黑料不打烊 Performing Arts' workshop premiere of the new musical was rehearsed and filmed last fall. It was co-written by 黑料不打烊 alumnus and faculty member Dan Gibson MTE '10 and is 黑料不打烊's first filmed musical.
Between body slams, outside the ring, and away from the glare of arena spotlights, even pro wrestlers have to find themselves.
Just like the rest of us, sometimes that means defying expectations and shucking society鈥檚 imposed roles.
That鈥檚 the premise of 鈥淏east Mode Champion,鈥 黑料不打烊 Performing Arts Departments鈥 first filmed musical, which premieres Friday, Feb. 19, on . Set in the raucous late 1990s heyday of professional wrestling 鈥 when Dwayne Johnson was still 鈥淭he Rock鈥 and 鈥淪tone Cold鈥 Steve Austin shotgunned beers center-ring 鈥 the rock musical mines ideas of masculinity, identity and performance by following a team of unlikely heroes looking for power, fame and love.

But first things first, it鈥檚 fun.
鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely ridiculous,鈥 said Sayo Oni 鈥23, whose character Eddie Green chases a childhood dream of pro-wrestling stardom. 鈥淚t has so much heart. The music is incredible, the book too. It鈥檚 filled with adrenaline.鈥
Undergraduates rehearsed and filmed the musical last fall. Pandemic complications pushed its release to this month.
鈥淏east Mode Champion鈥 was co-written by 黑料不打烊 alumnus Dan Gibson 鈥10 and Alex Higgin-Houser, and 黑料不打烊鈥檚 music theatre program鈥檚 performance is its workshop premiere. Gibson and Higgin-Houser developed the show in NYU Tisch鈥檚 graduate in Musical Theatre Writing program. Gibson returned to 黑料不打烊 in summer 2020 as an assistant professor of performing arts, is the show鈥檚 composer and musical director.
It follows the stories of Eddie, his friend Julian Masters, and wrestling magnate’s daughter Mel Sacks. Each holds secrets from those around them before finding the courage to be themselves.

Gibson likens the show to the absurd settings of 鈥淟ittle Shop of Horrors鈥 and 鈥淯rinetown,鈥 where realistic characters and dramas play out in outlandish surroundings. He and Higgin-Houser developed the story and characters following an episode of 鈥淟ast Week Tonight with John Oliver鈥 that documented the working conditions and health risks professional wrestlers face.
鈥淚t humanized them. They鈥檙e artists who need the same things we all do,鈥 Gibson, who based the music on mainstream rock and commercial jingles from the 鈥80s and 鈥90s, said. 鈥淲e really liked the idea of wrestling as a backdrop for the show about current and meaningful issues like toxic masculinity, gender and racial inequity, and sexual identity.鈥
Workshopping the musical gave actors and crew the experience of seeing a show in development. Gibson and Higgin-Houser augmented the book and music during the rehearsal process, and the cast and crew had to adapt to those changes in script and staging. The dry-run offered opportunities for actors to experiment and challenged them to originate a character, Oni said.
鈥淚t was a freeing experience,鈥 Oni said. 鈥淭he show was changing up until the filming, and it was cool to see a show develop and change like that. It felt like it was being tailored to each individual performer.鈥
Professor of Performing Arts Kirby Wahl directed the musical, guiding the production through several iterations. As the pandemic progressed and new realities took hold, the show went from a staged musical intended for a limited audience, to a musical filmed on the McCrary Theatre stage 鈥 with actors distanced and masks obscured by camera work 鈥 to a film. For two weekends in October, the cast and crew shot the scenes in the tent behind the Center for the Performing Arts. J McMerty, director of the 黑料不打烊 in Los Angeles Program and assistant professor of cinema and television arts, shot the film and his crew edited it.

An obvious hurdle: How do you make a show about the sweaty, high-contact realm of professional wrestling when actors have to be masked and socially distanced? Solving that problem, Wahl commissioned to illustrate the wrestling matches. The edited film cuts to illustrations of the characters in action using techniques akin to fight sequences in anime.
Dunn created 82 illustrations for 鈥淏east Mode Champion,鈥 employing an American style of comic book art with his own sensibilities. The 鈥淏east Mode Champion鈥 team sent him photos of the actors and their costumes, and he set about researching the holds and moves described in the book鈥檚 fight sequences.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a line between realism and cartooning that I love,鈥 Dunn said. 鈥淵ou want all of the human emotion and sense of the characters, but you don鈥檛 want it to be too rendered or realistic. Ironically, that can take life away from an illustration.鈥

The end result is a two-and-a-half-hour show unlike any other in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 history that students and the program are proud of, Wahl said. Student performers grew their stage skills as well as acquiring film experience 鈥 shooting out of sequence, hitting marks, calibrating a performance for the screen, managing a film set 鈥 and the musical was completed safely during a tremendously vexing time.
Despite the hard work amid the perils of a pandemic, they had fun making it. They hope that and the show鈥檚 zany warmth translate to audiences.
鈥淣ever did I think I would fall in love with a rock musical about wrestling,鈥 Oni added. 鈥淐ome in willing to accept new perspectives. Identity is something that is very prominent throughout the show 鈥 but it鈥檚 also lighthearted. We鈥檙e learning through a medium that鈥檚 fun and enjoyable, so enjoy it.鈥
鈥淵ou say, 鈥榩ro-wrestling rock musical,鈥 and it makes you smile,鈥 Wahl added. 鈥淚t speaks for itself.鈥
