REBECCA to Arrive on Broadway Next Year? Fundraising Deadline Extended Through 2014

By: Jul. 24, 2013
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Back in April, BroadwayWorld reported that lead producer of REBECCA, Ben Sprecher, still intended to bring the new msuical to Broadway by the end of the year. After the Fall 2012 production was canceled, Sprecher revealed to BroadwayWorld that another $7 million would be needed to reach the $15 million needed to bring the show to Broadway. For the show to open by the end of the year, the musical needed to raise the money by the end of June.

Since then, Sprecher has continued fundraising for the project. According to Radio Wien, Austria's VWB (Vereinigte Bühnen Wien), who holds the rights to the musical, has extended the deadline through 2014- meaning that the show could now arrive on Broadway next year. The show is currently seeking Austrian producers to help raise the remaining funds to make the Broadway production happen.

Sprecher was reached earlier this month by BroadwayWorld.com in Vienna, where he was assumingly both working on the extension of the rights and on attempting to line up additional funds for the musical, on which he won't give up. Sprecher's lawyer Ronald G. Russo commented: "Fundraising is continuing right now, and he is very commited to bringing REBECCA to Broadway. He is wildly interested and comitted."

A reading for the show was held on March 11, featuring the talents of Ryan Silverman, Karen Mason, Jill Paice, James Barbour (all of whom were attached to star in the Fall 2012 Broadway run) and Rob Gallgher.

Following REBECCA's cancellation on Broadway and the news that financier and stock broker Mark C. Hotton was arrested and called 'a considerable threat' to the community, he is now awaiting trial. Hotton was arrested for defrauding the show's producers of $60,000 and for an unrelated $750,000 real estate scheme which prosecutors said featured some of the same deceptions used in the REBECCA fraud.

In October, producers filed a $100 million fraud lawsuit in state Supreme Court against Mark C. Hotton, a former stockbroker from Long Island on whom they were relying to raise $4.5 million of the show's $12-million budget. For his criminal trial, Hotton faces 20 years for each of two counts of wire fraud, if convicted.

Earlier in October, Ben Sprecher and Louise Forlenza, producers for Rebecca, the Musical, announced that they were left with no option but to postpone the show. They released a statement at that time, noting that "After Paul Abrams, a major investor, passed away in London, on August 5th, 2012, and who, with three other colleagues, represented the last portion of $4.5 million of the full capitalization for the production... On September 28th, Sprecher and Forlenza were informed that an extremely malicious e-mail, filled with lies and innuendo, had been sent directly to a new investor that morning from an anonymous third party. The e-mail was designed to scare this investor away and it succeeded. The investor withdrew."

REBECCA, the new musical based on the classic novel by Daphne Du Maurier novel, previously delayed the start of its rehearsals by two weeks due reportedly to the death of a key investor responsible for a $4.5 million investment pool in the production. REBECCA was scheduled to begin rehearsals Monday, September 10 prior to an October 30 first preview and November 18 premiere at the Broadhurst Theatre.

REBECCA had its world premiere in 2006 at Vereinigte Buhnen Wien in Vienna, where it played to sold-out houses for more than three years. Vastly successful productions of REBECCA have also played Budapest, Hungary; Bucharest, Romania; Helsinki, Finland; Stuttgart, Germany; St. Gallen, Switzerland and at the Imperial Theatre in Tokyo.



Videos