I hope everyone survived last week’s weather. I finally moved back home on Sunday after spending a week at Linda and Kevin’s. As much as I love them, and all the company and good food, it was good to be home. Kevin even came over and cleaned my driveway before I came back. I really appreciate them, and I’m glad I moved home to be with family. Linda, her son and I went to see “Come From Away” on Saturday. It was just as wonderful on a slightly smaller stage, but I have no complaints. Columbus has wonderful theater people.

Speaking of theater, tomorrow Margie Bunting takes over with her version of Favorites Read During 2025. If Margie and I were closer, we’d be theater buddies. It’s a passion for both of us.

So, it’s appropriate that I’m reading Theater Kid: A Broadway Memoir by Jeffrey Seller. I’ve only read the first chapter, but I like his voice. That also means I have to use the summary of the book since I haven’t read enough to discuss it.

A coming-of-age tale from one of the most successful American producers of our time, Jeffrey Seller, who is the only producer to have mounted two Pulitzer Prize–winning musicals—Hamilton and Rent.

Before he was producing the musical hits of our generation, Jeffrey was just a kid coming to terms with his adoption, trying to understand his sexuality, and determined to escape his dysfunctional household in a poor neighborhood just outside Detroit. We see him find his voice through musical theater and move to New York, where he is determined to shed his past and make a name for himself on Broadway.

But moving to the big city is never easy—especially not at the height of the HIV/AIDS crisis—and Jeffrey learns to survive and thrive in the colorful and cutthroat world of commercial theatre. From his early days as an office assistant, to meeting Jonathan Larson and experiencing the triumph and tragedy of Rent, to working with Lin-Manuel Miranda on In the Heights and Hamilton, Jeffrey completely pulls back the curtain on the joyous and gut-wrenching process of making new musicals, finding new audiences, and winning a Tony Award—all the while finding himself.

Told with Jeffrey’s candid and captivating voice, Theater Kid is a gripping memoir about fighting through a hardscrabble childhood to make art on one’s own terms, chasing a dream against many odds, and finding acceptance and community.


What about you? What did you do in the past week? What have you read?