Frontmezzjunkies reports: Raúl Esparza to star in Galileo
By Ross
Some Broadway returns feel exciting. Others feel inevitable. And then there are the rare announcements that land with the kind of personal electricity only a singular performer can generate. The news that Raúl Esparza will return to Broadway this fall in the new musical Galileo belongs firmly in every one of those categories.
The rock musical, which premiered at Berkeley Repertory Theatre in 2024, arrives at the Shubert Theatre beginning November 10, with Esparza starring as the revolutionary astronomer Galileo Galilei. Directed by Michael Mayer (Broadway’s Chess) and featuring a book by Danny Strong with music and lyrics by Michael Weiner and Zoe Sarnak, the musical explores the eternal tension between truth and power. It is a theme that feels especially resonant for a performer whose work has always thrived on emotional and intellectual risk, yet is grounded in impressive vocal power and impeccable acting skills.
When the new musical premiered at Berkeley Rep, critics responded with admiration and caution in equal measure, praising Esparza’s electrifying performance and the production’s visual ambition while noting that the score and book were still searching for their fullest dramatic formulation. That developmental history only heightens our curiosity about what refinements may be discovered before its Broadway arrival.
Yet for many theatre lovers, Esparza is not simply a leading man. He is an event worth celebrating. His performances carry a tense urgency that makes even familiar material feel newly discovered, as though each lyric or line is being wrestled into existence in real time. It is a quality that has defined his career and one that makes the prospect of seeing him inhabit a figure as fearless as Galileo especially thrilling.
My personal admiration for Esparza stretches back years, shaped most vividly by one of many legendary performances, particularly in Company. His rendition of “Being Alive” forced every emotional turn to unfold beat by beat, exposing the song’s inner struggle with an astonishing step-by-step clarity. That performance became something of a personal theatrical near miss. I had gathered a gaggle of friends together to see him on Broadway, only to discover upon arrival that he was out that week, a disappointment that lingered long after the curtain call (although that production of Company can be watched in its entirety on YouTube). Fate, however, intervened months later at a Sondheim benefit, when Esparza unexpectedly stepped onstage as a last-minute replacement for Gypsy‘s Patti LuPone, and delivered a “Being Alive” so raw and heartfelt that it remains, to this day, one of the most unforgettable moments I have ever witnessed in a theatre.
That is precisely what makes his return in Galileo so exciting. Esparza is an actor whose work resists distance or passivity. He thrives on immediacy and power, on the shared breath between performer and audience. A musical about a man daring to challenge accepted truths feels like an ideal match for an artist who has long approached performance with fearless emotional honesty.
Joining him will be Jeremy Kushnier and Joy Woods, with choreography by David Neumann. It’s a strong foundation to build upon, yet for many audiences, the central draw will be the chance to witness Esparza leading a new musical on Broadway once again, something that feels both overdue and deeply welcome.
There are roles audiences hope will find the right performer. Occasionally, a performer arrives who makes the search feel unnecessary. With Esparza leading Galileo, Broadway stands poised for that rare alignment, where anticipation comes not only from the work itself, but from the artist bringing it to life.



