More than 25 years after its brief Broadway debut, The Wild Party musical returned to the stage in a City Center Encores! revival, and was exactly what its title promised: wild, electric, and a little dangerous.
Cast of The Wild Party Musical – photo by Joan Marcus
Inspired by a 1928 narrative poem, the revival of The Wild Party musical carried a particular intensity. The intimate yet grand space of New York City Center provided the perfect backdrop for the short-run production, reflecting the theater’s longstanding mission to make bold, powerful works accessible to audiences.
Set in the Jazz Age, specifically downtown Manhattan, the musical centered on a wild, alcohol-fueled party where a mix of strangers and friends came together, and what began as celebration unraveled into chaos, exploring themes of race, class, money, sexism and relationships in the early 1900’s. At its core, the story examined desire, betrayal and jealousy culminating in tragedy.
Under the direction of Lili-Anne Brown and with music by Michael John LaChiusa, the show balanced spectacle with a deeper narrative, ensuring that the Jazz Age allure never overshadowed the emotional stakes. For stretches of the performance, the heaviness of the storyline dimmed, carried instead by the magnetism and vaudeville of the cast.
Jasmine Amy Rogers, who had previously wowed audiences in Betty Boop, brought an electric presence to her role, while Adrienne Warren, Jordan Donica, and Jelani Alladin delivered performances that were equally compelling and nuanced. Tonya Pinkins added further depth, rounding out a cast that consistently commanded attention.
Cast of The Wild Party Musical – photo by Joan Marcus
Every character felt fully themselves, shaped by complex pasts that drove their desires and conflicts over the course of a single chaotic night. The final weekend performance had a charged energy, making it the kind of show that didn’t just end when the curtain fell — it lingered in the mind long afterward.
City Center’s Encores! series once again demonstrated why it remains a vital part of New York’s theater scene: short, powerful runs that revisit and reframe works with historical and cultural relevance. Like the previously reviewed Urinetown, The Wild Party, delivered a revival that was both a spectacle and a deeply human exploration of desire, ambition, and chaos — all wrapped in a night of unforgettable music, dance, and theatrical electricity.