Video5 A Bronx Tale Cast Members Recall Their Broadway DebutsThe musical continues to play Broadway's Longacre Theatre.
By
Andrew Gans
March 20, 2018
Five cast members from the musical A Bronx Tale, currently playing the Longacre Theatre, discuss making their Broadway debuts in the video above.
Watch Bradley Gibson, Levi Smith, Lucia Giannetta, Hudson Loverro, and Adam Kaplan recall their whereabouts when they received the news that they had been cast in a Broadway show, the first person they told, and their first time walking onto a Broadway stage.
The Broadway company is currently led by Kaplan as Calogero, Giannetta as Rosina, Tony nominee Joe Barbara as Sonny, Christiani Pitts as Jane, Richard H. Blake as Lorenzo, Gibson as Tyrone, and Loverro and Smith, who share the part of Young Calogero.
A Bronx Tale has a book by Oscar nominee Chazz Palminteri, music by Oscar, Grammy, and Tony winner Alan Menken, and lyrics by Grammy winner and Oscar and Tony nominee Glenn Slater. It is co-directed by Robert De Niro and Jerry Zaks, with choreography by Sergio Trujillo.
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See A Bronx Tale Record Their Cast Album
See A Bronx Tale Record Their Cast Album
The cast recorded their album January 9 for release on the Decca Broadway label.
5 PHOTOS
(Back row) Bradley Gibson, Kaleigh Cronin, Paul Salvatoriello, Ariana DeBose, Ted Brunetti, Joe Barbara, Lucia Giannetta, Richard H. Blake, Joey Sorge, Brittany Conigatti, Michael Barra, Jonathan Brody, Bobby Conte Thornton, and Nick Cordero (Front row) Dominic Nolfi, Rory Max Kaplan, Kirstin Tucker, Gilbert L. Bailey II, Keith White, Cary Tedder, and Christiani Pitts
Rory Max Kaplan, Dominic Nolfi, Cary Tedder, and Keith White
Bradley Gibson, Richard H. Blake, Ariana DeBose, Glenn Slater, Alan Menken, Lucia Giannetta, Chazz Palminteri, Bobby Conte Thornton, and Nick Cordero
Paul Salvatoriello, Joey Sorge, Ted Brunetti, Jonathan Brody, Joe Barbara, Michael Barra, and David Michael Garry
Gilbert L. Bailey II, Richard H. Blake, Glenn Slater, Ariana DeBose, and Lucia Giannetta
The choreographer behind A Bronx Tale,On Your Feet!, Memphis, and Jersey Boys talks about creating two distinct dance vocabularies for the new musical based on the Chazz Palminteri classic.