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Company: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

The Tiny Desk is working from home for the foreseeable future. Introducing NPR Music's Tiny Desk (home) concerts, bringing you performances from across the country and the world. It's the same spirit — stripped-down sets, an intimate setting — just a different space.


Company is finally back on Broadway this week after a 20-month hiatus. There were only nine preview performances before all the theaters in New York went dark during the pandemic. Now the cast celebrates its return with a Tiny Desk performance filmed a few blocks away from the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre at the CIVILIAN Hotel. It's the 35th birthday celebration for the lead character, Bobbie, but also a reunion for this ensemble.

"It is incredible to come back to this piece, this masterpiece," cast member Matt Doyle explains, "a show that's about company, about togetherness and most importantly about being alive. This is what we get to do on the other side of this and I'm so honored to be in the room with each and every one of you. ... We're having a party tonight."

The musical comedy Company, written by Stephen Sondheim and George Furth in 1970, was re-conceived by director Marianne Elliot for a critically acclaimed run in London that transferred to Broadway. The big change in this production is that the lead character, Bobby, is recast as a woman, Bobbie. The audience is taken on an emotional roller coaster through iconic songs with Katrina Lenk, no stranger to the Tiny Desk, as she tries to find the purpose of being alive. (Ms. Lenk won the Tony for her portrayal of Dina in The Band's Visit.)

My Tiny Desk colleague, Sofie Hernandez-Simeonidis, was one of the lucky few who got to see a preview before it was forced to close:

"While gender-swapping roles for retro media has been popular for years, it feels different for Company," she says. "An intentional choice that emphasizes the social pressure for women to settle down, get married and have kids. The heaviness of that was felt by the audience collectively, but it was deeply emotional in other ways, too. There was laughter, tears, but more than anything, there was celebration."

Sondheim was interviewed by Stephen Colbert about the revival. "I don't usually tout my own stuff, but I urge everybody here to see it," he confessed. "You're gonna have such a good time. It's really one of the most entertaining evenings I've ever had in the theatre." I'll drink to that.

MUSIC AND LYRICS

  • Stephen Sondheim
  • SET LIST

  • "Company"
  • "Someone is Waiting"
  • "Another Hundred People"
  • "You Could Drive A Person Crazy"
  • CAST

  • Katrina Lenk
  • Matt Doyle
  • Christopher Fitzgerald
  • Christopher Sieber
  • Jennifer Simard
  • Terence Archie
  • Etai Benson
  • Bobby Conte
  • Nikki Renée Daniels
  • Claybourne Elder
  • Greg Hildreth
  • Anisha Nagarajan
  • Manu Narayan
  • Rashidra Scott
  • BAND

  • Joel Fram: music direction
  • Paul Staroba: piano
  • Michael Blanco: bass
  • Rich Rosenzweig: drums
  • CREDITS

  • Video: David Givens, Brandon Ivey, HaiTao Wu
  • Audio: Richard Levengood, Ana Fernandez, Tyler Postiglione
  • Staging: Gina Rattan
  • Music Coordinator: Howard Joines
  • Production Services: O&M ETC
  • Video Production and Editing: Super Awesome Friends
  • Creative Director: Jim Glaub
  • Director of Photography: David Givens
  • Line Producer: Rebecca Prowler
  • Production Assistants: Ciera Miller, Jenna Rich, Holly Wasson
  • Editor: Jim Glaub
  • TINY DESK TEAM

  • Producer: Josh Rogosin
  • Video Producer: Maia Stern
  • Audio Mastering: Josh Rogosin
  • Tiny Production Team: Bob Boilen, Bobby Carter, Kara Frame, Sofie Hernandez-Simeonidis
  • Executive Producer: Keith Jenkins
  • Senior VP, Programming: Anya Grundmann
  • Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Josh Rogosin
    Josh Rogosin (he/him) stumbled into NPR HQ in 1999 on his way to mixing shows at The Shakespeare Theatre in downtown DC. Since then, he has been at the controls for all of NPR's flagship newsmagazines and gathered sound in far flung places like Togo and Benin, West Africa, Cambodia and Greece for the Radio Expeditions series. He has engineered at NPR West and NPR NY and spent two years as Technical Director at Marketplace Productions in Los Angeles. He served as Senior Broadcast Engineer for New York Public Radio and Studio 360, and was an originating producer and sound designer for NPR's Ask Me Another.
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