Ride the Cyclone
Ride the Cyclone is a Canadian musical with book, music, and lyrics by Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell.[1][2] The production follows six teenagers from the Saint Cassian High School chamber choir who perish in a roller coaster accident and awaken in limbo, compelled to share their life stories with a malfunctioning mechanical fortune-teller named Karnak, who promises to resurrect one based on the most compelling narrative.[3] Originally developed in Victoria, British Columbia, the musical blends dark humor, poignant ballads, and surreal elements to explore themes of mortality, identity, and the value of ordinary lives.[1] The show first gained traction through fringe festival performances and regional stagings before achieving broader acclaim, including an off-Broadway run at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in 2024, which highlighted its cult appeal among theater enthusiasts and younger demographics via viral social media clips of songs like "The Ballad of Jane Doe."[2] Its unconventional premise—teenage ghosts competing for revival through autobiographical songs—has drawn comparisons to works like The Little Shop of Horrors for its mix of whimsy and tragedy, though it remains rooted in Richmond and Maxwell's "Uranium Teen Scream" trilogy of adolescent horror-themed narratives.[1] A world premiere cast recording released in 2021 further propelled its popularity, underscoring the musical's enduring draw despite limited mainstream commercial success.[4]Background and Development
Concept and Creation
Ride the Cyclone was conceived by playwright Jacob Richmond in 2008 as an exploration of mortality and identity through the lens of six deceased teenagers vying for resurrection in a surreal limbo judged by a carnival fortune-telling machine. Richmond drew initial inspiration from personal experiences with accidental deaths among acquaintances, including fires and car crashes, aiming to blend dark comedy with life's affirmation in a format evoking The Muppet Show crossed with Survivor. He invited composer Brooke Maxwell to collaborate on the music and lyrics, marking the start of their partnership in crafting the show's eclectic score influenced by styles ranging from Supertramp to New Orleans jazz.[5][6] The project emerged from Richmond's "Uranium Teen Scream" trilogy, positioned as the second installment after the 2003 play Legoland and intended to precede a third, unproduced work centered on teens from the fictional Uranium City. Development began with a workshop in September 2008 at a Ukrainian church in Victoria, British Columbia, produced by Atomic Vaudeville, where early iterations featured elements like a thrift-store pump organ overture and experimental song concepts later refined or cut, such as a Marxist gospel number. This phase transformed Richmond's core premise—rooted in undramatizable absurdity and causal chains of chance—into a full musical structure, emphasizing competitive monologues and ensemble dynamics amid themes of regret and reinvention.[7][5] Subsequent rewrites, informed by director Rachel Rockwell's input, integrated character backstories like the amnesiac Jane Doe and honed the narrative's balance of pathos and farce, with multiple iterations of key sequences like "The Uranium Suite" spanning years of iteration. The creative process prioritized empirical staging of existential stakes over conventional plotting, yielding a work that probes identity's fragility through hyperbolic, machine-mediated judgment.[5]Initial Premise
Ride the Cyclone revolves around six teenagers from the Saint Cassian Chamber Choir in Uranium City, Saskatchewan, who meet their deaths in a derailment of the dilapidated Cyclone roller coaster at a rundown carnival. Transported to an otherworldly limbo, the group confronts The Amazing Karnak, a malfunctioning mechanical fortune teller that acts as narrator and judge, promising to resurrect one soul whose life story proves most worthy of revival. This core conceit, devised by librettist Jacob Richmond and composer Brooke Maxwell, frames a competition where each teen performs a musical monologue revealing their personal history, blending fantasy with stark confrontation of untimely demise.[2][5] Richmond and Maxwell crafted the premise to confront the "undramatizable" realities of accidental death, drawing from Richmond's experiences with loss to subvert traditional dramatic norms that avoid depicting such events directly. Rather than sentimental eulogies, the narrative employs quirky, absurd vignettes to probe what renders a life meaningful, emphasizing life's chaotic value over polished mourning. The fortune teller's contest mechanism underscores causal finality—even in limbo, revival hinges on persuasive evidence of unlived potential, grounding supernatural elements in a merit-based reckoning.[5] Stylistically, the initial concept integrates vaudeville's performative flair, operetta's lyrical expansiveness, and pop's rhythmic immediacy to mirror the teens' diverse quirks without romanticizing tragedy. Maxwell highlighted influences like circus organs and swing rhythms to evoke carnival whimsy, while Richmond noted self-aware narration akin to vaudeville emcees, fostering a tone of irreverent vitality amid mortality's shadow. This eclectic fusion avoids didacticism, prioritizing empirical self-disclosure over abstract philosophy to challenge sanitized cultural evasions of death's abrupt causality.[5]Productions
Early Workshops and Canadian Premieres (2008–2013)
Ride the Cyclone, with book by Jacob Richmond and music and lyrics by Brooke Maxwell, premiered in 2008 under the production of Atomic Vaudeville at their theatre in Victoria, British Columbia, directed by Britt Small.[8] [9] The initial staging introduced the core premise of six teenage choir members from Uranium City, Saskatchewan, who perish in a roller coaster derailment and plead their cases before a mechanical fortune teller for a sole chance at afterlife revival.[10] This workshopped production, developed collaboratively within Atomic Vaudeville's ensemble-driven process, emphasized an edgy, satirical tone blending vaudeville elements with dark humor, marking the musical's foundational form before subsequent revisions.[8] In 2013, Atomic Vaudeville remounted Ride the Cyclone for a Western Canadian tour, including a key engagement at the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival in Vancouver from January 23 to 27 at the Arts Club Theatre.[11] [12] This iteration incorporated refinements to the script and score informed by prior performances and internal feedback, enhancing character arcs and musical sequences while retaining the original's compact one-act structure of approximately 90 minutes.[9] The tour's logistical focus on regional venues facilitated targeted audience testing in Canadian markets, paving the way for broader recognition without altering the narrative's uranium-themed, post-mortem competition framework.[11]World Tour and U.S. Debuts (2014–2016)
In 2015, Ride the Cyclone expanded through a Canadian tour, presenting concert-style performances that showcased revised material from earlier workshops, including songs like "Play to Win" in its touring iteration.[13] This phase marked the musical's preparation for international audiences, building on its cult following in Canada with mobile productions adapted for varied venues. The tour featured audio recordings and fan-documented performances, highlighting logistical adaptations for travel, such as simplified staging to accommodate multiple stops across provinces.[14] The U.S. debut occurred at Chicago Shakespeare Theater's Upstairs at Chicago Shakespeare space, running from September 29 to November 15, 2015, under the direction of Rachel Rockwell.[15] Rockwell's staging emphasized dynamic choreography and thematic elements of purgatory, with set designs evoking the Cyclone rollercoaster's wreckage to immerse audiences in the narrative's fatal accident premise. This production represented a key milestone in the musical's growth, transitioning from Canadian roots to American theaters while maintaining its quirky, genre-blending structure.[16] Following the Chicago run, Ride the Cyclone transferred to Off-Broadway at the Lucille Lortel Theatre via MCC Theater, with previews beginning November 9, 2016, and an official opening on November 30, 2016.[17] The limited engagement extended to December 29, 2016, due to audience demand.[18] Rockwell returned as director, collaborating with scenic designer Scott Davis to innovate the set for the intimate 198-seat venue, which typically hosted non-musical plays; the design incorporated an imposing rollercoaster apparatus and atmospheric projections, overcoming spatial constraints through modular elements and efficient rigging to evoke a larger-scale amusement park ruin without compromising the story's visceral impact.[19] This adaptation addressed logistical challenges of scaling down elaborate mechanics for a black-box-like space, ensuring fluid transitions between choral numbers and monologues.[20]Revivals and International Expansions (2017–2025)
In 2023, Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., mounted a professional revival directed by Sarah Rasmussen, running from January 13 to March 5 after an extension due to demand.[21] [22] The production retained the musical's core narrative of six deceased teenagers competing for a chance at resurrection via a fortune-telling machine, emphasizing its blend of dark humor and choral elements in a regional theater context.[23] Internationally, the musical expanded to Sydney, Australia, and Buenos Aires, Argentina, contributing to its growing global footprint beyond North American premieres.[24] [25] A UK premiere was scheduled at Southwark Playhouse Elephant, with previews beginning November 14, 2025, and performances continuing through January 10, 2026.[26] [27] Broadway Licensing introduced a High School Edition in 2023, adapted for teenage performers and audiences by adjusting content for appropriateness while preserving the original score and structure.[28] [29] This edition spurred widespread adoption in educational settings, including productions at La Salle High School in Pasadena from February 29 to March 10, 2025; Anoka-Ramsey Community College starting April 11, 2025; and MIT Musical Theatre Guild's summer 2025 staging.[30] [31] [32] Additional college outings, such as at Hastings College in fall 2025 and College of the Mainland from February 6 to 23, 2025, alongside high school runs at LASA High School in October 2025, indicate accelerated licensing uptake among amateur and youth groups.[33] [34] [35]Synopsis
The musical depicts the fatal derailment of the Cyclone roller coaster carriage carrying the six members of the Saint Cassian High School Chamber Choir from Uranium City, Saskatchewan, on September 14.[36] Their spirits materialize in a dilapidated warehouse strewn with carnival wreckage, confronting the Amazing Karnak, an animatronic fortune-telling machine that has gained awareness beyond its programming.[36][2] Karnak declares his ability to resurrect one soul to earthly life, stipulating that the chosen must demonstrate worthiness through a contest of personal testimony delivered in song.[36] Each of the five identified teenagers—Ocean O'Connell Rosenberg, Mischa Bachinski, Noel Gruber, Ricky Potts, and Constance Blackwood—performs a solo recounting key elements of their existence, vying for the opportunity amid the limbo-like setting.[36] The proceedings reach their climax with the amnesiac Jane Doe, who intones "The Ballad of Jane Doe," a lament over her fragmented recollections and anonymous fate.[37] Karnak's internal mechanisms then process the pleas to select the recipient of revival, finalizing the group's supernatural adjudication.[36]Characters
Ocean O'Connell Rosenberg is depicted as the ambitious, competitive leader of the Uranium City choir, self-assured to the point of egotism and occasional cruelty, while perceiving herself as morally superior.[38] Constance Blackwood serves as the overweight, self-loathing "nicest girl" in the ensemble, often functioning as a passive doormat to others like Ocean, with a capacity for comic expression.[38] Noel Gruber is the choir's only openly gay member, romantically inexperienced and deeply immersed in French New Wave cinema, contributing introspective dynamics to the group.[38] Ricky Potts is a shy, withdrawn boy afflicted by a rare degenerative disease from childhood, resulting in non-verbal communication and, in original iterations, physical limitations that confine him to his imaginative inner world.[39][40] Mischa Bachinski is a Ukrainian immigrant characterized by a thick dialect, bursts of rage, affinity for gangsta rap, and an underlying soulful romanticism that influences ensemble interactions.[38] Jane Doe is an enigmatic, amnesiac presence in the group, marked by emotional detachment and robotic demeanor due to her unidentified background.[38] The Amazing Karnak functions as the omniscient, non-singing narrator, portrayed as a mechanical fortune-telling machine that frames the teens' collective narrative.[38]Musical Numbers
The score of Ride the Cyclone was composed by Brooke Maxwell and Jacob Richmond, blending eclectic styles such as pop, folk, rock, swing, and carnival motifs to reflect the characters' eccentricities and the story's macabre amusement-park limbo.[5] These elements include organ-driven carnival sounds in opening sequences, Taylor Swift-inspired pop aggression in competitive solos, Ukrainian folk wedding influences in romantic pleas, and New Orleans swing in haunting ballads.[5] The one-act structure, running approximately 90 minutes, sequences numbers to establish the premise through Karnak's narration and ensemble exposition before shifting to individual character solos that reveal backstories and vie for resurrection.[2] While some productions divide the piece into two acts for intermission, the core narrative unfolds continuously via these songs, which propel the plot by alternating group transitions with personal appeals judged by the mechanical soothsayer. The primary musical numbers, drawn from the 2021 world premiere cast recording produced by Ghostlight Records, proceed in the following order, with functions centered on scene-setting, backstory delivery, and competitive escalation rather than resolution until the finale.[41]| Song Title | Primary Performers | Style/Influences | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Karnak’s Dream of Life | Emily Rohm (Jane Doe) | Organ, quirky recurring motifs | Establishes dreamlike limbo atmosphere |
| Welcome… | Jacob Richmond (Karnak) | Narrative address | Introduces host and rules of the contest |
| The Uranium Suite | Ensemble (Lillian Castillo, Emily Rohm, et al.) | Dramatic pop, carnival waltz | Recounts the fatal roller-coaster accident |
| Jane Doe’s Entrance | Ensemble | Circus organs, reverb guitars | Reveals the unidentified newcomer |
| What the World Needs | Tiffany Tatreau (Ocean), Ensemble | Modern pop (alpha-teen vibe) | Launches Ocean's ambitious plea |
| Noel’s Lament | Kholby Wardell (Noel), Ensemble | Dramatic character showcase | Conveys Noel's poignant personal history |
| Every Story’s Got A Lesson | Jacob Richmond (Karnak), Ensemble | Agitprop-inspired melody | Transitions between contestant narratives |
| This Song Is Awesome | Chaz Duffy (Ricky), Ensemble | Attitude pop with autotune | Highlights Ricky's fantastical aspirations |
| Talia | Chaz Duffy (Mischa), Ensemble | Folk (Ukrainian wedding style) | Advances Mischa's romantic backstory |
| Space Age Bachelor Man | Scott Redmond (Ricky), Ensemble | '80s pop (Bowie/Prince sax) | Expands Ricky's sci-fi alter-ego fantasy |
| The Ballad of Jane Doe | Emily Rohm (Jane Doe), Ensemble | Haunting swing/jazz | Delivers Jane's unidentified life's essence |
| The New Birthday Song | Emily Rohm, Ensemble | Silly transitional ditty | Lightens mood post-major solos |
| Jawbreaker | Lillian Castillo (Constance) | Monologic delivery | Sets up Constance's raw emotional arc |
| Sugar Cloud | Lillian Castillo (Constance), Ensemble | Life-affirming rock | Culminates Constance's youthful reflections |
| It’s Not A Game/It’s Just A Ride | Ensemble | Marching band escalation | Builds to collective finale and judgment |
Cast and Performances
Original and Notable Casts by Production
The original Canadian production premiered in 2008 with Kholby Wardell originating the role of Noel Gruber, a part he reprised across multiple early iterations through 2019.[42] Wardell, who performed Noel in every production prior to the U.S. debut, contributed to the show's development during workshops and tours from 2008 to 2013.[43] The U.S. premiere occurred in Chicago at Chicago Shakespeare Theater from October 8 to November 15, 2015, marking the first fully documented principal cast for the streamlined six-teenager format.| Role | Actor |
|---|---|
| Ocean O'Connell Rosenberg | Tiffany Tatreau |
| Constance Blackwood | Lillian Castillo |
| Noel Gruber | Kholby Wardell |
| Jane Doe | Emily Rohm |
| Ricky Potts | Jackson Evans |
| Mischa Bachinski | Russell Mernagh |
| The Amazing Karnak | Karl Hamilton |
| Role | Actor |
|---|---|
| Ocean O'Connell Rosenberg | Taylor Louderman (withdrew); Tiffany Tatreau (replacement) |
| Ricky Potts | Alex Wyse |
| Mischa Bachinski | Gus Halper |
| (Other roles as in Chicago cast above) |
Casting Controversies
In the 2015 world tour production, actress Taylor Louderman, known for her roles in Bring It On and Mean Girls, was cast as Ocean O'Connell-Rosenberg but withdrew during previews on October 16, 2015, citing creative differences with the production team. Her abrupt departure required an immediate replacement by understudy Tiffany Tatreau, who assumed the role for the tour's opening in Seattle on October 23, 2015, allowing the production to continue without cancellation but prompting speculation about internal tensions over scripting and direction. The role of Ricky Potts, depicted as intellectually disabled and largely non-verbal in life before adopting expressive, fantastical mannerisms in the afterlife, has frequently been performed by able-bodied actors across workshops, tours, and revivals since the 2008 premiere, including original cast member Kholby Wardell and subsequent performers like Alex Wyse in the 2016 U.S. debut.[54] This practice has fueled debates in theater circles between calls for authenticity—wherein disabled actors could provide nuanced insight into the character's isolation and communication challenges—and merit-based selection, emphasizing performers' ability to master the role's demanding choreography, improvised vocalizations, and stylized physicality required for the ensemble-driven sequences.[55] Proponents of the latter argue that the show's surreal narrative demands versatility beyond disability simulation, aligning with broader musical theater norms where fictional traits are portrayed by actors best equipped for technical execution. Actors' Equity Association guidelines promote inclusive casting and prohibit discrimination based on disability but impose no contractual mandates for disability-matched portrayals in roles involving intellectual or developmental differences, leaving decisions to directors' artistic discretion and production needs such as rehearsal consistency and performance reliability. These principles have informed choices in Ride the Cyclone productions, where contractual understudy provisions and ensemble demands often prioritize actors capable of covering multiple roles fluidly, as seen in swings handling Ricky's physical commitments during extended runs.Reception
Critical Reviews
The 2016 Off-Broadway production of Ride the Cyclone at the Lucille Lortel Theatre elicited mixed critical responses, with reviewers praising its quirky premise, energetic ensemble, and eclectic score while critiquing uneven pacing, tonal inconsistencies, and derivative elements. The Hollywood Reporter commended the young cast's talent and appeal but faulted the musical numbers for lacking cohesion, likening them to "inferior versions of numbers you've heard before in more thoughtfully crafted shows."[56] Similarly, Vulture highlighted the production's visually striking, "phantasmagorgeous" design but noted its structural "downs and ups," evoking a "queasy hangover" from the blend of dark humor and adolescent angst that failed to fully cohere.[57] In contrast, Playbill aggregated positive sentiments from New York critics, describing the show as a "wildly original new musical—part comedy, part tragedy, and wholly unexpected," with strengths in the cast's vocal prowess and the score's variety of pop styles.[58] Aggregate scores reflected this divide; on Show-Score, the production earned an 82% rating from over 200 reviews, lauding its spectacular staging and delightful darkness alongside critiques of narrative sketchiness.[59] The New York Times appreciated the high-energy performances akin to a "Disneyland all-access pass" but implied limitations in depth for the cartoonish characters.[60] Revivals from 2022 onward, including productions at Arena Stage and elsewhere, often addressed earlier flaws through tighter direction and enhanced character work, though some tonal whiplash persisted. A 2023 review of the Arena Stage mounting called it "wacky and wonderful," transforming the absurd premise into "side-splitting, hilarious" entertainment via improved humor and originality.[61] Critics noted persistent challenges with sound balance and diction in certain stagings, yet praised refinements in the score's delivery and the ensemble's ability to balance morbidity with merriment.[62] A 2024 San Francisco production was deemed a "rousing 90 minutes" for its moving development and hilarity, signaling broader acclaim for the show's innovative limbo conceit in revised forms.[63]Awards and Nominations
Ride the Cyclone received nominations from Off-Broadway awards organizations for its 2016 MCC Theater production, including the Lucille Lortel Awards for Outstanding Scenic Design (Mara Ishler) and Outstanding Lighting Design (Greg Hofmann).[17] The production was also nominated for the Drama League Award for Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical.[64] In regional theater, the 2016 Chicago Shakespeare Theater staging earned a Joseph Jefferson Award win for Best Director of a Musical, given to Rachel Rockwell.[65] Canadian productions of the musical have won Dora Mavor Moore Awards, including for Outstanding Musical Production.[66] The show has accumulated additional regional honors, such as a Suzi Bass Award and a Joe A. Callaway Award nomination, primarily recognizing production and design elements rather than composition.[67] Composer Brooke Maxwell's score received acclaim in these contexts but no standalone major composition awards.[21] Despite nominations for design and direction, Ride the Cyclone lacks wins or nominations from flagship Broadway honors like the Tony Awards, consistent with its status as an Off-Broadway and regional cult favorite without a Broadway transfer.[2]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Production/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Joseph Jefferson Awards | Best Director (Musical) | Won | Rachel Rockwell, Chicago Shakespeare Theater[65] |
| 2017 | Drama League Awards | Outstanding Production (Broadway/Off-Broadway Musical) | Nominated | MCC Theater[64] |
| 2017 | Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Scenic Design | Nominated | Mara Ishler, MCC Theater[17] |
| 2017 | Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Lighting Design | Nominated | Greg Hofmann, MCC Theater[17] |