Chattanooga Times Free Press

“Rent” at Rock musical run. two-night Tivoli for THURSDAY & WEDNESDAY

Rock musical plays Tivoli for two nights

- STAFF REPORT

“Five hundred, twenty-five thousand, six hundred minutes Five hundred, twenty-five thousand moments so dear…”

Few lyrics ever become so synonymous with one musical as have those opening lines to “Seasons of Love” from “Rent.”

The haunting song encapsulat­es the musical’s message as it asks how to measure the value of a year in a person’s life, concluding the answer is “measure in love.”

“Rent” follows that life-affirming theme through the story of struggling artists and their entwined experience­s over four seasons in one year. Love found, lives lost and love rediscover­ed form the plot of “Rent,” the rock musical loosely based on Puccini’s opera “La Boheme.” The 20th anniversar­y tour of “Rent” stops Wednesday and Thursday, March 8-9, for performanc­es at the Tivoli Theatre.

“Rent” was written in the early ’90s by a then-little-known composer named Jonathan Larson. It won a Pulitzer Prize off-Broadway before it opened on Broadway in 1996. The success of the show led to several national tours before the musical was adapted into a 2005 movie. The musical follows seven young adults living in New York City’s East Village. The principals are Mimi, an HIV-positive exotic dancer, and Roger Davis, a songwriter who is also HIV-positive, played by Skyler Volpe and Kaleb Wells, respective­ly. Danny Harris Kornfeld plays Mark Cohen, Roger’s roommate who is an independen­t filmmaker. David Merina plays the iconic role of Angel, the drag queen percussion­ist with AIDS.

Puccini’s lead character dies from tuberculos­is in his opera. Larson chose AIDS as “Rent’s” health epidemic, which in the early 1990s was peaking. Four of the seven principals in “Rent” either have been diagnosed with AIDS or are HIV-positive, and one of them will succumb to the disease.

Still, the musical’s dynamic music and well-developed characteri­zations combine for a message of hope and celebratio­n of friendship. Up to the final moments before the closing curtain, “Rent” reminds its audiences to live every day to its fullest and measure their seasons of life with the only thing that truly matters: love.

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