Photo Flash: First Look at Sicily Mathenia, Larissa White, Cameisha Cotton & More in New Line Theatre's HEATHERS

By: Oct. 02, 2015
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New Line opens its 25th season with the regional premiere of the pitch-black musical comedy HEATHERS, written by the award-winning team of Kevin Murphy (Reefer Madness) and Laurence O'Keefe (Bat Boy, Legally Blonde). This hilarious, big-hearted, and homicidal new musical is based on the 1989 cult film, truly one of the darkest teen comedies of all time. The original screenwriter Daniel Waters called it, "a Carson McCullers-style novel of a girl who meets the Antichrist as a teenager."

It's September, 1989, and Westerberg High is terrorized by a shoulder-padded, scrunchie-wearing junta: Heather, Heather and Heather, the hottest and cruelest girls in all of Ohio. But brainy misfit Veronica Sawyer rejects their evil regime for a new boyfriend, the damaged new stranger J.D., who plans to put the Heathers in their place. For good. Deliciously, wickedly funny, oddly romantic, and occasionally powerful, this is a surprisingly truthful parable for anyone who's ever been in love, in trouble, or in high school.

The cast of New Line's HEATHERS includes Anna Skidis (Veronica), Evan Fornachon (J.D.), Sicily Mathenia (Heather Chandler), Larissa White (Heather McNamara), Cameisha Cotton (Heather Duke), Grace Seidel (Martha Dunnstock), Omega Jones (Ram Sweeney), Clayton Humburg (Kurt Kelly), Brenda Bass, Kevin Corpuz, Colin Dowd, Alex Glow, Joel Hackbarth, Lindsey Jones, Chris Kernan, and Victoria Valentine. The show will be directed by Scott Miller and Mike Dowdy, with music direction by Jeffrey Richard Carter, choreography by Robin Michelle Berger, scenic design by Rob Lippert, costume design by Sarah Porter, sound design by Benjamin Rosemann, and lighting design by Kenneth Zinkl.

Today, in this era of bullying and school shootings, the satire of HEATHERS takes on a powerful new relevance. As a 2014 Atlantic article said, "Heathers has the courage to sympathize with a psychopath who exposes how dangerous it can be when fads and gossip are more influential than basic decency." Today the original movie, released a full decade before Columbine, seems weirdly prescient. And the musical takes on this weight of our more recent history, without ever losing its satiric touch or its outrageous comedy, in songs like "I Love My Dead Gay Son."

Despite a misfired original production off Broadway, The New York Times called Heathers a "rowdy guilty-pleasure musical," and The New York Post called it "ingenious, naughty, and very funny." TimeOut New York called it, "sassy, sexy, and oh-so-smart." The Associated Press said, "This dark demented comedy keeps us in stitches!" The New York Daily News noted the show's more serious side: "The writers aren't just going for jokes - there is real heft in the touching song 'Lifeboat,' which depicts kids fighting for survival, and 'Seventeen,' about youth." USA Today wrote, "As the true motives of Veronica's new beau, J.D., become clearer, and the couple's relationship more intense, Murphy and O'Keefe ask that we also consider them, and their classmates - even the more despicable ones - as human beings." Variety said, "The show still deals with the serious issues that gave the movie its cutting edge: school bullying, teen sexuality, campus shootings, bomb threats and suicide epidemics. After 25 years of horrific school violence, J.D.'s terrorist persona and homicidal activities are actually more chilling today than they were when the movie came out." Check out a first look at the production below!

Photo Credit: Jill Ritter Lindberg



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