for @holdwinetosky
“I lived in Manhattan in 1981, met my husband that year. We lived through the AIDS drama of real life on the Upper West Side. This show speaks to me on So many different levels.
Saw this production on Broadway shortly after it opened. Crazy, Intense, Wonderful .
Just like it was in 1990 as Falsettoland at the Lucille Lortel, and when it first moved to Broadway as Falsettos in 1992. Saw the original casts of each, and each production multiple times (1 time with Mandy Patinkin as Marvin), saw the road companies that came to Philadelphia........etc...lol
Freakin Love this Show."
@ rugby8-Philadelphia
“Saw a traveling company which came through Phoenix, AZ. I left Manhattan in '81 as numerous friends were getting ill and shortly thereafter died. This show made me laugh out loud AND cry out loud!”
David Helmstetter (@ davidhelmstetter6661)
“Thank you. You signed my program when I was a kid. I waited by the stage door. My Mom didn't want to see the show at the time. She turned into the most accepting woman and this musical changed my life. xo”
@ castChicagoactors
“An absolute perfect moment in theater... this opened in nyc in 1990!!!!! We all had just lost lovers and friends and it was still raging without any meds. Vowing to "buy the farm arm in arm" was and still is the most moving loving words to hear so beautifully sung”
Jeff Schecter (@ jeffschecter4543)
“I saw Falsettoland at the Theatre De Lys in the Village shortly after my brother Marty died of AIDS, and I have never cried so hard in my life as during "What More Can I Say" and "Unlikely Lovers." I cried so hard that in part of my brain I thought someone might escort me out of the theatre, but there was nothing I could do about it, Michael Rupert you gave voice to everything I felt and there was no stopping it. Thank you thank you thank you. Of course saw the short multiple times on Broadway and afterwards in various productions and I will just never forget this song and that moment until every brain cell I've got has given up and every memory is erased because this is the such an honest statement of what love is all about. To all of you in the show and William Finn I am forever grateful.”
David Fleischer (@ davidfleischer455)
“Thanks for posting, Michael. Today, after 29 years together, my husband and I are legally married in our state of Georgia.”
@ theBestArts
“I have seen many Broadway musicals in my day. Over one hundred original and first run shows since 1980. I can honestly say without heistation that Falsettos in 1992 is the best musical I have ever seen in NY. The ensemble cast, simple set, lyrics, and use of character to tell a story is a perfect example of theatre art. Every theater lover should have seen this one, it is a masterpiece. Chip Zien and Barbara Walsh shine in every performance they give.”
@ muscled57
“I saw March of the Falsettos in 1980 and marvelled at it's musical brilliance and ended up seeing it half a dozen times. Then I saw Falsettoland a decade later which devastated me with it's sensitivity and humanity. Years later I saw a regional production of Falsettos which is the combination of the two shows and was enchanted and remain grateful to Mr Finn for writing such a masterpiece of musical theatre that I could see again and again.”
@ donovan3535
“I was fortunate enough to be reach up and touch Mr. Patinkin at the Golden Theatre in February, 1993, during his run with this amazing show. Those who don't think he made a good Marvin: I have to disagree with you completely. The man is one of the best American talents alive today and gave an amazing performance, in my opinion.”
@ dyabolykyll
“I can't believe I've never seen this before. I've sobbed all the way through the second act. Such strong memories of my dear friend Sammy, who died in 1993. The last time I visited him with my kids, he asked if he could change my daughter's diaper, and afterwards he cried because I wasn't afraid.
It hits so hard for those of us who were young adults when AIDS came on the scene. People were afraid to be in the same room with someone who had it, much less to touch them. It made hand holding and hugs mean so much more."
@ VeracityLH
Tomorrow's the series final for one of the best/favorite cartoon's, Craig of the creek ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜 Thank you to Matt Burnett & Ben Levin, The Creek Crew, and all those involved for making one of the best shows of the late 2010's to early 2020's 🌳💕
My art would not be where it is without this series and I'm thankful for it everyday 🩷🌳🫂🌳🩷
“Ace of Heart(s) - An intense desire to be loved”
yooooo fr All The Rain SLAPS and was the main song i looped when drawing this
Also seven episodes in, pretty sure that Wilson follows House around because he secretly has beef jerky in his pockets and Wilson is trying to nab it when he looks away. Also explains why Wilson gets so close to him and openly salivates when they're in the same room
Hey folks I’m watching House. I’m about 7 episodes in. When will they explain why Wilson follows House around like the specter of a dead wife determined to keep her widowed husband interested in living?
Actually insane that the only YouTuber tagged was tommyinit
i think as far as the dsmp goes, you either die the villain or live long enough to see yourself become part of the ever-growing list of queer minecraft youtubers
lord the peasants are so loud today
Ate two bees when I was 10 and now my parents ask me for honey on the daily
I always feel so crazed when I am labeled as a *female character* hater because I like a gay ship that she "comes in between of" like ??? That's my girl???
grabs yoyr shoulders. shakes you. i am a saiouma shipper and i fucking adore kaede akamatsu
Lesbian/any pronouns/neurodivergent. multi fandom insanity paired with a love for writing and the goal to be able to draw men kissing
218 posts