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FALL ARTS PREVIEW: Green Day's American Idiot is made over for the Berkeley Rep stage


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FALL ARTS PREVIEW Who would have pictured Green Day's anthemic 2004 punk-rock concept album, American Idiot (Reprise), as the stuff of musicals? It took merely two unlikely kindred spirits, meeting in the fall of 2007 for the first time: the Oakland band's lead vocalist, guitarist, and primary songwriter Billie Joe Armstrong and Tony-winning Spring Awakening director Michael Mayer.

Armstrong — that punk-rock diehard who even now plays Gilman with his side project Pinhead Gunpowder? Turns out that as a tyke growing up in Rodeo, he serenaded the elderly and infirm in local hospitals with standards and show tunes from musicals like Oliver! and Annie Get Your Gun.

"That's how I learned how to sing," says Armstrong, laid back and low-key in stark contrast to the manic rabble-rouser who'll soon take command over a stage at San Jose's HP Pavilion. He's on the phone from his Oakland home during a brief stop in Green Day's arena tour for 21st Century Breakdown (Reprise), the follow-up to American Idiot.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


"There's a real old-school craft to it," he continues, measuring that quality against Shrek, Legally Blond, and other recent disposable Broadway musicals. "That's kind of a corny way of doing things, but when you see something like Spring Awakening, it's ... it's real life, and it's something that everybody relates to, and it's inspiring and emotional. American Idiot was really tailor-made for something like this to happen to it, y'know."

At the same time that Armstrong tried to heal the ailing with music — and '80s-era punks everywhere greeted "Morning in America" with a snarl — the generation-older Mayer was earning his MFA on the other side of the country in theater at NYU. No surprise, then, that Mayer "felt such a surprising kind of simpatico" on meeting the Green Day leader. "Even though we come from different worlds and are such different people," Mayer says, "you know, at the end of the day, Billie Joe is such a showman! Such a theatrical guy. Not since Al Jolson have I seen someone so in love with the audience and with putting on a performance for them."

Mayer radiates a similar high-wattage intensity, one that's fully prepared to kick out the jams. Wide-eyed and unblinking behind his black frame specs, clad in a Justice League T-shirt and floppy shorts, he's hiding out with me in what looks like an old classroom within the downtown Berkeley building enlisted for rehearsals of the musical version of American Idiot. "I feel like where we connect is old school," he says of Armstrong, slapping the table for emphasis. "Tin Pan Alley." Slap. "Vaudeville." Slap. "That's the music he grew up with. He became a punk-rocker — I became a theater homo!"

Together, Armstrong and Mayer are making a piece of theater that combines the musical's narrative tradition and holy union of song and dance with a breed of feisty alternative rock fed by the streetwise political punk of Gilman Street. A musical that unites the ironclad craft ...

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( 1 comment | Comment on this article )
elanorelle on Wednesday, August 26, 2009 at 12:12 AM
I am looking forward to this...I live in Canada and we need more stuff like this trust me..

I am going on Sept 10 and 12 and what a treat for all. Especially in the area where the human rights demonstrations and protests were held. I find it quite ironic that this play might be another very bold step in opening our eyes to the world around us.The music is fantastic ...the story matter timely ...and I believe the direction will be stellar. I have been listening to the music of Spring Awakening as well as walking down the street visualizing in my mind what a scene of AI would be like...Michael Mayer is very talented and I think the whole cast and creative team is fabulous and always a pleasure to hear that Green Day is fully part of the creative process. And also during the time of the falling economy ...poverty...class warfare..war...Its more than a musical...its connecting today with the vision of the 1960s that was lost along the way...and Berkeley being the centre once again and brining humanity back to its roots.

Suzanne in Victoria, BC

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