Alice by Heart
Alice by Heart is a musical with book by Steven Sater and Jessie Nelson, music by Duncan Sheik, and lyrics by Steven Sater, loosely inspired by Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.[1] Set against the backdrop of the London Blitz during World War II, the story centers on teenager Alice Spencer, who shelters in an Underground station with her close friend Alfred amid the chaos of air raids.[1] When Alfred falls ill and is quarantined, Alice retreats into the pages of her beloved copy of Carroll's book, embarking on an imaginative journey through a reimagined Wonderland that intertwines with her real-life struggles.[1] The musical explores profound themes of first love, grief, loss, and the redemptive power of storytelling and imagination, blending the whimsical elements of Carroll's tale with the harsh realities of wartime adolescence.[2] Featuring a contemporary pop-rock score, it was created by the Tony and Grammy Award-winning team of Sater and Sheik, known for their earlier work on Spring Awakening, with Nelson contributing to the book based on her experiences co-writing the musical Waitress.[1][2] Originally commissioned and developed through National Theatre Connections in the United Kingdom, Alice by Heart received its first staged readings and youth productions across over 30 UK theaters starting in March 2012.[3] It underwent further workshops, including a 2018 presentation at New York Stage and Film's Powerhouse Theater, before its world premiere off-Broadway at MCC Theater's Newman Mills Theater in New York City on February 26, 2019, directed by Nelson with choreography by Rick and Jeff Kuperman.[2] The production ran through April 7, 2019, earning four nominations at the 2019 Lucille Lortel Awards for Outstanding Choreography, Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical (Heath Saunders), Outstanding Costume Design (David Zinn), and Outstanding Lighting Design (Bradley King).[2] An original cast recording was released in 2019 by Ghostlight Records, featuring performances by leads like Grace McLean and Nathan Lee Graham.[4] In 2024, an optional scene was added to the script, and the musical received its first Spanish-language production in Argentina.[1] Since then, the show has been licensed for regional and educational productions worldwide, including stagings by companies such as San Diego Musical Theatre and Wright State University's School of Fine and Performing Arts.[5][3]Synopsis
Plot summary
Set in 1941 London during the Blitz, the musical opens with teenager Alice Spencer and her best friend Alfred Hallam seeking shelter in an underground Tube station amid relentless air raids.[6] Alfred, suffering from advanced tuberculosis, has been quarantined in a corner of the shelter by a harsh Red Cross Nurse who enforces strict rules to prevent disease spread, including confiscating personal items like books.[7] Desperate to comfort Alfred and escape the trauma of war, Alice clings to her copy of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but the Nurse destroys it, deeming it a health risk.[6] Having memorized the book, Alice begins reciting the story aloud to Alfred, drawing him and the other displaced youths in the shelter into her imagination.[7] In her mind, the drab bunker transforms into the vibrant, chaotic world of Wonderland, with the shelter residents reimagined as Lewis Carroll's characters: Alfred becomes the frantic White Rabbit, his pocket watch symbolizing his dwindling time due to illness; the domineering Nurse embodies the tyrannical Queen of Hearts, wielding authority over the narrative; and other figures like a fey resident named Dodgy who morphs into the Duchess.[6][7] Alice pursues the White Rabbit down the rabbit hole, tumbling into Wonderland where familiar scenes unfold with a wartime twist. At the Mad Tea Party, the eternally stuck-in-time Hatter and Hare represent the stagnation of youth amid chaos, while Alice grapples with budding feelings of first love toward Alfred's alter ego.[8] Further encounters challenge her innocence: she meets a Caterpillar pondering growth and change, mirroring her own adolescence, and faces the grotesque Jabberwocky as a manifestation of her deepest fears about loss and the unknown.[8] The Queen of Hearts, as the Nurse, demands Alice's head in a trial scene that echoes the shelter's oppressive rules, forcing Alice to defend her right to control her story.[6] As the fantasy deepens, Alfred grows weary of his Rabbit role, urging Alice to confront reality and let him face his final moments as himself, not a character in her escape.[7] In denial about his terminal condition, Alice resists, but the blending of worlds culminates in a poignant confrontation where she must choose between holding onto the book’s illusion and embracing the grief of impending separation.[8] Ultimately, Alice emerges from Wonderland with newfound maturity, accepting Alfred's fate and finding the strength to carry on, as the sirens fade and the shelter returns to its grim normalcy.[6]Themes and inspirations
Alice by Heart delves into profound themes of grief and loss, set against the backdrop of World War II's London Blitz, where characters confront the deaths of loved ones and the fragility of life amid relentless bombings. The story portrays the emotional turmoil of young people dealing with personal tragedies, such as illness and separation, using the musical's songs to explore how grief shapes identity and memory. For instance, the number "Your Shell of Grief" serves as a bereavement anthem, advising the protagonist to embrace sorrow as a way to preserve connections to the lost, reflecting the wartime devastation that claimed countless lives.[1][9] Central to the narrative is the theme of first love and coming-of-age, embodied in the tender, poignant relationship between Alice and Alfred, which highlights the innocence and intensity of adolescent romance amidst chaos. This motif underscores the challenges of growing up, including the loss of childhood illusions and the emergence of adult emotions, as the characters navigate forbidden affections and the harsh realities of maturity. The musical also emphasizes escapism through literature, with Alice's cherished copy of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland becoming a portal for psychological refuge, allowing the ensemble to retreat into imagination as a coping mechanism during air raids. Resilience emerges as a key undercurrent, portraying the courage required to move forward despite overwhelming adversity, as celebrated in the creators' vision of imagination's transformational power even in the harshest times.[1][9] The musical draws direct inspiration from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, reimagining its whimsical elements—such as the White Rabbit and Jabberwocky—to symbolize distorted perceptions of trauma and the blurring of reality and fantasy. The WWII London Blitz provides the historical context, mirroring the original novel's Victorian-era nonsense with the era's air-raid shelters and quarantine fears, transforming Carroll's surreal journey into a metaphor for wartime survival. Symbolic elements abound, with Wonderland representing a psychological sanctuary from external horrors like bombings and internal ones like grief, where characters' alter egos manifest real-life pains, such as anxiety and loss, in Carroll's archetypal figures. Lyricist Steven Sater has noted the integration of Carroll's gibberish with medical jargon to evoke the terror of illness, further intertwining literary fantasy with historical peril.[1][9]Development and background
Conception and workshops
The conception of Alice by Heart originated with Steven Sater following the success of Spring Awakening in 2006, drawing from his lifelong affinity for Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, which he first encountered as a child and later relied upon during a prolonged hospital stay in his early twenties recovering from a severe spinal injury.[10] During this period of personal hardship, Sater found solace and escape in literature, an experience that profoundly shaped the musical's exploration of storytelling as a refuge amid grief and turmoil.[9] Sater partnered with composer Duncan Sheik to adapt these inspirations into a musical, initially envisioning a narrative set during the London Blitz where a young girl recites Carroll's tale to her ailing friend as bombs fall overhead.[9] The project's early development included a 2012 commission from London's National Theatre Connections program, resulting in a 60-minute one-act version performed by youth theater companies across the U.K. as part of the annual Connections festival.[1] This workshop production, staged at venues like the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre, focused on a condensed retelling emphasizing Alice's emotional journey through Wonderland as a means of coping with loss, with Alfred as a pivotal but limited figure representing her childhood companion.[11] The one-act format allowed for testing core thematic elements, such as the interplay between reality and fantasy, but highlighted the need for deeper character exploration to sustain a longer narrative. Subsequent iterations addressed these limitations through additional workshops, notably a 2014 developmental staging at Theatre Aspen in Colorado, where the work expanded into a full-length musical.[12] Key revisions included broadening Alfred's role from a peripheral dying friend to a more integral character whose tuberculosis-fueled decline drives Alice's descent into Wonderland, enhancing the story's emotional stakes and the tension between historical wartime constraints and imaginative escapism.[9] Development challenges centered on harmonizing the gritty realism of 1941 London air raids with Carroll's whimsical fantasy sequences, ensuring the blend reinforced themes of resilience without overwhelming the human drama.[9] As Carroll's original works were in the public domain, adaptation rights posed no significant barriers, allowing creative freedom in reimagining the source material.[13]Creative team
Alice by Heart was created by a core team of writers and artists known for their work on emotionally resonant musicals. The book was co-written by Steven Sater and Jessie Nelson, with Sater also providing the lyrics. Sater, a Tony Award winner for Spring Awakening, focused on infusing the narrative with emotional depth, exploring themes of grief, first love, and adolescent longing and loss in a wartime setting through Alice and Alfred's intimate bond.[9] Nelson, an acclaimed director and screenwriter, contributed to the book's structure while also helming the direction for the world premiere workshop in London and the Off-Broadway production, drawing from her experience adapting stories of personal transformation, as seen in her work on Waitress.[2] The music and orchestration were composed by Duncan Sheik, Sater's longtime collaborator from Spring Awakening, who crafted a pop-folk score that blends modern sensibilities with period-appropriate elements evocative of 1940s London and the timeless whimsy of Lewis Carroll's Wonderland. Sheik's compositions incorporate haunting chords, gospel influences, and unconventional instrumentation like steel drums to underscore the dual realities of the Blitz-era bunker and the fantastical escape into Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, creating a soundscape that heightens the story's themes of escapism and resilience.[9][14] The creative team evolved through several workshops leading to the 2019 Off-Broadway premiere at MCC Theater. Early iterations, including the 2012 National Theatre Connections presentation and a 2014 New York workshop directed by Lear deBessonet, refined the script and score, with Nelson taking over direction for subsequent developments. For the premiere, choreography was handled by the Kuperman brothers (Rick and Jeff), replacing earlier workshop approaches to better integrate movement with the nonlinear fantasy sequences. Scenic design was by Edward Pierce, costumes by Paloma Young, and lighting by Bradley King, contributing to a visually immersive world that juxtaposes gritty wartime realism with surreal Wonderland motifs.[15][16]Productions
World premiere and early stagings
The musical Alice by Heart received its world premiere in 2012 as part of the National Theatre Connections program, an annual initiative commissioning original works for youth theatre groups across the United Kingdom.[12] This one-act version, designed for approximately 60 minutes of performance time, was performed by various youth ensembles at local venues before selected productions advanced to the Connections Festival at the National Theatre in London.[11] One such advancing production was mounted by the Flying High Theatre Company from Bedfordshire, directed by Carrie Bird, and staged at the National Theatre's Lyttelton Theatre on June 25, 2012, as part of the festival running June 20–25.[11] The cast featured emerging young actors, including Laurie Field as Alice and George Page-Bailey as Alfred, with the ensemble portraying multiple roles in the Blitz-era bunker setting intertwined with Wonderland.[17] Initial feedback highlighted the production's inventive fusion of Lewis Carroll's fantasy with World War II themes, praising the young performers' energy and the emotional depth conveyed through the score and staging.[17] Subsequent developmental stagings built on this foundation. In July 2014, Theatre Aspen in Colorado hosted a workshop presentation at the Wheeler Opera House, directed by Paige Price and featuring actors such as Riley Costello, Mike Faist, Noah Galvin, Molly Gordon, Phillipa Soo, and others.[18] This iteration included complete songs and scenes rather than a full staging, allowing the creative team to test expansions beyond the one-act format amid the program's new-play development series.[19] A pivotal invitation-only workshop followed on December 18, 2015, directed by Lear deBessonet and presented by MCC Theater in New York, with a cast led by Ben Platt as Alfred, Ashley Park, Mary Testa, and others including Noah Galvin, Molly Gordon, and Anthony Ramos.[20] This three-week process with full cast and orchestra marked a significant evolution, incorporating feedback from prior outings to develop a complete second act and refine the narrative's balance of loss, love, and escapism.[21]Off-Broadway premiere
The Off-Broadway premiere of Alice by Heart took place at MCC Theater's Newman Mills Theater within the Robert W. Wilson MCC Theater Space in New York City.[15] The production, marking the musical's world premiere in a full staging, began previews on January 30, 2019, and officially opened on February 26, 2019.[14] Directed by Jessie Nelson, who also co-wrote the book with Steven Sater, the limited engagement was initially scheduled through March 31 but extended twice due to strong ticket demand, ultimately closing on April 7, 2019.[22] The production featured a creative team that brought the story's dual worlds of a London Underground shelter during the Blitz and the fantastical Wonderland to life. Scenic designer Edward Pierce created a versatile set evoking the dim, arched confines of a Tube station that transformed into imaginative Wonderland environments through projections and movable elements.[14] Lighting designer Bradley King used dynamic shifts in color and intensity to blur the lines between reality and fantasy, while sound designer Dan Moses Schreier incorporated ambient effects like air raid sirens and echoing footsteps to heighten the wartime atmosphere.[14] Choreographers Rick and Jeff Kuperman handled the movement, emphasizing fluid transitions between scenes.[15] In terms of box office performance, the show saw robust initial sales that prompted the extensions, reflecting positive early audience interest in the musical's innovative take on Lewis Carroll's classic amid MCC Theater's inaugural season in its new venue.Regional and international productions
Following its Off-Broadway premiere, Alice by Heart saw its expansion into regional and international venues facilitated by Music Theatre International (MTI), which acquired licensing rights in late 2022 and made the show available for performances starting in early 2023, initially on a limited basis before opening to full regional licensing.[23][24] This timing aligned with post-COVID-19 recovery in the theater industry, though the pandemic had curtailed earlier plans for broader stagings after the 2019 premiere, delaying many community and educational productions until 2023 and beyond.[25] In the United States, regional productions proliferated in 2024 and 2025, often adapted for intimate spaces and youth ensembles to emphasize the musical's themes of adolescence and imagination. Notable examples include Kokandy Productions' staging in Chicago's Chopin Studio Theatre from August to September 2024, which utilized a small cast to highlight the show's emotional intimacy.[26] School and community theaters embraced youth-led versions, such as Colorado Academy's Upper School musical in Denver in April 2024, featuring student performers exploring the story's blend of World War II grit and Wonderland whimsy.[27] Similarly, Hillbarn Theatre's Teen Company presented an abbreviated run in Foster City, California, from May 22 to 25, 2025, tailored for rising high school actors with simplified staging for a black-box environment.[28] Other significant U.S. outings included Coastal Carolina University's production in February 2025 at Wheelwright Auditorium, and the Contemporary Theatre of Ohio's presentation in Columbus in September 2025.[25][29] Internationally, the musical debuted outside North America in 2024, with adaptations reflecting local contexts while preserving its core narrative. In Australia, the Elder Conservatorium of Music at the University of Adelaide staged the show from October 10 to 13, 2024, at the Little Theatre, performed by second-year music theater students and praised for its fresh take on loss and escapism.[30] That same year, Starcatcher Theatre in Jerusalem, Israel, mounted a production in July 2024, incorporating dynamic choreography and surreal elements to resonate with audiences amid contemporary global tensions.[31] These international efforts, licensed through MTI's global affiliates, demonstrated the show's versatility for diverse casts and venues, with further stagings like Theatre South Playhouse in Orlando planned for January 2026.[32][33]Music and roles
Musical numbers
Alice by Heart features 17 musical numbers composed by Duncan Sheik with lyrics by Steven Sater, forming a pop-infused chamber musical score that blends haunting ballads, anthems, comic patter songs, and gospel-inflected ensembles to advance the dual narratives of wartime London and Wonderland.[9][14] The orchestration supports this intimate style with a small ensemble including woodwinds, brass, percussion (notably steel drums in "Your Shell of Grief"), and strings, emphasizing emotional depth over spectacle.[1] Several songs evolved through workshops from 2010 to 2018, with additions like "Still" and rewrites refining their integration into the story's themes of grief and transformation.[9]Act I
- West of Words (Alice and Ensemble): A haunting opening ballad set amid WWII London bombings, where Alice recites Alice's Adventures in Wonderland to deny her friend Alfred's illness, transporting them into the story's world.[9]
- Down the Hole (Alice, Alfred, and Ensemble): An energetic anthem marking Alice's shift to Storybook Alice, reimagining Alfred as the White Rabbit and hospital patients as Wonderland figures, propelling the ensemble into the adventure.[9]
- Still (Alice and White Rabbit): A tender duet added late in development, capturing the lingering connection between Alice and the White Rabbit as they navigate the threshold of Wonderland, refined through multiple workshops.[9]
- Chillin' the Regrets (Caterpillars and Alice): The first song written for the show, this seductive ensemble number features the Caterpillars tempting Alice with a hookah to pause time and regrets, blending humor with introspective pop rhythms.[9]
- The Key Is (Alice and White Rabbit): A celebratory duet encouraging self-transformation, where Alice urges the White Rabbit to embrace the hookah's escape, highlighting themes of agency amid loss.[9]
- Those Long Eyes (Ensemble, featuring Cheshire Cat): A hushed, whimsical quadrille with the Cheshire Cat and Lobsters, joining Alice and the White Rabbit in a moment of eerie playfulness that underscores the story's surreal logic.[9]
- Manage Your Flamingo (Duchess): A comic solo of disdain from the Duchess toward Alice's disruptions, unchanged since its early creation, satirizing rigid social norms through patter-style delivery.[9]
- Sick to Death of Alice-ness (Mad Hatter, March Hare, Dormouse, and White Rabbit): The bitter close to the Mad Tea Party, expressing frustration with Alice's narrative alterations; this number evolved from an earlier version during rehearsals.[9]
- Brillig Braelig (Ensemble): A macabre dance sequence intertwining medical jargon with the "Jabberwocky" poem, reflecting Alfred's deteriorating health and transition to a more dire ward, bridging the acts with dark intensity.[9]
Act II
- Some Things Fall Away (Alice and Cheshire Cat): Alice's solitary reflection on needing more time with Alfred, met with the Cheshire Cat's philosophical response, deepening her internal conflict in a introspective ballad.[9]
- Your Shell of Grief (Mock Turtle and Ensemble): An anthem for the Mock Turtles advising Alice to embrace grief rather than escape it, enhanced by choreography and unique instrumentation like steel drums for emotional resonance.[9]
- Another Room in Your Head (White Rabbit): The White Rabbit confronts Alice's reluctance to face the impending Trial, rewritten post-workshop to heighten tension and advance the plot's confrontation with reality.[9]
- Isn’t It a Trial? (Queen of Hearts and Ensemble): A gospel-flavored ensemble dressing down Alice for her childish evasions, evolved from an initial Kurt Weill-inspired style to emphasize judgment and pathos.[9]
- Do You Think We Think You’re Alice? (High Court Ensemble): A taunting courtroom ditty questioning Alice's identity and authority in the story, expanded for the Trial scene to build comedic yet accusatory momentum.[9]
- I’ve Shrunk Enough (Ensemble): The final song added before premiere, a defiant stand against shrinking self-worth and existential fears, resonating with contemporary themes of empowerment.[9]
- Afternoon (Alice and White Rabbit): A poignant farewell duet between Alice and Alfred, signifying the end of childhood illusions and acceptance of loss, blending tenderness with finality.[9]
- Winter Blooms (Ensemble): The closing hymn, adapting a melody from Spring Awakening, as Alice reflects on Alfred's death and finds hope in storytelling's enduring power.[9]
Characters and original casts
The principal characters in Alice by Heart blend real-world figures from the London Blitz with their fantastical counterparts from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, allowing the ensemble to portray multiple roles in the protagonist's imagined escape. Alice Spencer / Alice is the central figure, a curious and determined teenage girl who turns to her favorite book for solace amid wartime hardship.[34] Alfred Hallam / White Rabbit / March Hare serves as Alice's loyal best friend and budding romantic interest, embodying anxiety and devotion in both realities.[34] The Red Cross Nurse / Queen of Hearts acts as the primary antagonist, a stern authority figure enforcing rules in the shelter while transforming into the tyrannical ruler of Wonderland.[34] Harold Pudding / Mad Hatter / Knave of Hearts is an eccentric doctor in the real world who doubles as the whimsical, chaotic tea party host and a courtier in Alice's vision.[34] Supporting ensemble roles, such as Tabitha / Cheshire Cat (a sly, enigmatic girl), Dodgson / Caterpillar / King of Hearts (a cryptic elder), and Nigel / Dormouse / Knave of Clubs (a timid young boy), further merge the two worlds through the performers' versatility.[34] The musical's early development featured notable workshop casts that shaped its evolution. In the July 2018 workshop presentation at New York Stage and Film's Powerhouse Theater at Vassar College, Molly Gordon portrayed Alice Spencer / Alice, J. Quinton Johnson played Alfred Hallam / White Rabbit / March Hare, and Mary Testa took on Red Cross Nurse / Queen of Hearts, with additional cast members including Mike Faist, Phillipa Soo, and Riley Costello in supporting roles.[35] The Off-Broadway premiere at MCC Theater's Newman Mills Theater in 2019 introduced a revised cast that solidified the production's staging. Molly Gordon led as Alice Spencer / Alice, Colton Ryan as Alfred Hallam / White Rabbit / March Hare, Grace McLean as Red Cross Nurse / Queen of Hearts, and Wesley Taylor as Harold Pudding / Mad Hatter / Knave of Hearts. Other key performers included Nkeki Obi-Melekwe (Cheshire Cat / Tabitha), Andrew Kober (Caterpillar / Dodgson / King of Hearts), Mia DiLena (White Queen / Lory), Noah Galvin (Duchess / Dodgy / Dodo / Mock Turtle), Heath Saunders (Executioner / Bill the Lizard / Five of Clubs / Cook), Zachary Downer (Eaglet / Two of Spades), Catherine Ricafort (Red Queen / Dormouse), Natalie Walker (Queen of Diamonds / Executioner), and Zachary Infante (March Hare / Nigel / Dormouse / Knave of Clubs).[36][37] Subsequent regional and international productions have featured varied casts reflecting local talent while adhering to the core role doublings. For instance, in a 2023 production by Blank Canvas Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio, Raina Thiegs starred as Alice Spencer / Alice, with Benson Anderson as Harold Pudding / Mad Hatter.[38] These iterations often emphasize youth ensembles to capture the story's themes of adolescence and imagination.[1]Reception and legacy
Critical reviews
The Off-Broadway premiere of Alice by Heart in 2019 received mixed reviews from critics, who praised the score while critiquing the narrative structure.[39] Duncan Sheik's music was frequently highlighted as a strength, with Variety noting its "haunting ache of young dreamers" in songs like "Afternoon" and "West of Words."[6] The Hollywood Reporter echoed this, calling the score a standout for its emotional resonance.[14] On the review aggregator Show-Score, the production earned an overall rating of 76% based on professional critiques.[39] Critics often pointed to weaknesses in the script by Steven Sater and Jessie Nelson, describing it as overburdened with symbols, riddles, and metaphors that led to pacing issues and confusion.[6] The New York Times characterized the show as "directionless," losing its roadmap early in the blend of World War II-era reality and Wonderland fantasy.[40] The Observer described it as a "muddled concoction, tangled up in too many layers of reality and fantasy," making the transitions hard to follow.[39] Despite these flaws, reviewers appreciated the emotional depth, particularly in exploring themes of loss and growth; Lighting & Sound America commended how it "holds its wounded characters and their shared heartbreak in such tender regard."[39] In regional productions of the 2020s, such as those at Santa Barbara's Center Stage in 2023 and Kokandy Productions in Chicago in 2024, critics noted improvements in intimacy and clarity on smaller stages.[41][42] The Santa Barbara Independent praised the "dreamy melodies" that enhanced the harsh WWII backdrop in a more focused environment.[41] Similarly, the Kokandy staging benefited from a cast of 12 in a 150-seat venue, allowing strong vocal performances to amplify emotional impact without the original's overwhelming scale.[42]Awards and nominations
The Off-Broadway production of Alice by Heart at MCC Theater in 2019 received several nominations and wins from major New York theater awards organizations, recognizing its choreography, design, and performances.[43][44]| Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 Chita Rivera Awards | Outstanding Choreography (Off-Broadway) | Rick and Jeff Kuperman | Won[43] |
| 2019 Chita Rivera Awards | Outstanding Male Dancer (Off-Broadway) | Wesley Taylor | Won[43] |
| 2019 Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Choreographer | Rick and Jeff Kuperman | Won[44][45] |
| 2019 Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Heath Saunders | Nominated[46] |
| 2019 Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Costume Design | Paloma Young | Won (tie)[46] |
| 2019 Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Choreography | Rick and Jeff Kuperman | Nominated[47][16] |
| 2019 Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Costume Design | Paloma Young | Nominated[47][16] |