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Andrew Keenan-Bolger

Author of Act 1 (Jack & Louisa)

4+ Works 148 Members 5 Reviews

Works by Andrew Keenan-Bolger

Act 1 (Jack & Louisa) (2015) 66 copies, 3 reviews
Act 2 (Jack & Louisa) (2016) 35 copies, 1 review
Limelight (2026) 24 copies, 1 review
Act 3 (Jack & Louisa) (2017) 23 copies

Associated Works

Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas [1997 film] (1997) — Actor — 192 copies, 1 review
Newsies: Original 2012 Broadway Cast Recording (2013) — Preformer — 8 copies
Wolverine: The Long Night [podcast] (2018) — Actor — 1 copy, 1 review

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Common Knowledge

Gender
male

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Reviews

7 reviews
In 1996, a Staten Island teen gets into an elite performing arts high school and tries to find his place in the world.

Danny Victorio has had a hard year. He and his mom left his abusive father and their materially comfortable old life in exchange for a cramped, dingy apartment belonging to Danny’s deceased uncle. With only the cassette tapes of Broadway cast recordings Uncle Richie left behind as inspiration, Danny auditions for LaGuardia High School of the Performing Arts. When he’s show more unexpectedly accepted, he’s thrilled to leave behind his Catholic school, which students call “St. Pete’s Cellblock for Horny and/or Satanic Boys.” At LaGuardia, he quickly befriends a quirky group of young fellow artists, including Christian, a Filipino American drag queen and ballet dancer, who gives white-presenting Danny butterflies. But to discover where he truly belongs, Danny will not only have to step outside his comfort zone, he’ll have to let his friends see the real him. Broadway actor Keenan-Bolger evokes musical theater classics like Billy Elliot and Fame along with even older performing arts school novels like Rumer Godden’s Thursday’s Children and Noel Streatfeild’s Shoe Books series. The rich setting and beautifully developed main characters balance the more two-dimensional side characters and quickly wrapped up ending. Still, musical theater fans will devour this story of finding your “corner of the sky.”

A vivid queer Broadway celebration with a classic feeling. (author’s note) (Historical fiction. 14-18)

-Kirkus Review
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This book may not be for everyone because of all of the musical theater references that most won't get, but oh, how I loved it! If Better Nate Than Ever, with its bad language and sexual references is too edgy for you (like it is for me), than this is the musical theater-themed book for you. I will admit to being slightly obsessed with the authors' web series Submissions Only , which is why I wanted to read Jack and Louisa, Act 1 , but even if you have never heard of authors/Broadway show more veterans Andrew Keenan-Bolger and Kate Wetherhead, this is still a fun read. And if you are a confirmed Musical Theater Nerd (MTN) like myself, what are you waiting for?!

I wasn't thrilled by the characters' infatuation with Stephen Sondheim's Into The Woods . In fact, if you mention that musical to anyone in our family we start singing in atonal voices, "Into the woods, into the woods, into the woods, into the woods". And yes, I do know that brands us as Broadway plebians because only the truly cultured "get" Sondheim, but I did bond with Louisa's dad in the book when they were discussing Sondheim.

"You just don't appreciate the complexity of Sondheim," I muttered.
Dad looked at me, eyebrows raised. I could tell my big words had impressed, or at least surprised him. Still, he wasn't about to give in.
"I 'appreciate the complexity' of a turbine engine," Dad said with a smirk. "THAT is complexity worth appreciating. This Sondheim stuff sounds like a record skipping."

Amen, brother.

Aside from not liking Into the Woods , I loved everything else about this book. The story is fun, the main characters are very likable, and the Broadway and New York references spoke to this poor, New York-deprived Colorado girl. I am lucky enough to have taken a couple of trips to New York, and this next quote from the book reminded me so much of a girl's trip I had with 2 of my daughters last year at this time. We just wanted to blend in and not look too touristy - so to accomplish that we had my son-in-law take a picture of us standing nonchalantly in Grand Central Station reading the paper and messing with our phones - mission accomplished! In this quote, Louisa just found out that her new neighbor, Jack, moved to her neighborhood in Shaker Heights, Ohio, from New York City. She got excited about that and he asked her if she had ever been there.

"To New York? Yeah, a couple times," I replied, like going to the cultural capital of the world was no big deal. Like I hadn't squealed with delight the first time I walked through Times Square, or practically fainted when I got a picture with Tony Award-winner Norbert Leo Butz in front of Schmackary's Cookies. Exposing my inner geek was a delicate process. I needed to at least attempt to be cool."

Or maybe it reminds me of last summer when I flew to Long Island on a Tuesday for the birth of my granddaughter, told my daughter not to have the baby for another day and took the train into the city by myself on Wednesday (the baby obliged and didn't come for another couple of days). I walked from Penn Station to the Shake Shack on 8th Avenue, stood in the long line on a hot July day (while pretending to talk to someone on the phone so I looked like a "real" New Yorker), got my shake and fries and walked to the St. James Theater just down the street to go to the matinee of Something Rotten! . I was incredibly early, and as I was standing in front of the theater all by myself with a fry halfway up to my mouth, Tony Award-winner Christian Borle walked right in front of me. I'm pretty sure I stood with my mouth open and my hand holding the fry frozen in the air just watching him walk to the stage door... but it is all kind of a blur :) . So you can see why I connected to Louisa in that moment. I try not to expose my inner geek as well - and I'm not a 12 year old girl! (And yes, we are planning another girls trip to New York in the fall and Schmackary's is definitely on the docket, along with Magnolia Bakery and 16 Handles. Not that I obsessively watch broadway.com's backstage shows like The Princess Diary or Renaissance Woman - where they talk about the wonder of those places - or anything.)

So, do you have to be a Musical Theater Nerd to like this book? No, it is a sweet and fun story even if you don't get all thrilled and tingly at the Broadway/New York references. However, if you ARE an MTN, you will absolutely love it like I did. I can't wait to read Act 2! And now I have to find out which of my middle schoolers will love it as much as I did. (I do have one student named Sutton, and the first time she checked out a book I told her one of my favorite Broadway performers was named Sutton and she knew who I was talking about - that bodes well.)

http://read-me-maybe.blogspot.com
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Jack may be only 12, but he's already a Broadway veteran when disaster strikes: in rehearsals for a new show, Jack's voice starts to break. He has no choice but to bow out, especially when his father's job takes him to Shaker Heights, Ohio. Jack is trying to prepare himself for a life as a normal kid -- but then he meets his neighbor Louisa. She may never have been to Broadway, but she has mad skills as a musical theatre geek, able to spout facts and statistics about favorite shows, actors, show more and directors -- and she's thrilled to finally have someone around who might understand her obsession. When the local community theatre group announces auditions for Into the Woods, a show beloved by both tweens, Louisa hopes that Jack will join her in trying out -- but maybe Jack doesn't want to do theatre any more...

I thought the authors did a great job with both the theatrical details and the preteen angst in this book. There's not a lot of depth, but it does what is sets out to do admirably: it's a fun, fluffy read that will certainly appeal to young readers who share Jack and Louisa's theatrical aspirations.
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Works
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Also by
4
Members
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Popularity
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Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
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ISBNs
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