Your independent guide to the best shows in Boston
An independent show guide not a venue or show. All tickets 100% guaranteed, some are resale, prices may be above face value.We're an independent show guide not a venue or show. We sell primary, discount and resale tickets, all 100% guaranteed prices may be above face value.We are an independent show guide not a venue or show. We sell primary, discount and resale tickets, all 100% guaranteed and they may be priced above or below face value.
Turning old stuffy material full of self important men in wigs into something relevant and vibrant is no easy feat…but this cast and creative team have done it!
Craig Kelley from Boston, Massachusetts
WHAT A GREAT SHOW!
If I could give the show 10 stars, I would. The nuances of history that we still struggle with today pop out in every scene and every song and the gender and race bending really helped create a new line of thought not just about how America was built, and by whom, but how we might yet be able to fix the broken parts.
There is more of this eagle still to be born.
Cindy Dye from Boston, Massachusetts
IT STANDS UP
As someone who saw the original cast when they were touring many years ago, and played the record until I knew every word by heart, I am happy to say that this version is amazing. Casting, costuming, set design, and choreography all combine to retell a story we know, and still give us much to contemplate that we know, but do not always pause to consider. And as a bonus, this John Adams can really sing. As ever, the standout songs are "Molasses, and Rum, and Slaves" and "Mama Look Sharp", the powerful reminders that for all that the plays libretto is full of humor, this was a time when decisions were made with serious consequences. But the humor gives us leaven, and lets us see beyond stiff images in history books to the flawed, but revolutionary people who laid the ground work for both the principles, and the deadly compromises that haunt and inspire us more than two centuries later.
Nikki from Boston, Massachusetts
ASTOUNDING. PASSIONATE. POWERFUL.
This show was the most powerful, passionate theatre work I’ve seen… maybe ever. Well done. I wish every white man in America could watch this performance and feel the passion we all felt like sitting in the audience. 10/10 cannot wait to go see it on Broadway!
CS from Boston, Massachusetts
INCREDIBLE, THOUGHT PROVOKING, A MUST SEE
Growing up watching the original 1776 to mock its gimmicky and hokey music, I never expected myself to see this production, not once but twice, leaving in tears.
The reclamation of a script telling the story of this deeply flawed nation from its conception, is only now more evident in our currently divided nation. Letting the story be told by oppressed people of this country (women, non-binary, transpersons and people of color) allowed the overt patriarchal and sexual overtones of the original script to become a beautiful mockery of the patriarchal structure this nation was built upon.
Stand out performances from every cast member. I have never been so moved by a performance. Thank you thank you thank you.
DG from Boston, Massachusetts
WHY?
Why change the nature of the play, by assuming that having an all female cast playing the “male characters” would make this a better play? Would bring more depth to the dialogue, more insight? It didn’t, it was gimmicky, “let’s be cool”, too much! I thought the performers were wonderful, amazing voices. I applaud all of them.
Roy from New Hampshire
APPLAUSE FOR THE ATTEMPT, BUT MORE HITS THAN MISSES AMONG THE CHANGES
It is a shame that none of the reviews at the Globe, Herald or WBUR were by people familiar with the traditional staging. Being familiar with traditional productions of "1776" myself, I applaud the attempt to give the show a new perspective. The cast was mostly excellent, with strong acting & top not voices. But, the production overall has issues.
The choreography was overly literal and overdone to the point of being distracting. Some of the re-orchestration worked, much did not. The staging wasted half the depth of the stage and limited the front-of-curtain work, and also made it impossible to have things like one desk per colony, which actually matters.
Other bits were just strange with no pay-off. Why use a shoe-shine stand for Hancock's chair and then make no point with it? Is the front of curtain work minstrel or vaudeville, and what's the point it is making?
Overall an A for effort but if this is going to Broadway, it needs some serious work.
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