After writing and originally starring in a once-in-a-generation, cultural touchstone project like Hamilton, youâd be correct to assume Lin-Manuel Miranda could do pretty much whatever he wanted next. For the most part, thatâs been spending time in Hollywood. Miranda wrote songs for Disneyâs Moana, Encanto, and The Little Mermaid; starred in Mary Poppins Returns; and directed a screen version of Jonathan Larsonâs musical tick, tickâŠBOOM!
But, as Miranda has made clear so many times over his career, his heart still belongs to musical theatre, and heâll never be far from it for long (last year, he wrote lyrics for the short-lived Broadway musical New York, New York). This year, heâs debuting a new project, with playwright Eisa Davis. The pair have co-written a musical version of The Warriors, a cult classic that hit movie theatres in 1979 and was based on a novel by Sol Yurick.
The story begins with a Bronx meeting that collects all the gangs of NYC. One gang leader wants to propose a citywide truce that would allow the groups to control their own neighborhoods free of violence and the police action that brings. But then, that leader is shot and killed, and Coney Island gang the Warriors gets falsely blamed for the crime. Unarmed and in the revenge sights of every other NYC gang, and running from law enforcement, the Warriors have to fight to return home.
The musical releases October 18, but you wonât be able to see it on Broadway, or any stageâyet, at least. Miranda and Davis decided to take a cue from musicals like Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita, The Whoâs Tommy, and even Jekyll & Hyde; they are releasing the work first as a concept album. And that decision was not made haphazardly.
On a surface level, making the musical as an album opened up the opportunity to cast the piece with some very heavy hitters, and they have done that and then some. Ms. Lauryn Hill plays Cyrus, the peace-seeking gang leader whose murder kicks off the story. Busta Rhymes, Shenseea, Nas, Ghostface Killah, and RZA all have cameos, too. "I could never get all these people doing eight shows a week,â Miranda tells Playbill, âor even in the same room at the same time. But we could get them for an afternoon or a couple of days.â
But thatâs just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what making this musical an album unlocked for Miranda and Davis. âWe got to free ourselves from thinking about how theyâre going to stage it,â Miranda explains. âNot our problem. Our job was to just musicalize it to the best of our ability.â
Not having to worry about staging might be particularly helpful when it comes to Warriors (carrying on a grand Broadway tradition, Miranda and Davis have dropped the âtheâ from their musicalâs title, albeit without the oft-seen exclamation point). The story sees the characters visit numerous locations on their journey, from subway stations to various neighborhoods, parks, and bars. There are fight sequences throughout that see the titular Warriors running, tussling, even being thrown in front of approaching subway trains. None of these are ideas that musicals, especially when confined to traditional proscenium stages, are known for doing particularly well. Miranda says heâs loved the film since he was a kid, and had the concept of musicalizing it pitched to him soon after In the Heights, his first musical, won Best Musical at the 2008 Tony Awards. But the film's action sequences made him reject the concept for years.
Beyond the difficulties with staging, Miranda says the real trouble is that action movies end up using action sequences kind of how musicals use songs. âI think that action movies, musicals, and porno movies are all fighting for the same storytelling real estate. When you canât talk anymore, you sing, fight, or fuck,â Miranda declares with a wry smile.
That meant that in Warriors the musical, Miranda and Davis had to figure out how to musicalize fightsâand no Jerome Robbins ballets are on the docket this time. âWeâve kind of landed on throwing everything at the wall,â Miranda says. Some fights became musical montages, while others are instrumental, and some even have third-person descriptions of the action.
And it's not just done using Hamilton-esque rap and hip-hop. In Miranda and Davisâ Warriors, that wild landscape of New York City becomes a musical score that is not afraid to dip into the sound of punk rock, heavy metal, rap, Fania, and even contemporary musical theatre. And Miranda says that was due to Davis. Primarily known as a performer (Passing Strange) and playwright (the Pulitzer finalist Bulrusher and Angelaâs Mixtape), Davis isn't just writing Warriorsâ book. The musical credits both Miranda and Davis as its authors without further designation. When Davis joined Miranda on the project, she wanted to push Miranda into some new musical areas, and even use the album recording process to explore with their musicians and see what they found.
And Davis had some powerful support when it came to that idea. Miranda says Andrew Lloyd Webber echoed that advice when they spoke about the project, which eventually led to some complete numbers being written via group jam sessions with the albumâs band (âthe best musicians in the country,â Miranda says) at producer Mike Elizondoâs home studio in Tennessee.
And easter egg alert: Davisâs musical contributions were more specific than encouraging Miranda to jam with their band. Davis envisioned a specific trumpet line for the musicalâs opening that ended up getting used in the orchestration. And the very first sung material heard on the album, six seconds into the first track, is the very voice memo Davis recorded to send to Miranda of that brass lick.
It's not just the songsâthis version of The Warriors is considerably different from its source material. Most notably, the all-male Warriors gang has been transformed into a band of women, played by stage favorites Jasmine Cephas Jones, Julia K Harriman, Gizel JimĂ©nez, Amber Gray, Aneesa Folds, Sasha Hutchings, Kenita Miller, and Phillipa Sooâall eight were originally brought in to sing scratch vocals as a demo, but Miranda and Davis loved the performances so much that they kept them all for the final album. "There is a really strong feminist impulse in this that comes from my politics and just walking around in New York City," says Davis.
But thatâs not the only change. The Warriors on screen is, some might say, campy (Miranda prefers âstylizedâ). Sure, some of the gangs look like youâd expect a gang to look in the New York of the late â70s. But there is also a gang of mimes, a group that fights on roller skates, a gang that dresses up in baseball uniforms with wild face paint, an all-female possibly lesbian-coded group that tries to bring down the Warriors by seducing them, and more.
That all-female gang, the Lizzies, has become the Bizzies, a male group of dangerous himbos whose sound is straight out of â90s boy bands and even more modern k-pop groups. The roller skating bunch is, appropriately, now a group straight out of the ballroom scene, played on the album by Billy Porter, Michaela JaĂ©, and Mykal Kilgore.
But beneath the surface of all these changes is another shift, somehow both more subtle and incredibly impactful. The movie tends to play as a contemporary Odyssey-style adventure storyâthe violence of which inspired something of a moral panic over NYCâs supposed gang problem. But Davis, who hadnât seen the film until Miranda asked her to collaborate with him on the musical, saw something different.
âThe thing that really stood out for me was that there was this peace meeting and there is this possibility of a truce,â Davis says. âThere is a possibility that we wouldnât have to fight each other anymore.â Davis has underlined this in the musical adaptation, making Warriors about the dream of peace, why itâs worth fighting for, and how it can be achieved even when it seems the most unlikely. âThereâs all these fears in it, of being falsely accused, of being lost, of not being able to get home. But thereâs also this hope, that peace is possible,â Davis says.
Warriors doesnât hit you over the head with that shift, but the effect is palpable. Miranda and Davisâ take on the story invites us to reconsider how we think of gangs, perhaps less as violent mobs out to terrorize locals and more as community groups seeking autonomy over their own neighborhoods. Davis says that feeling came from her own New York City experience, with groups like the Black Panthers or the Young Lordsâa history that people often overlook. âA lot of these gangs became community organizations that were actually taking care of each other.â
So, your typical theatre fan is probably thinking, whatâs next? Both Miranda and Davis swear that no Broadway run is yet in the works, nor is any staging. âWe donât have a director, we donât have a producer, we just have an album,â Miranda says. But that doesnât mean the possibility of a stage production isnât on the mind.
The big question is what that might look like, and how the piece might continue to develop in that process. Listening to the album, one wonders if a stage version might have more dialogue, but Miranda says theyâre not so sure. âWe debate whether itâs going to be more or less, given that the album paints such a complete picture,â he says.
âWe wrote this so that it would be sung through with these little skits,â Davis adds. âWe wanted the narrative to be completely apparent and clear just from that. So I don't really know, is there any fat to add? I don't know!â
But come on. Itâs safe to assume Hamilton has made people a few spare millions in its almost decade-long run so far. Surely, it wouldnât be hard to find a producer who wants to see if they could repeat that wild success? In response, Miranda playfully invokes Annieâs plucky Star to Be: âThree bucks, two bags, one us!â he campily sings.
In other words, listen now, because the next iteration of Warriors might cost you a little bit more than a Spotify subscription.