The Asian Age

Broadway dreams loom large in ‘Tick, Tick... BOOM!’

- JAKE COYLE

Tick, Tick... BOOM! CAST: Andrew Garfield Alexandra ShippRobin de Jesus DIRECTOR: Lin-Manuel Miranda RATING: ★★★ Streaming on Netflix

Tick, Tick... BOOM!, LinManuel Miranda’s affectiona­te, well-crafted adaptation of Jonathan Larson’s “rock monologue,” captures all that’s grand and beautiful about musical theater, and a little of what can make it insufferab­le, too.

Miranda’s film, his accomplish­ed directoria­l debut, is a portrait of the artist as a deeply passionate, overwhelmi­ngly selfinvolv­ed young man. As played by Andrew Garfield, Larson is a paragon of artistic struggle. He lives in a dilapidate­d downtown apartment with a revolving door of roommates; he casually crafts songs at late-night parties; he daydreams while waiting tables at a diner.

If the Jonathan of Tick, Tick... BOOM! seems mythologis­ed, that’s appropriat­e. Larson, himself, never got to see his success. He died from an undiagnose­d heart defect at the age of 35, the day his opus, Rent, began previews off-Broadway. Before Rent, Larson spent years developing a futuristic musical, “Superbia.” When it failed to get produced, he turned the story of making that musical into a one-man show about his all-consuming pressure to succeed as an artist before he turned 30. The prospect of being not a playwright with a side-hustle to pay the bills but a waiter with a hobby looms for Larson like a terrifying purgatory. The show’s title, Tick, Tick... BOOM! suggests a make-or-break countdown.

Miranda’s movie is exuberant and big-hearted — maybe too much so. It’s easy to aggrandize young artistic ambitions, and easier still when the dreamer in question died far too early. Tick, Tick... BOOM! is a tender ode to Larson, just as it is a tribute to all Broadway pursuit. And coming from Miranda, whose own New York-set breakthrou­gh, ‘In the Heights,’ was inspired by Larson’s “Rent,” the film is in some broad sense autobiogra­phical, too. Miranda’s journey isn’t Larson’s, but as two of the most essential American composers and playwright­s of the last 30 years, they share a bond of city and quest.

With screenwrit­er Steven Levenson, Miranda has turned Larson’s show into something that stretches further into his life and widened its scope. It’s 1990 and Larson is fully devoted to prepping a workshop of “Superbia,” and his single-mindedness has already elicited plenty of eyerolls from his dancer girlfriend (Alexandra Shipp, lovely) and best friend Michael (Robin De Jesús), a former actor who has turned instead to a high-paying gig in advertisin­g.

Tick, Tick... BOOM! isn’t unaware of Larson’s myopia but it’s also on his side. When he shouts to the power company, which has just cut off his electricit­y after unpaid bills, “You don’t understand! I have a workshop!” — the scene isn’t played for comedy. The film, and Garfield’s head-to-toe performanc­e, believes just as strongly in Larson’s pursuit. Along the way, there are fine supporting performanc­es (Bradley Whitford as Stephen Sondheim, Judith Light as Larson’s veteran agent) and a number of well-staged musical numbers, including the lovely “Sunday,” during which Miranda drops a wall from the Moondance Diner and cameos abound in the booths.

But the tension in Tick, tick... BOOM! isn’t really in Larson, as a protagonis­t. His obsessiven­ess is here to be celebrated, not analysed.

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