Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Lisa Loeb and fellow Brown University alumni set 2020 to music

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Group reunions on Zoom have rarely become the fuel for good art. But one has created a musical — actually 10, to be precise.

Grammy Award-winner Lisa Loeb was inspired to capture the weirdness, wonder and horror of 2020 during a Brown University online reunion. So she tapped dozens of her fellow alumni to help create “Together Apart,” a collection of 10 mini-musicals that explore moments during the year. There are also songs by Grammy-winner Gordon Chambers.

There are stories about speed-dating during the pandemic, elementary school taught through Zoom, a pair of divorcees forced to become roommates, moms struggling through quarantine and a family game night that spins out of control. There are exasperate­d parents, long-ago lovers and lots of alcohol — perhaps even a drunk racoon.

“People really had the passion to connect and to tell these stories and to work together. So it created a lot of purpose during this time. And, for a lot of people, it created an opportunit­y to be creative,” says Loeb.

“Together Apart” makes its debut Friday on the streaming platform Broadway On Demand. Tickets are free with a suggested donation to The Actors Fund.

Loeb, whose music career kicked off with the 1994 hit “Stay (I Missed You),” logged onto a Zoom of former Brown musical theater students and listened as people reminisced about shows and talked about how COVID-19 had affected their plans and hopes.

“As everybody went around the room, in my head I felt like I was almost in a musical already,” she says. “So I said, ‘You know, instead of just talking about these musical theater memories, we should write a show.’”

Some nine months later, after about 100 alumni had offered their input as actors, songwriter­s, storywrite­rs and singers, “Together Apart” was done, a collection that captures both the absurdity of the pandemic and the impact of the death of George Floyd. Comedian Eric Kirchberge­r plays Dr. Anthony Fauci, popping up every so often to act as a sort of narrator.

“It’s a piece in time. This is what it felt like. It’s a theatrical sized version of it and it’s definitely a fictionali­zed, but there is definitely so many different facets of the COVID times,” says Loeb. “We were connecting and then we made a show about connecting.”

 ?? Richard Shotwell / Associated Press ?? Grammy Award-winner Lisa Loeb was inspired to capture the weirdness, wonder and horror of 2020 during a Brown University online reunion.
Richard Shotwell / Associated Press Grammy Award-winner Lisa Loeb was inspired to capture the weirdness, wonder and horror of 2020 during a Brown University online reunion.

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