Frontmezzjunkies reports: Tony Award winner Danya Taymor will direct a new Off-Broadway revival of Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater’s acclaimed musical at Studio Seaview
By Ross
Few musicals stay inside my soul like Spring Awakening. I still remember walking into the original Broadway production and leaving the theatre feeling as though something fundamental had shifted inside me. Ever since then, every announcement connected to this musical catches my attention. So when news arrived that Spring Awakening would return this fall in a new Off-Broadway production, I immediately wanted to know who would be guiding the next generation into this remarkable piece.
Tony Award winner Danya Taymor (Broadway’s John Proctor is the Villain) will direct a new production of Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater’s celebrated musical this fall at Studio Seaview, with choreography by Celia Rowlson-Hall (Searchlight’s The Testament of Ann Lee), and Or Matias (Signature Theatre’s Octet) as music supervisor. Equally encouraging is the decision to hold open call auditions on Thursday, July 9. Sign-in each day begins at 9am and ends promptly at 12pm at Studio Seaview.
Based on Frank Wedekind’s 1891 play, Spring Awakening unfolds in the restrictive atmosphere of late nineteenth-century Germany, where a group of teenagers struggles to understand identity, desire, fear, and adulthood while surrounded by silence and repression. What begins as youthful curiosity gradually evolves into a heartbreaking examination of innocence, shame, and the devastating consequences of withholding truth from the next generation.
The musical has built an extraordinary history. After premiering at the Atlantic Theater Company, it transferred to Broadway in 2006 and went on to capture the Tony Award for Best Musical along with Best Book and Best Original Score. Nearly a decade later, the Deaf West revival reimagined the piece through the integration of spoken language, American Sign Language, and music, creating one of the most inventive theatrical experiences I have ever witnessed.
When I wrote about that production, I found myself describing the challenge of silencing my memories of the original cast in order to embrace what was unfolding before me. Once I stopped comparing, the show opened itself up again with extraordinary beauty and emotional force. Its songs carried pain, joy, longing, and heartbreak with such honesty that by the final moments tears were flowing throughout the audience, including from my own. Rather than replacing my earlier memories, the revival deepened them and confirmed Spring Awakening as one of my favourite musicals of all time.
That is why this announcement feels like another chance to encounter a work that continues to evolve with each generation of artists who take it on. Its questions about silence, shame, identity, and young people searching for truth have never lost their urgency, and its music has never lost its ability to cut directly to the emotions. It feels no less urgent today than it did when Wedekind first wrote them. As audiences gather once again to hear these voices searching for understanding and freedom, I cannot wait to discover what new wonder this production will uncover.














