Sounds like my kind of theatre.
Off Off Broadway is where Promenade was born in 1965. Sixty years later, it seems as timely as ever, like it was written about 2026. So the New Liners are bringing it back to uproarious life.
The birthplace of Promenade, the Judson Poets’ Theatre, was one of the four cornerstones of off off Broadway, and the only one to produce musicals as well as plays and other performance pieces. In his (excellent!) book Playing Underground, scholar Stephen Bottoms refers to the Judson’s “unabashedly joyous sense of vaudevillian showmanship.”
Judson was just as radical and experimental as the other companies, but Judson shows were also entertaining. Good old-fashioned razzle-dazzle (on a budget!) in the service of very serious, very complicated ideas. Bottoms calls this moment in theatre history “radically promiscuous in its creativity,” and he tells us these artists found inspiration in poetry, soap operas, Greek tragedy, Hollywood movies, burlesque, even opera.
Playwright Jean-Claude van Itallie said about this moment, “It was like, OK, this is ground zero, and you’ve rejected the usual forms, which for us were Broadway and psychological realism. And then you think, now what’s possible?”
Judson’s resident director Lawrence Kornfeld (who directed Promenade) said of those times, “We needed to get out. To get out from inside. To get out from Eisenhower time. To get out from those constraints. To create a very, very American form.”
We usually don’t think about Theatre of the Absurd and musical theatre together, even though absurd originally meant out of harmony musically. The word has since come to mean out of harmony with reason or logic or purpose. Still, these two forms of theatre don’t seem to go together, since musicals are about emotional connection and absurdist plays are about ironic detachment.
But ultimately, musical theatre and absurdist theatre are both aiming for the same thing, honesty and truth. In The Theatre of the Absurd, Martin Esslin writes, “For all its freedom of invention and spontaneity, the Theatre of the Absurd is concerned with communicating an experience of being, and in doing so, it is trying to be uncompromisingly honest and fearless in exposing the reality of the human condition.”
By the Sixties, off Broadway had abandoned its identity as the place for weird and wonderful experiments (like Threepenny Opera and The Fantasticks); it had become just a smaller but still commercial version of Broadway.
So, off off Broadway stepped in.
Lots of new physical spaces emerged in the early 1960s to host all the new kinds of theatre, most of those spaces very nontraditional. Off off Broadway (originally "off-off-Broadway") was led by four theatres, all of them in New York's East Village (where Rent is set), Caffe Cino, La MaMa ETC, Theatre Genesis, and Judson Poets’ Theatre.
(Village Voice critic Michael Smith argued for adding The Open Theatre to the list as well.)
One of those spaces was in the basement of the Judson Memorial Church, a landmark in Greenwich Village. The Judson’s Gallery had presented the very first “Happening” in New York in 1958, and in the audience that night was a theology student named Al Carmines.
Soon after, the senior pastor hired minister Al Carmines to create a theatre in the church’s basement, dubbed Judson Poets’ Theatre, which debuted in 1961. The church’s congregation as a whole voted to hire Carmines, as part-time minister and part-time artistic director. They also voted never to censor any material presented in their space. Carmines told interviewers that they considered art-making to be as much a form of worship as Sunday services, and that the cornerstones of Christianity are salvation and creation.
Within its first five years, Judson produced fifty-nine plays by forty-three authors, including the one-act musical Promenade in 1965. At the same time, Carmines created Judson Dance Theatre and reignited the Judson Art Gallery. Carmines was openly gay and had two degrees in theology. He wrote scores for several off off Broadway musicals throughout the Sixties that played the Judson Poets’ Theatre and in some cases went on to commercial runs. Carmines openly admitted that Judson was a child of the legendary ensemble, The Living Theatre, not only in philosophy but in actors, directors, and designers as well.
In her book Fornes: Theatre in the Present, Dian Lynn Moroff writes about Carmines and his co-artistic director Lawrence Kornfeld:
They came to define the theater’s aesthetic, which from production to production mixed camp sensibility, abstract movement, social commentary, zany and grotesque humor, bright melodies, grinning irony, pop culture symbols, surrealistic flights of fancy, open sexuality, and, above all else, an unapologetic joy in life. The plays did not promote church orthodoxy, but for Carmines and the Judson leadership, art and performance were an extension of ministry, so it was natural that an ecumenical and somewhat programmatic celebration of life became a Judson hallmark. Two key traits of the Judson Poets’ Theater -- a free and experimental approach to performance events and a madcap often ironic delight -- became important aspects of [María Irene] Fornés' work in her first decade as a playwright. Nowhere is that affinity more apparent than in Promenade, her most Judsonesque play.
In their book Restaging the Sixties, James Harding and Cindy Rosenthal write about the theatre scene in Greenwich Village, “Making theatre was as much an experiment in radical democracy as it was an exploration of the possibilities of theatre as such.” One actor enjoyed calling the off off Broadway scene “the criminal psychedelic homosexual avant-garde.”
Michael Smith wrote in The Village Voice, “Off off Broadway isn’t a place or an idea or a movement or a method or even a group of people. It has no program, no rules, no image to maintain. It is as varied as its participants and they are constantly changing. At its best, it implies a particular point of view, that the procedures of the professional theatre are inadequate; that integrity and freedom to explore, experiment and grow count more than respectable or impressive surroundings.”
There was no Fourth Wall at the Judson. It was just too close-up and intimate. That old idea of “the suspension of disbelief” was utterly impossible here, in practical terms as well artistic.
This is the world that brought Promenade to life, and we're doing our best to honor that artistic worldview, and bring back this wondrous, audacious piece of theatre history, as faithful to its creators intentions as possible. It's a different kind of theatre from what any of us are used to, but that's what makes it such a terrific adventure! As we New Liners have been heard to say, "If it's not scary, what's the point?" Or maybe to put it more accurately, if it doesn't challenge us, what's the point? If we don't learn something, what's the point?
I never thought I would see a production (or video!) of Promenade. In fact, I never thought I'd hear the entire score, since a lot was left off the cast recording. But not only do I get to see it and hear it now, I get to study it, and I get to share it! My fanboy heart runneth over!
Come join us! And then, forever more, when musical theatre nerds mention Promenade, you can say, "I've seen it!"
The adventure continues...
Long Live the Musical
Scott
P.S. To get your tickets for Promenade, click here.
P.P.S. To check out my newest musical theatre books, click here.
P.P.P.S. To donate to New Line Theatre, click here.




































































