard. The musical was directed by Lapine with choreography by Michelle Dorrance, sets by Beowulf Boritt, costumes by Toni-Leslie James, lighting by Bradley King, and sound by Dan Moses Schreier.[7][9]
The production closed on January 16, 2022 after 63 performances (28 previews and 35 performances).[10]
Plot
[edit]Act l
[edit]Huxley, Grant, and Luce separately obtained LSD. Each is dealing with a problem: Huxley is grieving his wife's death, Grant his ineptitude with women, and Luce her guilt over the deaths of her mother and daughter.[11] Huxley takes LSD at the drugstore where he obtained it, and imagines the figures from the painting “Judith With the Head of Holofernes” coming to life around him ("Bella Donna Di Agonia").[11][12] Grant's first trip is when he meets his younger self and his violent father ("I Have It All"/"Funny Money").[11][12][13]
The three ultimately meet at the Brown Derby restaurant in Hollywood.[11]
Act ll
[edit]Huxley, Grant, and Luce gather at Luce's estate in Malibu, where they proceed on LSD trips with Gerald Heard as their guide.[11]
Cast
[edit]| Character | Broadway (2021) |
|---|---|
| Aldous Huxley | Harry Hadden-Paton |
| Maria Huxley | Laura Shoop |
| Gerald Heard | Robert Sella |
| Cary Grant | Tony Yazbeck |
| Dr. Harris/Father | Nehal Joshi |
| Archie Leach | Atticus Ware |
| Clare Boothe Luce | Carmen Cusack |
| Ann Brokaw/Judith | Kanisha Marie Feliciano |
| Austin/Handmaiden | Michele Ragusa |
| Rosalia/Sophia Loren | Emily Pynenburg |
Musical numbers
[edit]Source: Playbill[14]
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Reception
[edit]The show received mixed to negative reviews from critics, including AmNY,[15] The New York Times,[11] Theatrely,[13] and Timeout.[16] Generally, critics tended to dislike the book and music, while praising the show's cast, technical effects, set, sound design, and choreography.
Awards and nominations
[edit]Original Broadway production
[edit]| Year | Award Ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Tony Awards | Best Actress in a Musical | Carmen Cusack | Nominated | [17][18] |
| Best Original Score | Tom Kitt and Michael Korie | Nominated | |||
| Best Scenic Design of a Musical | Beowulf Boritt and 59 Productions | Nominated | |||
| Best Lighting Design of a Musical | Bradley King | Nominated | |||
| Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Scenic Design of a Musical | Beowulf Boritt | Won | [19][20] | |
| Outstanding Lighting Design for a Musical | Bradley King | Won[1] | |||
| Outstanding Projection Design | 59 Productions | Won | |||
| Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Actress in a Musical | Carmen Cusack | Nominated | [21] | |
| Outstanding Scenic Design | Beowulf Boritt | Nominated | |||
| Outstanding Lighting Design | Bradley King | Nominated | |||
| Outstanding Video/Projection Design | 59 Productions and Benjamin Pearcy | Nominated | |||
| Chita Rivera Awards | Outstanding Male Dancer in a Broadway Show | Tony Yazbeck | Nominated | [22] |
^ Flying Over Sunset tied with MJ the Musical for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lighting Design for a Musical.
References
[edit]- ^ Theater, Lincoln Center. "Flying Over Sunset". Lincoln Center Theater. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
- ^ Viagas, Robert (April 14, 2016). "James Lapine, Tom Kitt and Michael Korie Working on New Musical About LSD". Playbill. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
- ^ Nadler, Holly (September 2, 2015). "Flying Over Sunset lifts off at the Vineyard Arts Project". Martha's Vineyard Times.
- ^ Viagas, Robert (July 29, 2016). "Marin Mazzie Toplines Today's Reading of James Lapine's LSD Musical". Playbill. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
- ^ Evans, Greg (2020-06-24). "Broadway's 'The Music Man', 'Flying Over Sunset' Postponed Until 2021 Amid Speculation Of Theater Shutdown Extension – Update". Deadline. Retrieved 2020-06-24.
- ^ Lincoln Center Pushes to Fall 2020 BroadwayWorld, March 20, 2020
- ^ a b Gans, Andrew (May 13, 2021). "Lincoln Center Theater's Flying Over Sunset Will Open This Fall; Intimate Apparel Sets 2022 Dates". Playibll. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
- ^ "Photos: FLYING OVER SUNSET Celebrates Opening Night on Broadway". BroadwayWorld. 2021-12-14. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14.
- ^ Clement, Olivia (August 20, 2019). "Carmen Cusack, Harry Hadden-Paton, and Tony Yazbeck to Lead Cast of New Broadway Musical Flying Over Sunset". Playbill. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
- ^ "FLYING OVER SUNSET to End Broadway Run Early; Final Performance January 16". BroadwayWorld. 2022-01-05. Retrieved 2022-01-06.
- ^ a b c d e f Green, Jesse (2021-12-14). "Review: In 'Flying Over Sunset,' Getting High With the Stars". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ a b Evans, Greg (2021-12-14). "'Flying Over Sunset' Broadway Review: Musical Day Tripping With Cary Grant & Some Famous Friends". Deadline. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ a b "FLYING OVER SUNSET On a Smoothed-Out Trip — Review". www.theatrely.com. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ "Inside Playbill Gallery". Playbill. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
- ^ Windman, Matt (2021-12-13). "Review | 'Flying Over Sunset' is an artistic misfire | amNewYork". www.amny.com. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ Feldman, Adam. "Flying Over Sunset is an odd Broadway musical about LSD". Time Out New York. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ Culwell-Block, Logan (May 9, 2022). "2022 Tony Award Nominations: A Strange Loop, MJ, Paradise Square Lead the Pack". Playbill. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
- ^ Lewis, Hilary (June 12, 2022). "Tony Awards: Winners List (Updating Live)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
- ^ "66th Drama Desk Awards". Drama Desk Awards. Archived from the original on February 25, 2016. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
- ^ Culwell-Block, Logan (June 8, 2022). "Clyde's, Company, SIX: The Musical Lead 2022 Drama Desk Awards; See the Full List of Winners". Playbill. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
- ^ Gans, Andrew (April 26, 2022). "Nominees for 71st Annual Outer Critics Circle Awards Announced". Playbill. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
- ^ "2022 Chita Rivera Awards Nominations and Winners". ChitaRiveraAwards.com. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
External links
[edit]Flying Over Sunset
View on GrokipediaBackground and development
Historical inspiration
The emergence of LSD in the 1950s marked a period of intense psychiatric interest in its therapeutic potential, particularly for treating alcoholism, anxiety, and other mental health conditions. Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), first synthesized in 1938 and publicly reported in 1943, gained traction in clinical research after early experiments demonstrated its ability to induce profound psychological states under controlled conditions.[6] By the mid-1950s, LSD was legally administered in medical settings across North America and Europe, with studies exploring its use as an adjunct to psychotherapy. Key pioneers included British psychiatrist Humphry Osmond, who coined the term "psychedelic" in 1956 and conducted trials treating alcoholics with LSD and mescaline, reporting remission rates of up to 50% in some cohorts after a single session.[7] Similarly, American psychiatrist Sidney Cohen at UCLA ran extensive LSD experiments in the 1950s, concluding in a 1960 study that the drug was safe and potentially beneficial when supervised, though he later cautioned against recreational misuse as cultural adoption grew.[8] Aldous Huxley, the British author best known for his dystopian novel Brave New World (1932), became a prominent advocate for psychedelics following his personal experiments, which profoundly shaped his philosophical views on perception and consciousness. After relocating to California in 1937, Huxley worked as a screenwriter in Hollywood while writing nearly 50 books exploring mysticism and human potential. In May 1953, Osmond administered mescaline to Huxley in Los Angeles, an experience that inspired his seminal essay The Doors of Perception (1954), where he described the drug as revealing "the Total Vision" and unlocking doors to non-ordinary realities.[9] Huxley extended his advocacy to LSD, first trying it on Christmas Eve 1955 with his wife Laura, and continued using psychedelics until his death in 1963, even requesting an LSD dose on his deathbed to ease terminal cancer symptoms. These experiments reinforced his belief in psychedelics as tools for spiritual insight, influencing countercultural thought long after the 1950s.[7] Cary Grant, the iconic Hollywood leading man born Archibald Leach in 1904, rose to fame in the 1930s and 1940s with sophisticated roles in films like The Philadelphia Story (1940) and North by Northwest (1959), appearing in over 70 movies before retiring in 1966. Amid personal struggles from a troubled childhood and multiple marriages, Grant began LSD therapy in 1958 under the guidance of radiologist Mortimer Hartman in Los Angeles, undergoing more than 100 sessions by 1962 to address neuroses and relational issues. He publicly credited the treatments with transformative personal growth, stating in a 1959 interview that LSD had "changed my entire life," allowing him to achieve emotional clarity and professional renewal during a peak era of his career.[10] Clare Boothe Luce, a trailblazing American playwright, journalist, and politician born in 1903, achieved early success with her 1935 Broadway hit The Women before entering politics as a Republican U.S. Congresswoman from Connecticut (1943–1947) and later serving as U.S. Ambassador to Italy (1953–1957). As a prominent socialite and wife of media mogul Henry Luce, she moved in elite circles where LSD experimentation was fashionable in the late 1950s. Luce underwent supervised LSD sessions starting in 1959, including one with her husband, but documented a harrowing "bad trip" in 1962 on Majorca, Spain, where she experienced intense fear, existential dread, and sensations of nonexistence in detailed personal notes. Despite this, her encounters reflected the era's therapeutic curiosity among intellectuals, though she largely ceased use as the drug faced increasing scrutiny by the mid-1960s.[11]Creative process
The creative process for Flying Over Sunset began with James Lapine, who conceived the idea after reading a 2010 Vanity Fair article detailing the legal use of LSD in the 1950s and its adoption by figures such as Cary Grant, Clare Boothe Luce, and Aldous Huxley.[12] Lapine, serving as both book writer and director, drew from his own youthful experiences with the drug in the 1960s and extensive research into the era's psychedelia, aiming to explore the characters' midlife crises through fictionalized LSD sessions.[13] By the mid-2010s, Lapine had outlined the structure, with Act One depicting individual trips and Act Two a collective one, emphasizing surreal hallucinations to reflect inner transformations.[12] Around 2015, Lapine assembled his collaborators: composer Tom Kitt and lyricist Michael Korie, marking the start of intensive writing sessions that spanned four years.[13] The team decided that characters would only sing while under the influence of LSD, creating a unique convention where spoken dialogue dominated sober scenes and songs captured hallucinatory visions, such as ghosts, symbolic imagery like dragonflies or rocket ships, and altered environments transforming from drugstores to carnivals.[14] This approach allowed for theatrical surrealism, with choreography by Michelle Dorrance enhancing the trips through fluid, dreamlike movements.[12] A primary challenge was balancing historical accuracy—rooted in the real biographies and documented LSD therapies of Grant, Huxley, and Luce—with fictional invention, as no evidence exists of them sharing a trip together.[13] Lapine incorporated authentic elements like Huxley's Vedanta influences and Grant's personal testimonies, while fictionalizing interactions to heighten dramatic tension.[13] For the score, Kitt blended diverse styles including operatic duets inspired by Bellini, waltzes, music hall numbers, and modern Broadway elements to evoke the 1950s setting and psychedelic shifts, often revising pieces multiple times—such as seven iterations of the song "How?"—to align with the evolving narrative.[14] Korie's lyrics mirrored this by delving into the characters' subconscious, written under tight deadlines during rehearsals to capture the ephemeral nature of hallucinations.[14] The collaborative dynamic emphasized iteration, with the team conducting 7-8 workshops to refine the integration of music, lyrics, and book before pre-production.[14]Productions
Developmental readings
The developmental readings for Flying Over Sunset took place at the Vineyard Arts Project in Edgartown, Massachusetts, providing early opportunities to test the script, music, and lyrics with invited audiences and industry professionals.[15] In August 2015, the musical received its first reading, featuring an initial version of the book by James Lapine, music by Tom Kitt, and lyrics by Michael Korie, with a cast that included Christine Ebersole as Clare Boothe Luce, Boyd Gaines, Julia Murney, Tam Mutu, and David Turner.[16][15] A second reading followed on July 29, 2016, also at the Vineyard Arts Project, with an updated iteration of the work led by Marin Mazzie in the role of Clare Boothe Luce, joined by Boyd Gaines, Betsy Wolfe, Tam Mutu, Jennifer Simard, Matt McGrath, Colin Critchley, David Pittu, and Anna Eilinsfeld.[17][18] These private presentations helped the creative team explore the narrative's unconventional structure centered on the characters' LSD experiences without a commitment to full production at the time.[17] Following the Vineyard readings, the musical underwent additional workshops and readings at Lincoln Center Theater to further refine the material.[19]Original Broadway production
Flying Over Sunset premiered on Broadway at the Vivian Beaumont Theater, produced by Lincoln Center Theater, with previews beginning on November 11, 2021, and the official opening night on December 13, 2021. Directed by James Lapine, the production ran through January 16, 2022, completing 36 preview performances and 35 regular performances for a total of 71 performances.[1] The mounting of the production faced significant challenges due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Originally scheduled to begin previews on March 12, 2020, with an opening on April 16, 2020, the show was postponed indefinitely following Broadway's shutdown in response to the crisis.[20][21] Further delays occurred in 2021, including a one-week pushback of the preview start from November 4 to November 11. The limited run was ultimately shortened by three weeks due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, including detections within the company that led to multiple canceled performances, compounded by steeply declining attendance amid the Omicron variant.[22][23][24] The production's design elements emphasized its psychedelic themes through innovative staging and visuals. Scenic designer Beowulf Boritt created an abstract set evoking the human brain, featuring a motorized pivot system that allowed large set pieces to rotate and reconfigure during dream and hallucination sequences, such as transforming a drugstore into a surreal Botticelli-inspired landscape.[25] Costumes by Toni-Leslie James captured the 1950s era with period-appropriate attire, while lighting designer Bradley King's work enhanced the ethereal atmosphere. Projections by 59 Productions, including hallucinatory effects like breathing walls and floating globes, vividly depicted the LSD experiences central to the narrative.[2][1]Synopsis
Act I
The musical opens in 1950s Los Angeles, establishing a backdrop of post-war conformity and personal unrest among the elite. The narrative introduces three historical figures at pivotal moments in their lives: British writer and philosopher Aldous Huxley, American playwright, congresswoman, and diplomat Clare Boothe Luce, and British-born Hollywood actor Cary Grant. Each grapples with profound dissatisfaction—Huxley with his wife Maria's terminal illness and his ongoing quest for spiritual enlightenment; Luce with the lingering grief over her daughter's fatal car accident in 1944 and ambivalence toward her high-profile career, including her recent nomination as U.S. Ambassador to Brazil; and Grant with the facade of his glamorous persona masking childhood trauma and the strain of an impending divorce from his fourth wife, Betsy Drake.[13][26] Huxley's storyline unfolds through his defense of his novel Brave New World amid calls for its ban, reflecting his broader philosophical pursuits, before he encounters LSD through his friend and spiritual guide Gerald Heard, a proponent of Hindu Vedanta. In a Rexall drugstore scene, Huxley, accompanied by the ailing Maria and Heard, ingests the drug for the first time, leading to hallucinatory visions during a subsequent mountain hike where he fixates on artistic inspirations like Botticelli's The Return of Judith to Bethulia. Meanwhile, Luce, navigating a contentious Senate confirmation hearing for her ambassadorship, turns to Heard for guidance in a more therapeutic context, experimenting with LSD at her Connecticut estate to confront her emotional voids and professional uncertainties. Grant, announcing his retirement after 61 films at a press conference where he also defends exiled comedian Charlie Chaplin, learns of LSD from his wife during a session with her Freudian psychiatrist; he secures the drug through persistent negotiation, undergoing his initial session in a clinical setting that begins to peel back layers of his suppressed past.[13][26] These individual arcs build tension through escalating personal crises: Huxley's grief intensifies as Maria's health deteriorates, Luce resigns her post amid political and familial turmoil, and Grant confronts the emptiness behind his Hollywood success. The act converges on a fictional chance encounter at the Brown Derby restaurant in Los Angeles, where the three, already intrigued by their separate psychedelic experiences, connect over shared curiosities about LSD's potential for self-discovery. Guided by Heard's encouragement, they decide to experiment with the drug together at Luce's rented Malibu estate, setting the stage for deeper exploration while hinting at the transformative—and risky—nature of their impending collective journey.[13][26]Act II
In Act II, Cary Grant, Aldous Huxley, Clare Boothe Luce, and Gerald Heard convene at Luce's rented Malibu estate for a shared LSD experience, guided by Heard's expertise in the substance's therapeutic potential.[27][26] As the drug takes effect, the characters embark on hallucinatory journeys that unearth deep-seated regrets: Grant confronts his childhood trauma from an abusive father and absent mother, as well as the emotional toll of his multiple failed marriages and an extramarital affair; Huxley grapples with his encroaching blindness and the impending death of his wife Maria from breast cancer; and Luce reckons with the losses of her mother and daughter in separate car accidents, compounded by guilt over prioritizing her political ambitions.[13][27][28] These visions manifest surrealistically—Grant tap-dances in a duet with his younger self, depicted as a boy in a dress representing his early life as Archie Leach; Huxley witnesses Botticelli paintings animating before his eyes and perceives vivid colors despite his visual impairment; and Luce summons spectral appearances of her deceased loved ones amid iridescent imagery like a sapphire dragonfly.[26][13][28] Interpersonal revelations emerge through communal moments, such as the group chanting "OM" while sharing inner monologues, frolicking in the ocean in swimsuits, and confronting alter egos or past selves in sequences that foster unexpected bonding and mutual understanding of their vulnerabilities.[26][28] Huxley's insights into LSD's non-recreational purpose interrupt more personal disclosures, leading to epiphanies that highlight themes of grief and self-forgiveness, though the encounters remain introspective rather than fully transformative.[26][13] As the trip concludes, the characters return to sobriety, their lives subtly altered by glimpses of self-discovery—Grant embraces a renewed sense of identity beyond his Hollywood persona, Huxley finds fleeting solace amid his losses, and Luce reflects on balancing ambition with emotional connections—yet the musical underscores the fictional nature of these events, diverging from strict historical accuracy to explore broader human introspection.[27][13][28]Cast and characters
Principal roles
The principal roles in Flying Over Sunset revolve around three historical figures reimagined in a fictional narrative exploring personal crises and psychedelic experiences in 1950s America.[29][30] Cary Grant is portrayed as a charismatic yet insecure Hollywood icon grappling with his public persona and private vulnerabilities, using LSD over 100 sessions to seek self-understanding and emotional liberation from his past traumas.[29][31] His dramatic function highlights the tension between glamour and inner turmoil, as he confronts hallucinations of figures from his youth and admits hidden attractions during group acid trips.[30][31] Aldous Huxley serves as the intellectual philosopher and mystic, driven by curiosity about expanded consciousness and transcendence through psychedelics, drawing from his real-life experiments with mescaline and LSD.[29][30] In the story, he embodies a gleeful yet despairing seeker, guiding philosophical discussions and romantic visions during the shared LSD journey, while reflecting on existential questions amid his own health decline.[31] Clare Boothe Luce is depicted as an ambitious and witty socialite-turned-politician, navigating marital discord and personal regrets, with LSD offering a path to emotional clarity and reinvention.[29][30] Her role underscores themes of gender expectations and sacrifice in mid-20th-century America, as she initiates the group's Malibu beach house gathering and hallucinates deceased relatives, blending confidence with underlying loneliness.[31] Supporting figures include Henry Luce, Clare's influential publisher husband, whose strained marriage propels her LSD exploration and eventual persuasion of him to try the drug.[29][30] Gerald Heard appears as a benevolent spiritual guide and trip-sitter, introducing psychedelics to Huxley and Luce while revealing his own hidden gay identity in intimate moments with Grant.[30][31] Alter egos and ensemble roles, such as Ann (a hallucinated figure from Grant's past), Maria Huxley (in visions), Dr. Harris (Grant's therapist facilitating sessions), Young Cary, Rosalia, Sophia, Austin, Handmaiden, and partygoers, provide contextual interactions and psychedelic manifestations that deepen the protagonists' arcs without overshadowing the central trio.[32][31][5]Original Broadway cast
The original Broadway production of Flying Over Sunset featured a cast led by Carmen Cusack as Clare Boothe Luce, Harry Hadden-Paton as Aldous Huxley, and Tony Yazbeck as Cary Grant.[3] Cusack, a Tony nominee for Bright Star, brought her experience with complex leading roles to the portrayal of the ambitious playwright and editor. Hadden-Paton, known for his Tony-nominated performance as Henry Higgins in the 2018 revival of My Fair Lady, embodied the intellectual philosopher Huxley. Yazbeck, a tap dancer celebrated for his work in On the Town, captured the suave Hollywood star Grant with dynamic physicality.[2] Supporting the leads were Robert Sella as Henry Luce and Gerald Heard, Kanisha Marie Feliciano in her Broadway debut as Ann and Judith, Nehal Joshi as Dr. Harris and Cary's Father, Emily Pynenburg as Rosalia and Sophia, Michele Ragusa as Austin and Handmaiden, Laura Shoop as Maria Huxley, and Atticus Ware as Young Cary, with Eli Bolin as swing.[33][5] The understudies included Aria Braswell, Danny Gardner, Kate Marilley, Patrick Scott McDermott, Tony Roach, and Michael Winther.[34] Due to the production's limited run from previews on November 11, 2021, to closing on January 16, 2022, there were no major cast replacements, allowing the original ensemble to perform consistently throughout.[35]| Role | Actor/Actress |
|---|---|
| Clare Boothe Luce | Carmen Cusack |
| Aldous Huxley | Harry Hadden-Paton |
| Cary Grant | Tony Yazbeck |
| Henry Luce / Gerald Heard | Robert Sella |
| Ann / Judith | Kanisha Marie Feliciano |
| Dr. Harris / Cary's Father | Nehal Joshi |
| Rosalia / Sophia | Emily Pynenburg |
| Austin / Handmaiden | Michele Ragusa |
| Maria Huxley | Laura Shoop |
| Young Cary | Atticus Ware |
| Swing | Eli Bolin |
Musical numbers
Act I
- "The Music Plays On" – Company
- "Bella Donna Di Agonia" – Judith, Handmaiden & Aldous Huxley
- "Wondrous" – Aldous Huxley
- "Bella Donna Di Agonia (Reprise)" – Aldous Huxley
- "I Have It All" – Cary Grant
- "Funny Money" – Archie Leach, Cary Grant & Father
- "A Sapphire Dragonfly" – Clare Boothe Luce, Ann & Austin
- "Someone" – Clare Boothe Luce
- "Flying Over Sunset" – Clare Boothe Luce, Gerald Heard, Ann & Austin
- "Flying Over Sunset (Reprise)" – Clare Boothe Luce, Aldous Huxley, Gerald Heard, Cary Grant & Company
Act II
- "Om" – Gerald Heard, Clare Boothe Luce, Aldous Huxley & Cary Grant
- "Huxley Knows" – Clare Boothe Luce, Cary Grant & Aldous Huxley
- "My Mother and I" – Clare Boothe Luce, Cary Grant, Gerald Heard, Archie Leach, Father, Ann & Austin
- "The Music Plays On (Reprise)" – Aldous Huxley & Maria Huxley
- "I Like to Lead" – Sophia & Cary Grant
- "Rocket Ship" – Cary Grant
- "An Interesting Place" – Austin, Ann & Clare Boothe Luce
- "If Only I'd Known" – Clare Boothe Luce, Austin & Ann
- "How?" – Clare Boothe Luce
- "Three Englishmen" – Cary Grant, Gerald Heard & Aldous Huxley
- "The Melancholy Hour" – Maria Huxley, Ann, Austin, Archie Leach, Father & Rosalia
- "The 23rd Ingredient" – Clare Boothe Luce, Cary Grant, Aldous Huxley & Gerald Heard
- "Bella Donna Di Agonia (Reprise)" – Judith & Handmaiden[36]
Themes and style
Psychedelic elements
The psychedelic elements in Flying Over Sunset are central to depicting the characters' LSD experiences through innovative staging, music, and direction, transforming the Vivian Beaumont Theater into a surreal landscape that mirrors the disorienting and introspective nature of hallucinogenic trips. Scenic designer Beowulf Boritt's rotating sets facilitate fluid transitions between reality and hallucination, allowing scenes to shift seamlessly as characters enter altered states, evoking the fluidity of perception under LSD.[37] Projection designer Benjamin Pearcy, in collaboration with 59 Productions, employs abstract imagery such as swirling colors and symbolic figures—like a sapphire dragonfly or animated Botticelli paintings—to visualize subconscious manifestations, creating a visually immersive environment that captures the vivid, otherworldly visions reported in psychedelic accounts.[26][25] Tom Kitt's score integrates 1950s jazz influences with avant-garde effects to sonically replicate the ebb and flow of an LSD journey, featuring dissonant harmonies that build tension and release to suggest expanding consciousness, echoing vocals that imply multiplicity of thought, and abrupt tempo shifts mimicking waves of euphoria and introspection.[37][26] These musical choices dominate the hallucinatory sequences, which comprise a significant portion of the runtime, blending traditional Broadway orchestration with experimental sound design by Dan Moses Schreier to heighten the sense of detachment from linear time.[38][1] James Lapine's direction employs non-linear sequences during the LSD trips, fracturing chronology to reflect fragmented psyche, with the ensemble serving as ethereal manifestations of the characters' subconscious—appearing as younger selves, deceased loved ones, or archetypal figures to guide internal dialogues.[37] This approach, combined with choreographer Michelle Dorrance's integration of tap and contemporary movement, turns the trips into dynamic, all-singing, all-dancing spectacles that prioritize emotional revelation over narrative progression.[26][38]Historical and biographical aspects
_Flying Over Sunset takes significant biographical liberties by imagining a collective LSD experience among its protagonists—Aldous Huxley, Cary Grant, and Clare Boothe Luce—in the second act, despite their real-life uses of the drug occurring separately during the 1950s.[39] In reality, Huxley experimented with mescaline and LSD to explore mystical states aligned with his perennial philosophy, a belief in a universal spiritual truth underlying all religions, as detailed in his 1954 essay The Doors of Perception, where he described psychedelics as providing glimpses of divine reality beyond ordinary perception.[40] Grant underwent approximately 100 guided LSD sessions as part of psychotherapy to confront childhood trauma and reconcile his suave public persona with inner vulnerabilities, crediting the drug with enabling emotional catharsis and self-forgiveness.[10] Luce, meanwhile, turned to LSD in therapeutic contexts to navigate personal grief and marital strains, influenced by her guide Gerald Heard, a mystic and friend of Huxley, though her experiences were marked by intense, sometimes distressing visions rather than communal enlightenment. These individual pursuits are reimagined in the musical as interconnected journeys, emphasizing fictional group dynamics to highlight shared quests for transcendence amid personal turmoil. The musical situates these figures within the 1950s cultural landscape, a period of outward conformity and post-World War II prosperity that masked deeper identity crises and nascent rebellions against societal norms. LSD, legal until the mid-1960s, was initially employed in psychiatric therapy by professionals like Humphry Osmond and Sidney Cohen to treat conditions such as alcoholism and anxiety, serving as a tool for accelerated introspection in controlled settings. This therapeutic application among intellectuals and elites, including Hollywood stars and political figures, foreshadowed the drug's later recreational embrace in the 1960s counterculture, shifting from clinical exploration to broader social experimentation amid growing disillusionment with materialism.[41] In Flying Over Sunset, the protagonists' encounters reflect these precursors, portraying LSD as a bridge between the era's rigid facades—exemplified by Grant's celebrity image, Luce's conservative politics, and Huxley's intellectual exile—and an underground search for authentic selfhood in a time of suppressed existential unease. Through these biographical adaptations, the musical comments on the intersections of celebrity, intellect, and power in mid-century America, using the characters' philosophies to critique how fame and influence distort personal growth. Huxley's perennialism underscores a rejection of dogmatic religion in favor of universal mysticism, amplified by psychedelics to challenge intellectual elitism. Grant's therapeutic odyssey exposes the hollowness of Hollywood glamour, revealing power's isolating effects on emotional authenticity. Luce's arc, informed by her trailblazing feminism as a playwright and congresswoman advocating women's equal rights, intersects with LSD to explore gender roles and authority, portraying her as a formidable woman grappling with patriarchal constraints in public and private spheres.[42] Collectively, the show employs these elements to illustrate how mid-20th-century icons leveraged emerging psychedelics not just for escape, but to interrogate the American Dream's promises of success against the realities of inner conflict.[4]Reception
Critical reviews
Critical reviews of Flying Over Sunset were mixed upon its Broadway premiere in December 2021, with critics praising the production's artistic innovation and performances while faulting the narrative structure and speculative elements.[37][28][43] The musical earned acclaim for its innovative staging, which effectively captured the psychedelic LSD experiences through Beowulf Boritt's cycloramic sets and Bradley King's evocative lighting, creating a sensory-rich environment that blended historical glamour with hallucinatory flair.[28][44] Performances were a highlight, particularly Tony Yazbeck's precise and charismatic portrayal of Cary Grant, which captured the actor's suave charisma and underlying vulnerability, alongside strong turns by Carmen Cusack as Clare Boothe Luce and Harry Hadden-Paton as Aldous Huxley.[37][44] Tom Kitt's score and Michael Korie's lyrics were lauded for their lyrical grace and emotional depth, with numbers like "The Music Plays On" evoking transcendent introspection through lush, color-infused melodies.[28][37] As Variety noted, the musical's "thoughtful and unusually literate" approach mixed senses in a way that honored its trippy premise.[28] Critics were divided on James Lapine's book, which blended historical facts with fictional contrivances, leading to uneven pacing and a sense of bewilderment in conveying the characters' inner journeys.[37][28] The second act, in particular, drew complaints for its speculative LSD trip among the protagonists, which felt contrived and overly protracted, diluting emotional resonance.[44][45] Some reviews highlighted concerns with the portrayal of 1950s elite society, critiquing its focus on white celebrity privilege and introspection as self-indulgent navel-gazing without fresh insights into the era's social dynamics.[45] The New York Times described the work as "sometimes mesmerizing" but ultimately "mostly bewildering," emphasizing how the speculative nonfiction strained audience connection.[37] Aggregate scores reflected this ambivalence, with critic ratings averaging around 60-70% on review aggregation sites, underscoring the production's ambitious highs and narrative shortcomings.[46][43]Commercial performance
_Flying Over Sunset's Broadway run at the Vivian Beaumont Theater consisted of 36 previews from November 11 to December 12, 2021, followed by 35 performances until its early closure on January 16, 2022.[1] The production grossed a total of $2,274,957 over its limited engagement, with weekly grosses varying significantly due to external factors.[47] Attendance totaled 40,067 patrons, averaging approximately 52% capacity across 71 total performances in a 1,080-seat venue, though initial weeks saw higher utilization of 70-80% before a sharp decline.[47][48] The surge of the Omicron variant in late 2021 severely impacted attendance, with some weeks dropping to as low as 26% capacity and grosses around $123,000, contributing to the decision to close three weeks ahead of schedule.[49] Following the closure, no national tours or revivals have been announced.[2] The original Broadway cast recording, featuring the principal cast, was released on April 8, 2022, by Masterworks Broadway.[50]Awards and nominations
Flying Over Sunset received nominations for several major awards in 2022, primarily recognizing its design elements and performances.| Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Tony Awards | Best Actress in a Musical | Carmen Cusack | Nominated[51] |
| 2022 | Tony Awards | Best Original Score | Tom Kitt and Michael Korie | Nominated[51] |
| 2022 | Tony Awards | Best Scenic Design of a Musical | Beowulf Boritt and 59 Productions | Nominated[51] |
| 2022 | Tony Awards | Best Lighting Design of a Musical | Bradley King | Nominated[51] |
| 2022 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Scenic Design of a Musical | Beowulf Boritt | Won[52] |
| 2022 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Lighting Design for a Musical | Bradley King | Won (tied with MJ the Musical)[52] |
| 2022 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Projection Design | 59 Productions | Won[52] |
| 2022 | Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Actress in a Musical | Carmen Cusack | Nominated[53] |
| 2022 | Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Scenic Design | Beowulf Boritt | Nominated[53] |
| 2022 | Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Lighting Design | Bradley King | Nominated[53] |
| 2022 | Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Video/Projection Design | 59 Productions and Benjamin Pearcy | Nominated[53] |
| 2022 | Chita Rivera Awards | Outstanding Male Dancer in a Broadway Show | Tony Yazbeck | Nominated[54] |
