Elf | |
---|---|
Music | Matthew Sklar |
Lyrics | Chad Beguelin |
Book | Bob Martin Thomas Meehan |
Basis | Elf by David Berenbaum |
Productions | 2010 Broadway 2012 Broadway revival 2013 US tour 2015 West End 2022 West End revival 2023 West End revival 2024 Broadway revival |
Elf is a musical based on the motion picture of the same name, with a score by Matthew Sklar and Chad Beguelin.[1][2] The book is adapted by Bob Martin and Thomas Meehan from the 2003 film. The musical ran on Broadway in the Christmas seasons of 2010, 2012, and 2024, in the West End in 2015, 2022, and 2023, and has also toured extensively, often during the Christmas holiday season.
Santa Claus, annoyed that his football game has been recorded over, opens a large pop-up book to read a story. Buddy is the happiest, and much the tallest elf ("Christmastown"). It turns out that Buddy is actually human. Santa explains that Buddy's mother had died, and, as an orphan, he had crawled into Santa's toy sack; arriving at the North Pole, he was raised as an elf. Santa encourages Buddy to go to New York City to find his birth father, Walter Hobbs, who is on the naughty list because he doesn't believe in Santa. Nevertheless, Buddy hopes that Walter will be the "World’s Greatest Dad".
Walter works long hours as a book publisher in the Empire State Building. Too busy to shop for gifts with his son, Michael, and wife, Emily, he laments that Christmas gets "In the Way". Dressed in his elf clothes, Buddy finds Walter's office, where he is mistaken for a singing telegram entertainer, but he sings that Walter is his father. Walter does not believe him and has building security take Buddy to the nearby Macy's Department Store North Pole village. The employees there love Buddy's happy Christmas spirit ("Sparklejollytwinklejingley"). Buddy quickly falls for Jovie, a practical-minded Macy's elf, and persuades her to go on a date with him. The next day, however, Buddy sees Macy's Santa and declares that he is not the real Santa, causing a fracas. The police bring him to the residence of the Hobbs family.
There, Michael and Emily are struggling to build a science project. Buddy helps them to complete the project, in exchange for Michael and Emily sending a letter to Santa asking for quality time with Walter ("I’ll Believe in You"). Walter gets home, and they convince him to let Buddy sleep there for the night. In the morning, they receive the results of a DNA test that Emily arranged; it proves that Buddy is Walter’s son ("In the Way" (reprise)). Reluctantly, he takes Buddy to his office, because Emily has a meeting. Buddy, wearing a new suit like his dad's, hopes to be "Just Like Him". Mr. Greenway, Walter's boss, tells Walter that if he does not publish a hit children’s book by Christmas Eve, he will be fired; Walter, under pressure, grows even more frustrated by Buddy's distracting exuberance.
Buddy takes Jovie on a date, and the two have romantic chemistry. He plans to fulfill her Christmas wish by taking her to dinner at Tavern on the Green. Jovie enjoys Buddy's enthusiasm as he encourages her to spread Christmas Cheer by loudly singing "A Christmas Song". Buddy is eager to tell Walter that he is in love and decides to cheer up his dad by making it snow in his office, so he shreds up some paper that turns out to be the manuscript of the children's book that Walter is feverishly working on. Walter angrily tosses Buddy out of the office, asking him never to return. Buddy is despondent ("World Greatest Dad" (reprise)).
Santa recounts that Buddy left a farewell message for the Hobbs family. On Christmas Eve, hungry and alone on the streets of New York, Buddy finds a Chinese restaurant, where he meets unhappy, out-of-a job fake Santas complaining that "Nobody Cares About Santa". Buddy is two hours late for his date with Jovie, who is waiting angrily in front of Tavern on the Green. She vows: "Never Fall in Love (With an Elf)". When Buddy shows up, he gives her a snow globe that Santa had given him when he departed from the North Pole, but she is too disappointed and departs.
Emily and Michael find Buddy's letter and wish to retrieve him. Out of their apartment window, they see Santa's sleigh and realize that they had been wrong: "There Is a Santa Claus". They go to the Empire State Building, where Buddy also arrives, to find Walter sweating as he works to pitch a book idea to his boss. Buddy suggests "The Story of Buddy the Elf". Mr. Greenway loves the idea but says the book should be about a horse, rather than an elf. He demands that Walter work through Christmas to produce the book. However, Mr. Greenway overplays his hand by rudely criticizing Walter’s sons, and Walter quits his job. Michael relates that he and his mother saw Santa's sleigh land. This alarms Buddy, as he knows this means that the sleigh must have lost power from a lack of Christmas spirit in New York City. The Hobbs family rushes to Central Park ("Nobody Cares About Santa" (reprise)).
Buddy is struck by a plan. He sees a news crew covering a purported UFO event. Grabbing the reporter's microphone, he encourages all New Yorkers to spread the Christmas spirit to repower the sleigh and speed Santa on his way. Jovie appears, and she starts to sing "A Christmas Song" (reprise). Other New Yorkers begin to sing, and their collective Christmas cheer works. Santa invites Buddy to come home with him to the North Pole, but at last Buddy feels that he has a place in New York, where he can continue making everyone happy.
On Christmas Day at his home, Santa closes the big book and hears a knock on his door. There he finds Buddy, Jovie, their new baby, Buddy Jr., and the rest of the Hobbs family arriving to celebrate Christmas with him. This becomes their annual tradition.
Instead of Santa Claus, the film is narrated by Papa Elf, who does not appear in the musical. Other minor changes from the movie to the musical include Santa Claus using an iPhone instead of a list of names while delivering gifts, Buddy and Jovie's child being changed from a girl to a boy, the department store scenes taking place at Macy's instead of Gimbels, and Buddy being dropped off at the Hobbs house instead of being bailed out of jail by Walter. The musical also adds a subplot about Michael and Emily Hobbs' disbelief in Santa Claus. And instead of having an elf named Ming Ming, they changed the name to Charlie and had a girl elf named Shwanda.
Several scenes from the film are absent, including Buddy's visit to the mail room of the Empire State Building, and Buddy rescuing Michael from school bullies in a Central Park snowball fight. The character of Miles Finch is cut in the musical. In the musical, Walter's staff writers happen upon the only copy of an unpublished manuscript for a Christmas story by deceased famous author Chris Smith. Buddy shreds the document, not understanding its significance. This is when Walter angrily says he wishes Buddy wasn't his son, instead of in the aftermath of the Miles Finch scene.
The film and musical strongly deviate in the character of Walter. In the film, Walter is portrayed as greedy, obsessed with his work, and deliberately neglectful of his family duties. In the musical, he is shown as merely bumbling, forgetful, and overworked. Santa Claus explains in the film that Walter is on his "naughty" list because of his greed and general meanness, whereas in the musical it is because he doesn't believe in Santa. In the musical, after Buddy pitches the idea of making the book about how he came to the North Pole (leading into the song, "The Story of Buddy the Elf"), Mr. Greenway loves the story, but Walter quits after Mr. Greenway insults his sons; in the film Walter chooses to go with Michael to bring Buddy back home, instead of pitching anything to Mr. Greenway, which leads to his firing.
The musical numbers in the original Broadway production were as follows:[1]
Act I[3]
|
Act II[3]
|
The original principal casts of major productions.
Character | Broadway | Broadway Revival | West End[6] | Broadway Revival[7] |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 2012 | 2015 | 2024 | |
Buddy Hobbs | Sebastian Arcelus | Jordan Gelber | Ben Forster | Grey Henson |
Jovie | Amy Spanger | Leslie Kritzer | Kimberley Walsh | Kayla Davion |
Emily Hobbs | Beth Leavel | Jessica Martin | Ashley Brown | |
Walter Hobbs | Mark Jacoby | Joe McGann | Michael Hayden | |
Santa Claus | George Wendt | Wayne Knight | Mark McKerracher | Sean Astin |
Michael Hobbs | Matthew Gumley Matthew Schechter |
Mitchell Sink | Ilan Galkoff Harry Collett Noah Key Ewan Rutherford |
Kai Edgar |
Deb | Valerie Wright | Jennie Dale | Jennifer Sanchez | |
Mr. Greenway | Michael McCormick | Adam Heller | Mark McKerracher | Sean Astin |
Macy's Manager | Michael Mandell | Graham Lappin | Kalen Allen |
After a 2009 workshop, the musical officially opened for a limited holiday engagement at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre on Broadway on November 14, 2010, following previews from November 2, 2010. Casey Nicholaw directed.[8][9][10][11] The final performance took place January 2, 2011 after a run of 15 preview and 57 regular performances.[12] A Broadway cast recording was released on November 1, 2011.[13] Leading the original cast was Wicked and Jersey Boys star Sebastian Arcelus, who was joined by Broadway alums Amy Spanger and Beth Leavel.[14]
Presented by NETworks, a mini-tour of the musical played several cities across North America in the 2012 holiday season. Two separate tours, running simultaneously, began in 2013, and the musical toured again in the holiday seasons in 2014, 2015, and 2016.[citation needed]
A limited US/Canadian tour in 2017 featured Erik Gratton as Buddy, with direction by Sam Scalamoni and choreography by Connor Gallagher.[15][16] It stopped at the Madison Square Garden Theater in New York City[17][18][19] with George Wendt playing Santa.[20] TimeOut said it was one of the best Christmas shows in New York that year.[21]
Following the success of the 2010 production, the musical returned to the Al Hirschfeld for a second holiday season beginning November 9, 2012, on a run through January 6, 2013.[22] This new production featured a revised book and a brand new opening number "Happy All the Time."
A production of the musical opened at the Dominion Theatre on October 24, 2015, for a 10-week run until January 2, 2016, after brief runs with substantially the same cast at the Theatre Royal, Plymouth, in December 2014[23]) and at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre in Dublin from December 2014 to January 2015[24]). It was produced by Michael Rose, directed and choreographed by Morgan Young, and featured Ben Forster as Buddy and Kimberley Walsh as Jovie.[25] It received mixed reviews.[26][27][28][29] In 2015 it was reported that the production was the fastest selling show since the Dominion Theatre opened in 1929.[30]
A production ran at the 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle, Washington, from November 30 to December 31, 2012.[31] A Canadian production ran from November 20, 2012, to January 6, 2013, at Neptune Theatre, Nova Scotia.[32] A 2013 touring production ran under the name Elf the Musical.[33][34] A regional production ran at the Paper Mill Playhouse from November 26, 2014 until January 4, 2015.[citation needed]
There was a late 2017 UK tour ending January 14, 2018 in The Lowry theatre in Salford, England, with Ben Forster as Buddy.[35] On December 24, 2017, a film of the production aired on Channel 5, after being recorded live at The Lowry.[36]
An arena tour in December 2018 stopped at Cardiff Motorpoint Arena, Resorts World Arena in Birmingham and Motorpoint Arena Nottingham. The tour returned in December 2019 to M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool, SSE Hydro in Glasgow, Wembley Arena and Dublin's 3 Arena. This production had three stages. The audience decorated a giant 30 foot-tall Christmas tree and took part in a giant snowball fight. The production included a flying sleigh among other stunts and effects. Enormous TV screens relayed the action and added CGI scenery. In both productions, Tam Ryan played Buddy the Elf, Kym Marsh played Jovie, and Shaun Williamson played Walter Hobbs. The cast included over 100 performers.[37]
The musical was presented in UK arenas again in December 2022 by World's Biggest Panto[38] at M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool, P&J Live Arena in Aberdeen, OVO Hydro in Glasgow, Resorts World Arena in Birmingham, Motorpoint Arena in Cardiff and Motorpoint Arena Nottingham. The show also had a stint in the Winter Gardens, Blackpool, at the Opera House.[39]
Elf returned to the Dominion Theatre, with previews from November 14, 2022, and an official opening on November 24; it closed on January 7, 2023. The cast included Simon Lipkin as Buddy and Georgina Castle as Jovie.[40] The show returned to the Dominion for a second run from November 15, 2023 until January 6, 2024.[41]
Elf returned to Broadway for a limited holiday engagement at the Marquis Theatre, with previews from November 9, 2024, an official opening on November 17, and the closing expected on January 4, 2025. The staging reproduces the 2015 London production.[42] It stars Grey Henson as Buddy the Elf and Sean Astin as Santa Claus,[43] with Kayla Davion as Jovie, Ashley Brown as Emily, Kalen Allen as Store Manager and Michael Hayden as Walter.[44] The production is directed by Philip William McKinley, with choreography by Liam Steel, set and costume design by Tim Goodchild, lighting design by Patrick Woodroffe, sound design by Gareth Owen, and video design by Ian William Galloway. Alan Williams will serve as the music supervisor.[45][46]
On December 16, 2014, NBC broadcast a stop-motion animated adaptation of the musical entitled Elf: Buddy's Musical Christmas. It featured the voices of Jim Parsons as Buddy, Mark Hamill as Walter, Ed Asner reprising his film role as Santa, Garfunkel and Oates' Kate Micucci as Jovie, Rachael MacFarlane as Emily, Max Charles as Michael, Gilbert Gottfried as Mr. Greenway, and Jay Leno as the leader of the fake Santas. The screenplay was written by Andrew Horvath and Michael Jelenic, with Martin and Meehan. It contained the songs from the musical[47][48] and also featured a new song titled "Freezy the Snowman".[citation needed]
Mark Kennedy of ABC News called the production "a tight, polished, expensive-looking affair that has enough jokes for adults and enough special effects for kids."[49] In 2013, The Washington Post said the musical made the movie look "nuanced."[33] The show in 2015 received mixed[50] reviews from professional critics at publications such as The Guardian. The Guardian didn't much like the 2015 performance, but did praise Ben Forster as Buddy for his "anarchic glee."[26] The New York Times critic described the original Broadway production as "tinseled in synthetic sentiment, performed with a cheer that borders on mania, and instantly forgettable."[51]
The performance in late 2017 in Aurora received a mostly positive review in the Chicago Sun Times, who said the "immense energy" of the show could be overwhelming, with Kyle Adams as Buddy.[52] The Salt Lake City performance received a mixed to positive review from the Deseret News.[53] A BroadwayWorld critic praised it in 2017 in Boston, and observed that children in the audience seemed to love the production and pay rapt attention, with Erik Gratton in the title role praised for his performance as Buddy.[54] The English production was well-reviewed by the Manchester Evening News in 2017.[35]
The original production of the musical broke records at the Hirschfeld box office three times,[55][56][57] grossing over a million dollars in one week. It was the third best-grossing show for the 2010 Thanksgiving weekend, behind Wicked and The Lion King.[58][59]
Year | Award | Category | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | Drama League Awards[60] | Distinguished Production of a Musical | Nominated |
Notes