Ready for the dolls cats? Cats: The Jellicle Ball, the reimagined revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber's long-running musical, newly set in the underground world of Ballroom, has found full casting for its upcoming Broadway bow, set to begin at the Broadhurst March 18 ahead of an April 7 opening night.
Newly revealed to be joining are Legendary head judge Leiomy Maldonado as Mavacity; Kya Azeen (Pose) as Etcetera; Bryson Battle (The Voice) as Jellylorum; and Ken Ard, who created the role of Macavity in the 1982 original Broadway production, as DJ Griddlebone; along with Sherrod T. Brown, Bryce Farris, Phumzile Sojola (Masquerade), Kendall Grayson Stroud, B. Noel Thomas (Saturday Church), Kalyn West (The Prom), and Donté Nadir Wilder.
They join a previously announced company, much of them reprising their work from the production's earlier Off-Broadway staging at Perelman Performing Arts Center, including Tony winner André De Shields as Old Deuteronomy, "Tempress" Chasity Moore as Grizabella, Junior LaBeija as Gus, Sydney James Harcourt as Rum Tum Tugger, Jonathan Burke as Mungojerrie, Baby Byrne as Victoria, Dava Huesca as Rumpleteazer, Dudney Joseph Jr. as Munkustrap, Robert “Silk” Mason as Magical Mister Mistoffelees, Primo Thee Ballerino as Tumblebrutus, Xavier Reyes as Jennyanydots, Nora Schell as Bustopher Jones, Bebe Nicole Simpson as Demeter, Emma Sofia as Cassandra and Skimbleshanks, Garnet Williams as Bombalurina, Teddy Wilson, Jr. as Sillabub, and Tara Lashan Clinkscales. Casting is by X Casting's Victor Vazquez and Sujotta R. Pace.
The production, co-directed by Zhailon Levingston and Bill Rauch and featuring vogueing-infused choreography by Omari Wiles and Arturo Lyons, has its Jellicle cats convening for an annual ball to stomp the runway in fabulous duds, with Lloyd Webber's Tony-winning score (notably including the seminal "Memory") newly augmented by dance music-inspired beats. The Broadway bow's recently revealed theatre configuration includes onstage seating on either side of a ballroom runway. See what critics had to say about the production Off-Broadway here.
Also back from the earlier staging will be Levingston and Rauch's full creative team, including scenic designer Rachel Hauck, costume designer Qween Jean, lighting designer Adam Honoré, sound designer Kai Harada, projection designer Brittany Bland, hair and wig designer Nikiya Mathis, dramaturg and gender consultant Josie Kearns, and music supervisor and director William Waldrop. Cooper Howell and N'yomi Allure Stewart will serve as associate directors, and Cody Renard Richard will be production stage manager. Baseline Theatrical is general managing.
READ: In This New Cats Revival, It's Jellicle Songs for Voguers and Femme Queens
Most recently brought somewhat mainstream by the FX series Pose, the Ballroom scene is an underground LGBTQIA+ subculture that arose in 1920s NYC, arguably reaching its zenith in the '80s. Home to runway walk categories that invited participants to dress in any number of themes ranging from the extravagant to the fabulously commonplace, the Ballroom scene is also where vogue dancing comes from—but real vogueing, not Madonna vogueing. Dominated specifically by the Black and Latino queer communities, the scene has become ingrained in much of queer and popular culture today, particularly the world of drag. Ball culture was most famously memorialized in the iconic 1990 documentary Paris Is Burning.
But the world of Ballroom is a new take on the Lloyd Webber musical, which debuted in London in 1979 as a dance musical adapted from T.S. Eliot's book of poetry, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats. Largely plotless, the musical follows a tribe of so-called "Jellicle" Cats who gather for an annual ball, presenting themselves for the chance to be reborn into a new life. The first act culminates in an all-dancing Jellicle Ball. While the connections to Ballroom culture might seem obvious now, the original production, choreographed by Gillian Lynne, featured quasi-modern ballet-inspired dance and cat costumes comprising '80s-appropriate leotards and leg warmers.
Michael Harrison and Mike Bosner are producing the Broadway bow.