Lizard Boy is my favorite thing. And that’s good, because I’ve been working on it for almost a decade. One of the things that people talk about most with Lizard Boy is its uniqueness in how integrated everything is into one another—the music, lyrics, dialogue, staging, orchestration, design, all of it. The way that Lizard Boy has integrated all these elements is due to the wildly unique way that we have collaborated on the show over the years. In a show that is about how the things that make us different makes us powerful, it’s appropriate that the four of our singular skills, styles, and points of view have been united by a shared vision to make this show special. We all have our own superpowers as artists, and they are on full display in Lizard Boy.
The show is the brainchild of the brilliant Justin Huertas, who wrote the book, music, and lyrics (and drew the projection illustrations!), and due to his incredibly generous spirit he has allowed myself, Kiki deLohr, and William A. Williams in as collaborators, which explains some of the “it” factor audiences find in the show. In many ways we are like a little band—we affectionately refer to ourselves as The Lizards—and rehearsals for us are some kind of mix of play practice, garage band rehearsal, writing retreat, and happy hour. To outsiders, what looks like a chaotic and unfocused hang session with four best friends eventually leads to a brand-new song being taught, workshopped, rewritten, orchestrated, vocal arranged, and staged all in about an hour or so. The Lizard Boy process.
I want to say that is an oversimplification, but sometimes it does indeed work like that. And because of that, things like “The Fight,” where the three actors do a climactic epic comic book fight scene all while playing their instruments (you’ll see soon!), have this “How are they actually doing that?” quality that is fully due to deep collaboration, friendship, and trust in the differences of our creative partners. It’s actually quite apropos that the show is at OSF, where the resident company model has been used for decades and artists develop relationships with each other that make the work that much deeper and richer.
I think we have all come out fuller and more unafraid to be ourselves both in our artistic processes and in life from this show. Lizard Boy has been such a gift to all of us as artists and friends, and the work is better because of the way we are all able to bring our full, different, weird, messy selves into the process. Hopefully that energy will spill out into the audience and help you feel powerful because of your differences. We are thrilled to welcome even more people into the family and expand The Lizards, which includes folks from Seattle, San Diego, San Francisco, Manchester, Edinburgh, NYC, and now, Ashland!
—Brandon Ivie