After 17,800 reveals and 82,150 gallons of paint, Blue Man Group is hanging up its bald caps on the Astor Place Theater for good on Sunday. It arrived there in 1991, when George H.W. Bush was president, cellphones have been uncommon and the World Huge Net was two years away. (The group’s first profile in The New York Occasions existed solely on paper.) Within the technology since, the trio of hairless, earless, silent, blue-and-black clad performers, who spit paint and sculpt marshmallows, gobble Twinkies and drum in major colours, unexpectedly grew to become a culture-infiltrating sensation.
They achieved this — together with reveals in additional than a dozen cities throughout the globe, a number of live performance excursions, three studio albums, a Grammy nomination, many TV appearances, a guide and one indelible sitcom story line — with out altering a lot about their method. All through one of many longest runs in Off Broadway historical past, they remained proudly on the foolish aspect of efficiency artwork. Even with out a narrative, in addition they related viscerally with audiences, incomes a legion of megafans. “We love the concept of a present that’s chic and ridiculous,” mentioned Chris Wink, one of many founding performers.
Blue Man Group, which has been owned by Cirque du Soleil since 2017, shouldn’t be disappearing: long-running reveals stay open in Boston, Las Vegas and Berlin, and a return gig is deliberate for Orlando, Fla. However closing the New York manufacturing, the place all of it started — together with one other decades-old manufacturing in Chicago — is the tip of a chapter. (In a press release, a spokeswoman mentioned Cirque du Soleil was pleased with Blue Man Group’s monitor document, and that it made the “troublesome choice” to shutter after “we re-evaluated our present standings.” After declaring chapter in 2020, Cirque du Soleil, the Montreal-based reside leisure behemoth, is managed by non-public fairness corporations.)
Rising from the East Village arts scene, the unique Blue Man Group served as a monument to risk: D.I.Y. creativity — or unfettered lunacy — may nonetheless flourish in New York. That for 34 years it occupied the identical little bit of fascinating actual property, close to the downtown mecca of Astor Place, and throughout from the landmark Public Theater, gave it a stately basis — even when its 281-seat subterranean house was, virtually by design, a bit of dank. Images of the bald and the blue loomed outdoors, a part of the city structure.
In its personal manner, Blue Man Group is maintaining a toehold: two of the founders, and one present performer, Wes Day, reside above the theater. (Forgotten corners should be cobalt-flecked.)
As a personality, the Blue Man is a quizzical however optimistic outsider, delighting within the quotidian, like PVC tubes and Cap’n Crunch cereal, mentioned Day, who has been a Blue Man for 27 years, principally with the New York present. And that was the infectious expertise of the manufacturing, too: “It’s simply been spreading pleasure, sharing shade and being awe-inspired on the world round it,” Day mentioned.
As Wink put it: The concept was all the time to jump-start different individuals’s weirdness. “A part of what New York is all about is like, be your loopy self, get your freak on, strive your factor out.”
Why is the Blue Man blue? For 3 a long time the creators — Wink, Matt Goldman and Phil Stanton — have purposefully given shifting solutions. It has to do with the earth, Wink mentioned in a latest video interview, and valuing human connection over expertise. Regardless of the case, Goldman added, the hue was plain.
“After we first acquired all blue, we did have a look at one another and go, Holy cow — that is greater than us,” he mentioned.
They seen, too, that numbers mattered. “We didn’t know what the hell we have been doing; we might simply get blue and stroll round,” Wink mentioned. If he was alone, “Folks can be like, ‘Who’s the bizarre man over there?’” he recalled. However encountering a blue trio, “They might ask, ‘What’s occurring?’” — prefer it was a occurring, an occasion. “We began to see that that was a strong part to it.”
This was within the late ’80s, when he and Goldman, New Yorkers and childhood friends, and Stanton, a pal who Wink met at a catering job, have been 20-somethings kicking round artwork concepts. They discovered the yuppie period stultifying and in 1988 staged a funeral procession for the last decade in Central Park. MTV coated it with outsize fanfare. “Let’s get a operating begin on the ’90s!” Wink — painted, bald, in a blazer — introduced, among the many final occasions a Blue Man talked.
The present developed by its personal logic. Castoff plastic piping was acquired from a manufacturing unit in Brooklyn — each set and prop. “We’d spend a ton of time shoving stuff in tubes, attempting to shoot it towards the wall,” Wink remembered. With Stanton because the lead builder, they constructed devices out of PVC, like a multiplayer tubulum. Percussion grew to become the soundtrack. (Wink was a drummer in post-punk bands.) None of it made any sense on paper.
“We have been shocked — delightfully shocked — when lots of people began coming,” Stanton mentioned.
Their ascent was helped by a slew of TV spots. They appeared a week into “The Tonight Present With Jay Leno,” in 1992 — “They’re very unusual,” Leno mentioned, by means of introduction — doing among the identical bits they nonetheless do, like catching paint balls of their mouths and spewing them into spin artwork. They have been on 17 occasions through the years, together with as soon as when they trussed Robin Williams up by the ankles, hung him the wrong way up and had him body-splatter pigment on an enormous canvas. (His youngsters put him as much as it, Williams, the Oscar-winning actor and comic, informed the troupe.)
Ceaselessly talked about in journey guidebooks as an only-in-New-York expertise, with appearances on speak reveals in locations like Germany, Brazil, and Japan, they drew a world crowd early.
In 2001, when their debut album was nominated for a Grammy, for finest pop instrumental, they carried out on the present, with Moby and Jill Scott. (They nixed appearances with Madonna and U2, based on Goldman.) The band needed to be tuned to the Blue Males’s non-chromatic PVC devices, which regarded like exoskeletons. They acquired a standing ovation.
By then, extra Blue Males had been forged, giving the founders respite from eight-show-a-week life. However they have been nonetheless exacting about their picture. Round 2004, after they acquired a name from “Arrested Improvement,” the cult Fox sequence, about having the hapless Tobias Fünke (David Cross) turn into a Blue Man, they have been cautious, recalled Mitchell Hurwitz, the TV present’s creator. A speaking Blue Man wouldn’t fly. They landed on having Tobias audition to be an understudy.
“I used to be like nice, it’s funnier that he’s not it,” Hurwitz mentioned. “You’ve acquired a man who’s simply portray himself blue — apart from that diamond spot on his again that he couldn’t attain — and simply ready by the telephone.” (Cross by no means acquired the hold of the make-up: “There was all the time a bit of blue to be discovered on David, for months afterward,” Hurwitz recalled.) The multi-season arc grew to become one of many standouts of a now-beloved sequence. It was comedic alignment — “that tone of absurd issues taken severely,” Hurwitz mentioned.
The Blue Man imaginative and prescient influenced different artists. Fred Armisen, the comedian actor and author, was a drummer in the home band for the Chicago present from 1997-99, his first paying job as a musician. “It actually modified my life,” he mentioned. Not simply due to the regular cash, or the apply in what he referred to as “relentless drumming,” cued by, say, an airborne marshmallow. The fabric was wordless, summary — however not cynical — and but the viewers was giddy.
“It was, for me, a brand new manner of being humorous,” Armisen mentioned. “The concept of simply doing one thing for enjoyable, or for the hell of it or for who is aware of why — that additionally implanted in me.”
As Blue Man Group wound down in New York, Wink, Goldman and Stanton sometimes resumed their spots onstage, in what felt like buzzy reunions for buddies, followers and colleagues — many have been with the manufacturing for many years.
Their community of die-hards is surprisingly various. Jan Reynolds, 71, a retired nurse from Indianapolis, was at Chicago’s closing night time on Jan. 5; she had seen the present, in cities throughout North America, 100 occasions together with her husband. They have been hooked from their first outing. “I keep in mind feeling like a child,” she mentioned.
Micah St. George was in kindergarten when he first encountered Blue Man, in Boston. Now 18, he has been a lifelong acolyte — in seventh grade, he made a reproduction tubulum in his mother and father’ basement — and plans to check technical theater in faculty. En path to New York for one thing upward of his three hundredth efficiency, he mentioned the Blue persona had imprinted on how he lived his life: “all the time enthusiastic, inventive, very open.”
For the forged and creators, it’s the bonds they create, within the second, with theatergoers, that give the present its pulse. The finale webs everybody collectively, actually, with reams of paper.
“The Blue Males wanting down at you, you’re feeling like they’re wanting proper down into your soul,” mentioned Day, the veteran performer. Climbing into the seats, Goldman used to rely how many individuals’s eyes he may peer into (250).
“There’s one thing bizarre about drums and music and getting collectively, that’s magical and elegant,” Wink mentioned. “Irrespective of how trendy and remoted we turn into, and all of the loopy [stuff] we do and the bizarre meals we create, we’re nonetheless right here and we nonetheless love to bounce, and it’s nonetheless nice to be alive.”