Company of Schmigadoon! at the Kennedy Center. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

Frontmezzjunkies reports: The beloved musical parody steps onto Broadway with big songs, big laughs, and a question about what love really means

By Ross

Watching Schmigadoon! on television for the first time was such a wildly fun trip. It was like stepping sideways into a musical you already knew, even if you had never seen it before. There was something instantly recognizable about it, a comforting rhythm in its melodies, even as it hilariously twisted those familiar elements into something playful and Jane Krakowski-absurd. That feeling is about to take over a Broadway stage. After a successful tryout in Washington, Schmigadoon! is preparing to begin performances, inviting audiences into its carefully constructed, wacky-wonderful world.

Set in a magical place, seemingly just next door to the town from the legendary Brigadoon, where music is not a choice but a way of life, the story unfolds as if pulled straight out of the golden age of musical theatre. Every whimsical thought and emotion is expressed in song, every moment builds toward a melody, and the landscape itself feels shaped by a kind of theatrical optimism that never quite fades. When a troubled couple stumbles into this environment by accident, they quickly discover that leaving is not as simple as finding the road out. The only way forward requires something far more complicated, and far more revealing.

Directed by Christopher Gattelli (Broadway’s Death Becomes Her), with a book and score by Cinco Paul, the production carries with it the spirit of the original series while expanding it into something built for the stage. What once lived within the confines of a television screen now has the freedom of a wide Broadway stage. The production now has the opportunity to breathe, expand, and fully embrace the theatrical language it both celebrates and satirizes. That shift feels particularly fitting for a piece that has always been about the mechanics of musicals themselves, about the way they shape emotion and structure experience.

Alex Brightman and the company of Schmigadoon! at the Kennedy Center. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

The cast, led by Alex Brightman, Sara Chase, and Ana Gasteyer, suggests a company ready to embrace both the broad comedy and the utter sincerity at the heart of the piece. These are actors who understand the rhythms of musical theatre, who can play within its conventions while also revealing the cracks beneath them. That balance will be essential, because Schmigadoon! works best when it allows both affection and parody to exist in the same breath.

What makes this production particularly intriguing is not simply its humour, but the question that sits quietly underneath it. Beneath the bright colours and cheerful songs, there is an idea about connection, about expectation, and about what it actually means to find something real within a structure that feels predetermined and artificial. The town offers a version of love that is as clear and immediate as a classic show tune, but the characters moving through it struggle to meet that clarity without hesitation.

And as the lights come up and the first notes fill the theatre, there is a sense that the magic that first made this world so inviting might reveal itself again, just beyond the fog. There is the hope of stepping over that bridge into something that feels both known and new, where every song brings us closer to understanding not just the story that lives in Schmigadoon!, but the unconscious reasons we keep returning to stories like this in the first place.

Sara Chase and Alex Brightman in Schmigadoon! at the Kennedy Center. Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman.

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