Melissa Etheridge's autobiographical show is coming to Broadway

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Melissa Etheridge's autobiographical show is coming to Broadway
Melissa Etheridge in “Melissa Etheridge Off Broadway: My Window — A Journey Through Life,” at New World Stages in NewY ork, Oct. 12, 2022. The singer-songwriter Melissa Etheridge’s theatrical memoir in which she weaves stories from her life will be staged on Broadway this fall, the production announced Sunday, June 11, 2023. (Richard Termine/The New York Times)

by Julia Jacobs



NEW YORK, NY.- Singer-songwriter Melissa Etheridge’s theatrical memoir in which she weaves stories from her life will be staged on Broadway this fall, the production announced Sunday.

Called “My Window,” a reference to one of her hit songs, Etheridge’s show recounts the arc of her life and career, from growing up in Kansas to reaching rock fame and coming out as a lesbian in the ’90s.

The show, which had a brief off-Broadway run last fall, was written by Etheridge and her wife, Linda Wallem Etheridge, a television producer and actor who helped create the TV series “Nurse Jackie” and worked on “That ’70s Show.” The production plans to begin previews at Circle in the Square Theater on Sept. 14, with opening night scheduled for Sept. 28.

Etheridge, 62, has loved theater since childhood (“‘Godspell’ just set me on fire,” she said last week), and performed briefly in the rock musical “American Idiot” in 2011. She had long wanted to write for Broadway, she said, and so she was delighted to see the industry embrace Bruce Springsteen’s production, which she viewed as setting an example for productions by musicians that are part concert, part storytelling.

“I’ve been in front of audiences for 40 years, and I like to talk,” Etheridge said. “I enjoy story and drama, and I’ve always brought that into my music.”

Plus, she joked, “It saves on therapy.”

The show, directed by Amy Tinkham, verges into deeply personal territory for Etheridge, including when she discusses the death of her 21-year-old son from opioid addiction.

“It really helped me to just say it over and over,” Etheridge said. “I found it freeing, actually, to be very open about my life.”

In between the recollections, Etheridge plays her hits, such as “Come to My Window” and “Bring Me Some Water,” as well as snatches of more obscure titles, including the first songs she wrote as a child. Currently, Etheridge is figuring out what to cut; the off-Broadway show was three hours, including an intermission, and the singer said the Broadway version will most likely be about a half-hour shorter.

The production plans to run through Nov. 19.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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