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 Back. Saw Young Frankenstein (really funny), Color Purple with Fantasia (left me cold, but she can belt) and the Chorus Line revival (enjoyed it a lot). Didn't pay full price for any -- ticket lottery for Frankstein ($26.50 per ticket, first row center), TKTS booth for the other two -- $60.50 per ticket for both shows) Also walked all over Manhattan and my feet will be better some day. I hope. Stayed in a real need little apartment at 56th and 9th -- great location. Had the chance to get standing room for Jersey Boys, but by the time (about 90 seconds) I checked with wife, they were sold. That would have been $26.50 per ticket. Frustrating. | 
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 Rent Closing June 1! Quote: 
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 Ahhhh man!  I SO loved Rent | 
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 I heard that this morning on the radio.  So sad!  We even had "RENT" themed rush shirts one year. | 
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 Saw the original cast in NY.  What a great show.  I'm sure it will still be touring. | 
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 I'm happy about this.  Why?  Because that means nonequilty theatres could get rights before I'm too old to be in the show.:D [ahem] "Only thing to do is jump OVER the moon..." | 
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 I love the music of Rent, but I think the book is dated now. It's almost a cliche. My mom and boyfriend went with me to see it last year and they didn't get its appeal at all. Living with AIDS today is way different than it was when this musical was written. For people who are seeing it for the first time now, the story is way overdramatic and unreal. | 
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 As for it being overdramatic and unreal - it's a musical, and therefore saying that makes it redundant.:p | 
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 Romeo and Juliet lives, as does La Boheme. | 
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 West Side Story is about race relations, and the racially segregated gangs in the story are still around today - and when you combine that with the debates going on in this country today about immigration and race, WSS is just as relevant as ever. But, a major part of Rent's storyline is AIDS, and although it's still a serious issue in this country, the attitude about it has changed since the early 90s. The majority of the main characters in Rent have AIDS and go through the whole thing acting as if their days are numbered - and for one of the characters, it's true. That may have been the way it was when the story was written, but people diagnosed with AIDS nowadays can actually live their whole lives with AIDS - the treatment and prognosis is completely different...it's no longer a death sentence. So now the story comes off as cliched. The storyline is a little too literal to be able to apply its lessons to life today. | 
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 I think it's overly simplistic to say that RENT is "about AIDS." It's also about human relationships (hetro and homosexual) and economic (class) stuggle. I don't think those have gone away. | 
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