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The Nervous Set

The Nervous Set is an intensely cool, hip jazz musical about the Beat Generation. It's a show that is a part of St Louis history, originally written by St Louisans Jay and Fran Landesman, jazz composer Tommy Wolf and director Theodore Flicker. It was first produced at the Crystal palace in the legendary Gaslight Square entertainment district in 1959, before moving to Broadway.

With a story based on actual events, and characters based on the Landesman's, Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and other Beat writers, The Nervous Set takes place in New York City in 1950 and focuses on the personal life of the editor of an off-beat literary magazine and his wife. The show follows their attempts to find meaning and love in a society they find discontented - or overly contented to the point of dullness - as the action moves from Greenwich Village to Connecticut to New York's swanky Upper West Side. The Nervous Set took a sharp left turn from the 1950s musical comedy norm, discarding dance and big, expensive sets, replacing the usual Broadway orchestra with an on-stage jazz quartet, pushing cute sentimentality aside for the brittle wit and weary sophistication of the Beat Generation.

The New York Daily News called the show 'the most brilliant, sophisticated, witty and completely novel production of the past decade.' Several of the show's songs have gone on to become international jazz standards, including the haunting 'Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most' and 'The Ballad of the Sad Young Men'.

The Nervous Set explores the origins of the Beats, a generation of young people in postWorld War II, pre-Vietnam America, swimming in disillusioned angst and apathy. The show is funny, biting, outrageous, despairing and brilliantly witty. But more than that, it's truthful - a cleareyed social document, a record of a time and place that should never be forgotten, when America had lost its way and lost track of what was important. It's a loving evocation of the Beat Generation, with all its warts and contradictions, all its nihilism and its earth-shattering realignment of modern literature and poetry. People know about the hippies, but how many know where the hippies came from? The Nervous Set shines the light once again on some of America's true cultural giants.

Kerouac said of the Beats in New York, 'We are living at just the right time Johnson and his London, Balzac and his Paris, Socrates and his Athens - the same thing again.' the show is set at a thrilling moment in American culture - at the same time that Kerouac was changing the course of the American novel and Ginsberg was doing the same with poetry, other revolutions were also taking place. Jackson Pollock was changing American painting with his wild visceral new abstract style. Charlie Parker was changing jazz with the invention of 'Bop', a fierce, aggressive, manic new kind of jazz improvisation. Lenny Bruce was changing American theatre with an entirely new style of aggressive, emotionally raw acting. Sid Caesar was changing the face of the newborn television, inventing live sketch comedy with 'Your Show of Shows'. Jay Landesman was changing the American scene with a sense of fun and style.

The Nervous Set musical is available for all productions. Complete score, book and history available. Anyone interested in production rights should contact our theatrical agent: Diane Nine, email: ninespeakers@usa.net

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Play Music:

Man We're Beat
Let's Just Have Fun
Night People
Ballad of the
Sad Young Men