USA TODAY International Edition

‘Rent: Live’ offers dancing, singing, life and death Managing mature material

- Carly Mallenbaum

LOS ANGELES – For a theater nerd, visiting the set of a live TV musical sounds like a treat. There will be singing! There will be dancing! There will be unbridled joy!

At the Fox lot where “Rent” is being rehearsed this month, there was plenty of all. But also a somber undertone. And references to death, including a neardeath scene being practiced from a loftlike stage.

“Mimi!” yells Brennin Hunt (as depressed rocker Roger), holding the lifeless body of the exotic dancer and junkie, played by singer-actress Tinashe. He places her body on a metal table, as the other “Rent” players gather, worried: Joanne (Kiersey Clemons) holds her teary girlfriend Maureen (Vanessa Hudgens). Mark (Jordan Fisher) swoops in to offer support for Roger, who sings desperatel­y for his dying lover.

And that’s when you remember that, oh yeah, the exuberant, Tony-winning “Rent” is about friendship, love and the impact of the AIDS crisis in ‘90s New York City. And it was written by Jonathan Larson, a man who died before he could see his 1996 show eventually succeed on Broadway, and be adapted as Fox’s latest three-hour live event Sunday (8 EST/PST).

“Rent” is a more adult-themed departure from Fox’s previous adaptions of “Grease” and “A Christmas Story.”

Life-or-death stakes

“It is definitely different. It is a musical drama. The stakes are life and death,” says producer Marc Platt, who was behind those previous musicals, along with NBC’s “Jesus Christ Superstar.” “As the years have gone by with ‘Rent,’ and while there was a very fine (2005) film, there was a question of whether it could be given a new context and revitalize­d in a way.”

Tinashe’s Mimi quite literally gets revitalize­d in that scene. She takes a breath, sits up, and wait, everyone stop, Michael Greif, who also directed the original Broadway run, has a few notes:

Can Hunt put his hand under Tinashe’s head tenderly? And can Tinashe put her arm on Hunt when he sings the word “moonlight”? They run the scene a dozen more times, and the moments are more devastatin­g each time, even as actors check their phones and laugh at jokes between run-throughs.

It’s not as difficult as you might expect to adapt “Rent” for a broadcast-TV audience. (The telecast starts an hour later than previous Fox musicals).

“Light My Candle,” a song about falling for someone (and hiding a stash) was deemed OK. “Drugs are unfortunat­ely so much a part of the world that they’re a part of television,” Platt says. But don’t expect a Mimi striptease for “Out Tonight.”

“We tried it, we couldn’t get it past (censors),” he jokes. And the F-bombs have been subtracted from the lyrics.

Updating the script

Platt promises a story that sticks closely to its source material.

There’ll be more context about the AIDS epidemic, using title cards and voiceovers that will be helpful for “a lot of young folks who love the music of ‘Rent’ and love the story (but) aren’t really aware of how pervasive (AIDS) was in the world.”

Some characters are getting a slight refresh, too: Fisher is proud to play the first Mark of color.

The idea that the lead of “Rent,” a character first played by Anthony Rapp could be played by someone who isn’t white, “could have been challenged long ago,” says Fisher. “I know people of color who are Jewish. I know people of color who were born into privilege.” Mark is all of these things. “Beyond that, just the melanin in my skin, I loved the idea of playing somebody I felt very close to,” says Fisher, who’s known for “Hamilton” and “Dancing With the Stars.”

Fisher first sought the role of father figure Mark 15 years ago, when he watched a bootleg copy of a Broadway “Rent” recording. Coming from a small town near Birmingham, Alabama, “I was kind of always the kid that was supposed to be somewhere else. And that is Mark, the outsider looking in but living in the nucleus of all of us.”

Immersive experience

Fisher and Hudgens, who co-starred in “Grease: Live” (broadcast partly from an outdoor studio lot) are grateful that “Rent” will be staged in a round theater indoors.

The set is sparse, with metal, wood and signs that drop from the ceiling. A band will perform on an elevated stage.

“If felt like, when you saw ‘Rent’ on Broadway, it was a happening. What I want to put here is a happening,” says Platt.

What adds energy to “Rent”? Fans. Hundreds of “Rent”-heads will be crying and likely singing along from risers and gaps in the stage.

“The exciting thing about musical theater and doing it live is, there is no second chance,” says Hudgens. “When it comes to life, and it’s breathing and moving and all the thoughts are flowing, it’s blissful.”

 ??  ?? “Rent: Live” underwent some network-friendly tweaking. KEVIN ESTRADA/FOX
“Rent: Live” underwent some network-friendly tweaking. KEVIN ESTRADA/FOX

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