By Peter Mills (Composer and Lyricist)
1998 saw the founding of two ambitious new organizations: Prospect Theater Company and Google. Over the past decade both companies have grown tremendously.
Okay, Google may have grown a bit more…
Their 26-acre “Googleplex” has roughly half a million square feet of office space, while Prospect’s headquarters occupy a bit over 200 square feet on the third floor of the Ripley-Grier building. Nevertheless, we have come a long way in ten years, and on September 21st, 9pm at 37 Arts, we plan to celebrate our past successes, our continued survival, and our undoubtedly bright future with a 10th Anniversary concert during this year’s New York Musical Theatre Festival.
I can trace the history of our company in a long line of postcards adorning the walls of our aforementioned headquarters. Beginning with the earliest shows, a colorful parade of productions proceeds, season by season, through almost thirty mainstage shows and a host of smaller “Dark Nights” events. That line of postcards has now turned the corner twice and is quickly running out of real estate on our little office’s walls—another healthy sign of Prospect’s growth!
Almost half of our mainstage shows have been new musicals, and as Prospect’s resident writer, I have written music and/or lyrics for ten, yes ten, of those new tuners in as many years. The concert on the 21st will feature highpoints from each of those musicals:
Malcolm Gets will sing “Way Ahead Of My Time,” from The Taxi Cabaret, the very first show I wrote;
Gavin Creel will reprise his performance of “Highway Miles” from The Flood; the cast of Illyria will be on hand for a special sneak preview of Prospect’s upcoming revival. And those are just the first three of the fourteen we’ll be re-visiting!
In more recent years, Prospect become a home for new musicals other than mine—another healthy sign. The NYMF concert will also include music from The Tutor, the Rodgers Award-winning show by
Andrew Gerle and
Maryrose Wood; The Book of the Dun Cow,
Randy Courts’ and
Mark St. Germain’s adaptation of the National Book Award-winning novel; Tock Tick, a sweet and surreal fable by Tim Nevits and
Gihieh Lee, winner of a Larson Award; and the haunting Dada-inspired piece, The Blue Flower by Jim and
Ruth Bauer, another Larson Award-winner.
The star-studded evening, hosted by
Stephen Bogardus, will also include performances by
Matt Cavenaugh,
Jose Llana, Adama Jacobs and a host of other great talent. As our little company begins its second decade, the prospects look good. Who knows… perhaps in another ten years we’ll have a 26 acre “Prosplex” of our own!