Kerrigan-Lowdermilk
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Kerrigan-Lowdermilk

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Music

The best kept secret in music

Press


"2004-05 Season Wrap Up"

“Still waiting for wide recognition is the season's best musical, which almost no one saw. The Woman Upstairs...is the type of brilliant show that, on paper, seems ridiculous: the anti-romantic, barely plotted posturings of a music-hating physicist and the blind violinist who lives in the apartment below. How could such a show possibly work? In most writers' hands, it couldn't. But the two writers hit upon the only way to make a story like this play: Set it against the ever-bustling backdrop of New York City.”
- TalkinBroadway.com


"Review: The Woman Upstairs"

“Jot down the name Brian Lowdermilk, the composer-lyricist who has written the astonishing score for The Woman Upstairs. Incorporating additional lyrics by director-librettist Kait Kerrigan, Lowdermilk has tossed out a cornucopia of melodies and counter-melodies that rocket him upward on the list of people who are pointing to exciting new directions for the book musical.” - TheaterMania.com


"Fusion"

May, 2006 – Can you revolutionize musical theater and bridge the gap between theater music and pop music before your thirtieth birthday? Kait Kerrigan and Brian Lowdermilk, currently 25 and 23 respectively, are determined to try.

The two first met in their home state of Pennsylvania, while doing shows at Young People's Theatre Workshop (YPTW) in Glen Mills. (Among other things, Kerrigan played Audrey to Lowdermilk's Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors.) They connected again in 2002 when Kerrigan, then studying English literature at Barnard College and just starting writing plays, received an e-mail from Lowdermilk, who had taught himself piano by tackling Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods, and was moving to New York to attend NYU, after unsuccessful stints at Harvard and the Berklee College of Music.

Kerrigan recalls, "He e-mailed me and was like, 'Hey, I write music and I hear you're writing plays. Would you send me some? Can I send you some music?' And I was like, 'All right:" They were each impressed with the other's work, and Lowdermilk urged her to contact him if she had any ideas for a musical.

"I didn't understand how someone goes about getting to the point where they sing:' Kerrigan says, "so I went to the logical place: the NYU library." She ended up in the acoustics section, reading up on sound and music and becoming interested in one acoustician's complaints that musicians "have no idea what they're producing, and are these reckless, hapless mechanics, basically:' she says. "Over the course of the next day or two, I came up with this idea of this woman who is outside the rest of the city and not engaging in the music that is New York City."

That idea eventually became The Woman Upstairs, which had its premiere at the inaugural New York Musical Theatre Festival in 2004. With a cast of 16 (including former Miss America Kate Shindle), a rock-heavy score and its story about a blind violinist who pursues a music-hating physicist in NYC's aural battleground, it was one of the Festival's more unconventional entries. But it attracted notice, got encouraging reviews and opened lots of doors.

TheatreworksUSA Artistic Director Barbara Pasternack saw the show and engaged Kerrigan and Lowdermilk to do a musical adaptation of Cynthia Rylant and SUyie Stevenson's Henry and Mudge children's books. Momentum picked up on The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brown, Lowdermilk's musical (written with Zach Altman) about a high-school girl pondering life, love and college; with revisions by Kerrigan, it had a reading at Makor in April 2005 starring Celia Keenan-Bolger and Michael Arden. NYMF approached them in 2005 about writing a new show for that year's festival, which ended up as Wrong Number, a choose-your-own adventure musical produced with the Upright Citizens Brigade comedy troupe.

Their shows' variety is mirrored in the myriad sources that inspire their work. "I'm the love child of Meat Loaf and the Indigo Girls," Lowdermilk says of his musical proclivities, though he doesn't discount the influences of folksingers Dar Williams and Joni Mitchell, rap artist Eminem, or musical writers Sondheim, Richard Rodgers and Michael John LaChiusa. Kerrigan's favorite playwrights include Tom Stoppard, Tony Kushner, Anna Deveare Smith and musical librettist Hugh Wheeler.

But as she's musical (she studied violin for 15 years) and he's dramatic (he's written plays), classifying them is difficult. They consider themselves dramatists, "event planners" who create the moments in theater that can't be replicated anywhere else, and they don't want to tread familiar ground.

"Guys and Dolls has been written-we can't write it again," Kerrigan says. "We have to do something else. Someone who Brian knew walked out of The Woman Upstairs because he was so angry that the main character didn't sing. But your general audience actually doesn't care about the form-they care about what you're saying, the emotional thing that happens onstage. There was this one moment in the show where every night-" "Where this woman trapped inside herself begins to dance," Lowdermilk interjects. "[The audience] clapped, they hollered and they screamed," Kerrigan says. "All of the sudden, we were at a rock concert for 30 seconds, because this nerdy scientist had started to dance. It was so cooL"

To enhance that rock-theater connection, and to tap into new audiences, they've begun writing pop songs. And they're equally determined to push marketing boundaries-Lowdermilk has capitalized on the popularity of Myspace.com to spread Samantha Brown's best-known song, "Run Away With Me," to high schools and colleges. Free MP3 downloads of that song and others, and sheet music purchases, are available on their website. Quips Lowdermilk, "We're making dozens and dozens of dollars off that!"

While some honors have followed (together they received a 2006 Jonathan Larson Award and a Dramatists Guild fellowship; with Marcus Stevens, Lowderm - Stage Directions Magazine


"Review: The Woman Upstairs"

“Jot down the name Brian Lowdermilk, the composer-lyricist who has written the astonishing score for The Woman Upstairs. Incorporating additional lyrics by director-librettist Kait Kerrigan, Lowdermilk has tossed out a cornucopia of melodies and counter-melodies that rocket him upward on the list of people who are pointing to exciting new directions for the book musical.” - TheaterMania.com


Discography


HENRY AND MUDGE
Moving from the city to a new home in the country can be tough. Just ask Henry, who can't find a playmate! Luckily, he's got Mudge - a big, slobbery, 180-pound, canine buddy, with whom he can explore the neighborhood and share a year full of adventures! Henry And Mudge was commissioned by TheatreworksUSA and will open off-Broadway at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in November, 2006.
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THE UNAUTHORIZED AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF SAMANTHA BROWN
Sam, a senior in high school, has what everyone always wanted: a boyfriend who loves her, functional parents and an acceptance letter to the school of her choice. And since she's moving to New York City she doesn't even need the driver's license she's too chicken to get. So she doesn't need to be worried. And she doesn't need to be happy. Right?

– Bound For Broadway IV at Merkin Hall November 28, 2005
– Featured in the National Alliance of Musical Theatre Songwriter Showcase September 25, 2005
– 92nd St. Y’s Showcase Series at the Makor April 15, 2005
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THE WOMAN UPSTAIRS
Helen Morton is a physicist who hates music, living above a violinist who is falling in love with her. Once a woman who only lived for her work, she starts to realize that she needs to find other reasons for life when she learns that she’s going to be fired. Filled with a cast of characters as big as the city they inhabit, The Woman Upstairs is a belated coming-of-age story, an old-fashioned New York romance, and the quirky journey of a physicist who needs to learn how to love the sounds of the city.

– 47th Street Theatre as part of the New York Musical Theatre Festival September 2004
– North Shore Music Theater as part of the BOAM Festival in Boston May 2004
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WRONG NUMBER
You wake to the sound of a phone ringing. A voice on the line says that he has kidnapped your child. There's only one thing: you don't have a child. Do you find out whose kid it is, or roll over and head back to sleep? This is one of many choices you, the audience, will make in this new choose-your-own-adventure musical comedy. Wrong Number was co-commissioned by the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre and the New York Musical Theatre Festival.

– 45th Street Theatre as part of the New York Musical Theatre Festival September 2005

Photos

Feeling a bit camera shy

Bio

KAIT KERRIGAN (words) & BRIAN LOWDERMILK (music) have just been awarded the 2006 Jonathan Larson Award. They are currently writing TheaterworksUSA's adaptation of Henry & Mudge, which will premiere Off-Broadway next season at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. Their work has been most recently showcased at the 2005 New York Musical Theater Festival, for which they were co-commissioned by the Upright Citizen’s Brigade and the festival to write Wrong Number.

Other shows include The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brown, which received a reading in the Artist’s Showcase Reading Series at the 92nd Street Y and was featured in the 2005 NAMT Songwriters Showcase; and The Woman Upstairs, seen in the 2004 New York Musical Theatre Festival and the BOAM Festival at Northshore Music Theatre, MA. They were awarded a 2004-2005 Jonathan Larson Fellowship at the Dramatists Guild and they are members of the BMI Musical Theatre Workshop.

Ms. Kerrigan graduated from Barnard College with a degree in English Literature. Her plays include Her Old Possessions, which has had a workshop at Columbia University and at the Burton Taylor Theatre in Oxford, UK; Tender Wars in the Green-Gold Room and Transit. Mr. Lowdermilk studied at Harvard University and NYU where he received the Alan Menken Award. With collaborator Marcus Stevens, Mr. Lowdermilk was the recipient of a Richard Rodgers Award for his musical RED.