• Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
Sunday, May 17, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
No Result
View All Result
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
Home Theater

‘Schmigadoon!:’ Schmigafun!

Frank J. Avella by Frank J. Avella
April 27, 2026
in Best Actress in a Musical, Best Musical, Featured Story, News, Reviews, Theater, Tony Awards
0
‘Schmigadoon!:’ Schmigafun!

Sara Chase & Max Clayton. Credit: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Like Titanique, Schmigadoon! seems to want to capitalize on audience familiarity—not just with the Apple TV series it’s based on but with the old-fashioned Broadway musicals of the past it satirizes like Oklahoma, Carousel, The Sound of Music, The Music Man, Finian’s Rainbow and, of course, Brigadoon.

The show, also like Titanique, is a send up, a spoof. Both musicals are incredibly entertaining and have a mad fab talented ensemble working their respective Broadway butts off singing and dancing and sillying at the speed of sound. In addition, both productions scream glorious stage dazzle, with vibrant costumes, eye-popping scenic color, vivid lighting and appropriately bombastic orchestrations.

Both are eliciting tons of laughs from their audiences while sending positive messages about the power of love and how we should all be coming together and celebrating the uniqueness in each individual.

At the beginning of Schmigadoon! we meet two doctors Josh Skinner (Tony nominee Alex Brightman) and Melissa Gimble (Sara Chase), who fall for each other at a vending machine and whose relationship soon hits the skids, so they go on retreat in the woods. Lost and bickering, they cross a bridge and end up in Schmigadoon, a majestic ‘throwback to the show days of yore’ town where people burst into musical numbers.

Everyone cheerily smiles and appears ridiculously happy, but even in the magical musical land of Schmigadoon there are villainous townsfolk who want to eliminate anyone who isn’t living a squeaky-clean life, led by the Bible-waving puritan Mildred Layton (a marvelously mean Ana Gasteyer).

Credit: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Josh and Melissa discover, via a leprechaun, that the only way to get out of Schmigadoon and back to their precious NYC is to go back over the bridge with their true loves. Simple, since they’re in love, right? Not so fast. It’s not working. So, they fight some more and then go out on their own individual quests.

Melissa follows Tunnel-of-Love rapscallion Danny Bailey (a sexy and deliciously devilish Max Clayton who invokes a cross between Billy Bigelow from Carousel and any background Bob Fosse musical player).  Melissa also finds herself being courted by the prim and proper Doc (Ivan Hernandez).

Meanwhile Josh ends up winning the picnic basket of young Betsy (a wonderful wackadoodle McKenzie Kurtz)…just how young is she? Pretty young. And her dad, shotgun in tow, is after Josh to marry her. But Josh seems to be falling for the local schoolmarm (Isabelle McCalla).

A subplot involves the secretly gay Mayor (Brad Oscar) crushing on the town preacher (Maulik Pancholy), who is married to Mildred.

As you can see there’s a lot of story and it is a fun kind of lunacy, but it’s the kind of crazy that often feels too predictable and safe when it could have been more gutsy. Of course that might scare off the tourists…

Cinco Paul wrote the book, music and lyrics and has added a few new songs.

Ana Gasteyer & Co. Credit: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

A couple of numbers show just how clever and daring the show might have been. “Baby Talk,” a take-off on The Sound of Music’s “Do-Re-Me,” has Melissa teaching a naive, pregnant couple who aren’t familiar with the word vagina, about how a child is conceived and then birthed. And the rousing showstopper, “Tribulation,” stealing delightfully from “Ya Got Trouble” from The Music Man, is a bracing and breathless ditty about the “promiscuity and depravity” creeping into their haven, led by the glorious Gasteyer.

Chase is sure to get a Tony nomination, not just because it’s a terribly lean year for the lead actress in a musical category—and it is—but because she’s absolutely terrific, hilarious and, boy, can she belt a tune!

One of the standout moments has Melissa and Doc being interrupted by the arrival of Countess Gabrielle Von Blerkom (Afra Hines, amazing), basically the Baroness from The Sound of Music. It’s a sidesplittingly funny scene—I won’t say why. I wish there were more boundary pushing sequences like that one. Interesting, I read that her song got cut in previews. A shame.

Schmigadoon!, along with Titanique, are my fave new musicals of the season, but one must consider that there are only six new musicals opening in the 2025-26 season—two were just awful, and I have not seen The Lost Boys yet. A distinction also needs to be made with the notion of new vs. original. There was only one musical that was not based on a narrative feature or doc or TV series—Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York). An argument can be made for Titanique, which has an original book, but it is obvi loosely based on the James Cameron film, Titanic. I bring all this up to voice my frustration with Broadway producers who refuse to nurture original ideas for musicals, and, instead, constantly turn to film adaptations and the like. Shame on them. At least we can take some solace in the fact that there are no jukebox musicals this season.

All that said, Schmigadoon!, directed and choreographed with verve and panache by Christopher Gattelli (Death Becomes Her) is a most pleasant way to spend an afternoon or evening.

Here’s hoping Schmicago! is coming soon and will embody that excitement, originality, audacity and occasional recklessness that marked the work of composers like Sondheim and Kander & Ebb and directors like Fosse and Hal Prince.

Schmigadoon! is currently playing at the Nederlander Theatre (208 W.41st Street, NYC).

For tickets visit: Schmigadoon!

Spread the Word!

  • More
Tags: Alex BrightmanAna GasteyerBrad OscarChristopher GattelliIvan HernandezMax ClaytonMcKenzie KurtzSara ChaseSchmigadoonTony Awards
Frank J. Avella

Frank J. Avella

Frank J. Avella is a proud staff writer for The Contending and an Edge Media Network contributor. He serves as the GALECA Industry Liaison (Home of the Dorian Awards) and is a Member of the New York Film Critics Online. As screenwriter/director, his award-winning short film, FIG JAM, has shown in Festivals worldwide and won numerous awards. Recently produced stage plays include LURED & VATICAN FALLS, both O'Neill semifinalists. His latest play FROCI, is about the queer Italian-American experience. Frank is a proud member of the Dramatists Guild.

Next Post
Meryl Streep

Top Ten Tuesday: Meryl Streep’s 10 Best Performances

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple PodcastsSpotifyAndroidby EmailRSS

Subscribe Now!

Subscribe here to The Contending's newsletter! We will never spam you. We promise!

Looking To Advertise?

Looking to advertise with The Contending? Contact us for inquiries!

The Latest Stuff

Cannes 2026: ‘Flesh and Fuel,’ Pierre Le Gall’s Strangely Sweet Gay Trucker Film

Cannes 2026: ‘Flesh and Fuel,’ Pierre Le Gall’s Strangely Sweet Gay Trucker Film

May 16, 2026
10th annual crunchyroll awards

10th Annual Crunchyroll Anime Awards Announces New Celeb Presenters

May 14, 2026
bentonfill film festival logo with geena davis on it

Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick to Attend Opening Night Film “Family Movie” at the 12th Annual Bentonville Film Festival Led by Geena Davis

May 14, 2026
Tony Nominee Ali Louis Bourzgui On ‘The Lost Boys,’ David’s Queerness [VIDEO]

Tony Nominee Ali Louis Bourzgui On ‘The Lost Boys,’ David’s Queerness [VIDEO]

May 14, 2026
‘Schmigadoon!,’ ‘The Lost Boys’ Lead LGBTQ Critics’ Dorian Theater Award Nominations

‘Schmigadoon!,’ ‘The Lost Boys’ Lead LGBTQ Critics’ Dorian Theater Award Nominations

May 13, 2026

Wise Words From Our Readers

  • Ferdinand on Top Ten Tuesday: The Greatest Animated Feature Oscar Winners
  • FJA on Top Ten Tuesday: Meryl Streep’s 10 Best Performances
  • Clarence Moye on Top Ten Tuesday: Meryl Streep’s 10 Best Performances
  • Mark Johnson on Top Ten Tuesday: Meryl Streep’s 10 Best Performances
  • FJA on Top Ten Tuesday: Meryl Streep’s 10 Best Performances
The Contending

© 2025 The Contending

Find All the Things

  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

Dreaded Social Media

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

© 2025 The Contending

  • More Networks
Share via
Facebook
X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Mix
Email
Print
Copy Link
Copy link
CopyCopied