Parties

Not All Heroes Wear Capes! Bee Carrozzini was Honored at New York City Center's Gala Opening Night of Bat Boy: The Musical

Anna Wintour Bee Carrozzini
Anna Wintour, Bee Carrozzini
David Benthal/BFA.com

It is that sense of community found in the theater that has been a North Star for Carrozzini, from childhood right through her career. During her speech, she regaled the audience with tales of seeing Hairspray eight times as a teen and emotional memories of watching old Rogers and Hammerstein movies with her late father. She even took a stab at voice lessons, she revealed, which culminated in a rather lackluster performance of Where is Love? from the musical Oliver! (“It s a tough song….” was her mom s assessment at the time.)

Taking to the stage, Alex Timbers, the director of Bat Boy: The Musical, also praised the producer for her “vision, moxie, and instinctual sense of what will resonate with audiences.”

Timbers’s refreshed production—with some new songs and book changes from the original—had attendees buzzing on Wednesday evening. The campy story is based on a fabricated Weekly World News tabloid character; a half-human, half-bat foundling whose lurid, gaping expression was a mainstay peeking out from supermarket checkout shelves in the 1990s. With original music and lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe, (whose credits since include Legally Blonde and Heathers), the tale follows Bat Boy’s discovery in a cave in a small-minded West Virginia town and his ensuing struggle to fit into a society that is both fascinated and repulsed by him. Played with delicious wit and warmth by Taylor Trensch, Bat Boy—or Edgar, as he is eventually named—wins the heart of his adoptive mother Meredith and sister Shelley. For Kerry Butler, who plays the matriarch, it s a full circle moment given that she was the original Shelley in 2001. The comedy-horror also stars Christopher Sieber, Marissa Jaret Winokur, and Alex Newell—whose scene-stealing appearance as a glammed-up satyr brings down the house. The piece is a delightfully tawdry, if occasionally heartbreaking, romp around the limits of human empathy and contempt, with a healthy dose of blood sucking for good measure.

“It s basically Edward Scissorhands,” Timbers later told Vogue, invoking another misunderstood antihero. “Bat Boy is a cautionary tale about the fear of outsiders and the danger of demagogues. And I think it s a good time to be talking about those things,” he added. As for what Carrozzini is eyeing up next? She teased another uniquely American story, in the form of a possible Martha Stewart musical. Watch this space.