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![]() GEYSA'S MUSICAL PAGE RENT Synopsis |
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Home | A Chorus Line | AIDA | Avenue Q | Cabaret | CHICAGO | HAIRSPRAY | Jekyll and Hyde | Kiss Me, Kate | Mamma Mia | MISS SAIGON | Phantom of the Opera | RENT | Rocky Horror Show | Sweet Charity | The Producers | Thoroughly Modern Millie | We Will Rock You | WICKED
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The Time: Christmas Eve. The Place: New York City--an East Village industrial loft. Mark, a young filmmaker, sets up his
camera. His roomate Roger, a songwriter and ex-junkie, struggles to pick out a song on his electric guitar. Mark trains the
camera on Roger, taunting him about his songwriter's block (TUNE UP #1).
The phone rings: On the answering machine, Mark's mother leaves her son a consoling, motherly message. Mark, who has just
lost his girlfriend, Maureen, to another woman, screen the call (VOICE MAIL #1). The phone
rings again: Collins, an old friend, is at a pay phone downstairs. Mark picks up, but the call is cut short-Collins is being
mugged (TUNE UP #2). The phone rings once more. Again Mark and Roger pick up, hoping it
is Collins, only to find Benny, their wealthy former-roomate-turned landlord, on the line instead, demanding the rent. As
if things couldn't get any worse, the electrical power blows.
Loudly, Mark and Roger rage (RENT). They burn their past-to keep warm-using Roger's rock
and roll posters and Mark's screenplays for fuel. The past is not so easily wiped out, though; the phone rings yet again and
this time it's Maureen calling, begging Mark for technical help with her performance piece scheduled for later that night
in the vacant lot next door. Haplessly, he agrees.
Outside, a badly beaten Collins is discovered by Angel, a street musician, who offers bandages, comfort, and an invitation
for a night on the town (YOU OKAY HONEY?). Their instant attraction becomes a bond with
the realization that both are HIV-Positive.
In the loft, Mark also urges Roger to come out for the evening, but Roger refuses. Left alone, he stoically takes his AZT
and dreams of writing one last song to redeem his empty life (TUNE UP #3/ONE SONG GLORY).
He is interrupted by a beautiful stranger from downstairs, Mimi. Mimi needs a match, her electricity is down too (LIGHT MY CANDLE). She and Roger are instantly drawn to each other, but Roger resists. Mimi, he recognizes,
is a junkie.
Elsewhere, Maureen and Joanne's answering machine receives a message from Joanne's parents (VOICE
MAIL #2), but she is not home to hear it.
At last, Mark returns with Collins, who brings provisions and-better yet-funds, in the person of Angel, now decked out
in glorius drag. Angel explains how he has earned a fast $1,000 which he is eager to share (TODAY 4
U). Benny barges in with a deal: If Mark and Roger will stop Maureen's perfomance tonight protesting the clearing
of a tent city from Benny's adjacent vacant lot, Benny will forgive Mark and Roger's back-rent (YOU'LL
SEE). Once Benny is gone, Mark, Angel and Collins head out for the evening, leaving Roger alone again.
In the lot, Mark gathers his courage to meet the formidable Joanne, Maureen's new lover, who has also usurped Mark's stage
manager duties. When Joanne reluctantly accepts Mark's technical assistance, the two quickly find common ground in their shared
experiences of the self-centered, unfaithful albeit irresistable Maureen (TANGO: MAUREEN).
Angel and Collins attend an AIDS Support meeting; Mark arrives to document it on film. The group affirms its determination
to live without fear; "no day but today" (LIFE SUPPORT). Meanwhile, in her apartment, Mimi
is dressing to kill. Turning up again on Roger's doorstep, she implores him to take her out (OUT TONIGHT).
Roger is tempted, but his fear ultimately compels him to push Mimi away (ANOTHER DAY). Simultaneously,
a young support group member quietly asks, "Will I lose my dignity...Will someone care?" His questions are echoed by each
member of the community, including Roger, who decides finally to leave his loft room in search of answers (WILL
I...?).
In the lot, Mark, Angel and Collins rescue a homeless woman from police harassment (ON THE STREET).
The woman, however, is hardly greatful. Mark, Angel and Collins fantasize about leaving New York behind to live the good life,
far away (SANTA FE). Mark goes to check on Roger, leaving Angel and Collins alone to declare
their newfound love (I'LL COVER YOU).
Joanne dials Maureen from a payphone, simultaneously juggling two other calls on her cell-phone (WE'RE
OKAY). In St. Mark's Place, the homeless, sidewalk vendors, junkies, drug dealers, and cops comprise a human mosaic.
Angel buys Collins an overcoat, Mark meets up with Roger, and Mimi hunts for a fix (CHRISTMAS BELLS).
Roger spots her, apologizes fo rhis behavior in the loft, and invites her to dinner. She accepts.
Maureen arrives and presents her performance piece, a satirical protest that calls for a communal "leap of faith" against
Benny's commercial development (OVER THE MOON).
Aftarward, everyone meets and the Life Cafe, where they hear a gloating Benny declare that Bohemia is dead. Mark and his
fellow bohemians joyously reject Benny's pronouncement (LA VIE BOHEME). Benny exits in anger,
stopping only long enough to hound Mimi, who is, it would seem, a former lover. As her beeper sounds, Mimi pauses to take
her AZT. Roger discovers that his secret and his illness are Mimi's also. Exhilarated and frightened, they resolve to assume
the risk of romantic involvement as well (I SHOULD TELL YOU).
Joanne has several times been ordered back to the lot by Maureen. Fed up, she finally rebels, announcing that their relationship
is over. She also informs everyone that a riot has broken out on Avenue A (LA VIE BOHEME B).
Benny has padlocked Mark and Roger's building and called the police. The bohemians continue to celebrate. The riot continues
to rage. Roger and Mimi share a small, lovely kiss.
In the wake of the riot, the community pauses to ask, "How do you measure the life of a woman or a man?" The unqualified
answer- "measure in love" (SEASONS OF LOVE).
New Year's Eve. Mark films a "breaking back into the building party" (HAPPY NEW YEAR).
Mimi and Roger aer there and in love. Maureen humbles herself to earn back Joanne's favor. The celebration in complete when
Collins and Angel arrive with a blowtorch.
Once inside, Mark discovers a phone machine message left for him with a job offer from a tabloid television show hostess
name Alexi Darling (VOICE MAIL #3). Benny crashes the party to ostentatiously apologize,
offering the boys new keys to their old loft (HAPPY NEW YEAR B). Suspecting Benny's motives,
Roger balks. Furious, Benny implies that Mimi helped change his mind by sleeping with him. Mimi angrily denies this, but the
damage is done; Roger is bitterly jealous. Mimi is cornered outside by her dealer with a little something to assure her "happy
new year."
Valentine's Day. Roger is living with Mimi, but remains terribly jealous, often threatening to leave. Angel and Collins
survive together wherever they can. Mark still lives behind his camera. At their apartment, a warring Joanne and Maureen issue
each other an ultimatum (TAKE ME OR LEAVE ME). Neither backs down-they split up once again.
Spring. Everyone feels the coming changes. The community asks: "How do you measure a last year on earth?" (SEASONS
OF LOVE B). Roger walks out on Mimi, accusing her of being unfaithful with Benny. Alone, Mimi mourns the impending
loss of love, while Collins nurses the increasingly ill Angel (WITHOUT YOU). The end of
Spring brings reconciliation for Roger and Mimi, as well as Maureen and Joanne, bu all is tentative at best.
Summer's end, and Alexi is still calling, enticing Mark with big money (VOICE MAIL #4).
Much lovemaking is witnessed, framed by attendant frustrations in the age of safe sex (CONTACT).
By the fall, Roger, Mimi, Joanne and Maureen are all on the outs again. Collins and Angel's separation, however, is profound
and final. Angel has died.
At Angel's memorial each friend offers a loving tribute. Clutching the overcoat Angel gave him at Christmas, Collins reaffirms
his undying love (I'LL COVER YOU - REPRISE). Outside the church, Mark phones Alexi and accepts
her job offer, despondent at how drastically life has changed since that Christmas night just one year before (HALLOWEEN).
As the mourners exit the church, Mimi learns that Roger is leaving town for good. A nastly scene ensues, with arguments erupting
between all the estranged lovers. Collins, in sorrow, begs them all to stop. Maureen and Joanne are moved to try once again
to reconcile. Mimi and Benny leave together.
Mark tries to convince Roger to stay in New York and confront his pain, but Roger lashes out, accusing Mark of also remaining
detached, hiding behind his camera. Mark wonders whether Roger is simply afraid to watch Mimi die. Mimi appears and lets Roger
off the hook, insisting that she has just come to say goodbye (GOODBYE LOVE). Roger leaves
for Santa Fe and Mimi begs Mark for help. Benny turns up and offers to pay for Mimi's drug rehabilitation but she refuses
and instead runs away. When Benny covers the cost of Angel's funeral, he and Collins warm to each other and head off to get
drunk as Mark prepares for his meeting with Alexi.
Mark questions the choice he is about to make and the world in which he lives. His thoughts are echoed by Roger on his
way to Santa Fe (WHAT YOU OWN). They both remember the beauty of last Christmas Eve, when
they felt connected, and their friends were a family. Roger begins to discover his song. Mark turns down the TV tabloid job
to finish his film.
Roger, Mark, Mimi and Joanne's parents all wonder where their children are as the holidays approach (VOICE
MAIL #5).
Another Christmas Eve. Mark has pieced together a rough cut of his film, which he hopes to screen tonight. Roger has moved
back into the loft and has finished his song (FINALE). No-one has been able to find Mimi.
The power blows again but the night is brightened by the arrival of Collins. Then Maureen and Joanne appear on the sidewalk
below carrying a desperately ill Mimi. Laid out in the loft, Mimi finally manages to tell Roger that she loves him. Begging
her not to leave him, Roger sings his "one song" for her (YOUR EYES). "I have always loved
you," Roger whispers, then cries out her name as Mimi slips away.
Moments later, however she returns, with stories of a warm white light and Angel steering her back to life (FINALE
B). Celebrating the wonder of life's terrible uncertainty, the community re-affirms love as the strongest force
we know, acknowledging there is always, "No day but today."
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