Inside the Luigi Mangione musical that's playing to sellout crowds
SAN FRANCISCO - Backstage before Monday's performance of 'Luigi: The Musical,' actor Caleb Zeringue cracked a joke about how his castmate who plays the title role has to skip the show's European debut because such a trip could cost him his health insurance.
The barb strikes at one of the key themes in the show about alleged murderer Luigi Mangione: The whims of the U.S. health care system can drive people to do drastic things with fatal outcomes.
Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post.
The lead actor, Jonny Stein, gets his health coverage through his day job teaching high school math in San Francisco. He said his principal denied his request to skip the first week of school so that he could perform at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival starting Tuesday, so another actor will be stepping in.
'Just because something's funny, doesn't mean it's not serious,' said Zeringue, dressed as a prison guard, before Stein ducked out of the green room to slip into his bright orange jumpsuit.
Six months before this musical debuted in June, Mangione hit a nerve with the American public. Immediately after the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December, merchandise like pint glasses and baseball caps popped up carrying the phrase 'Deny, Defend, Depose,' the words emblazoned on ammunition casings found near where he was shot in Midtown Manhattan. After the then-26-year-old Mangione was arrested came the uncomfortable memes on social media with commentary on his appearance.
Now he's become a lightning rod for thinkpieces, viral TikToks, cult fandom and hand-wringing about the state of American medicine and making light of a murder case. And part of the debate over what Mangione represents is playing out in a scrappy musical.
When Nova Bradford, the show's 31-year-old director who also wrote it with a group of fellow Bay Area comedians, read that Mangione was being held in the same Brooklyn jail as disgraced crypto CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs, she thought the situation was ripe for satire.
'It's such a strange group of people to be in the same place at the same time. They're all high profile but from completely different worlds,' Bradford said in a phone interview. 'It's hard to imagine them being in the same room other than a prison cell.'
Their worlds of tech and finance, entertainment and health care have all suffered a loss of public trust, Bradford said, through the Great Recession, Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal, the #MeToo era, the opioid crisis and more.
When people see institutions failing, Bradford said, they're drawn to alternatives like new age healers on Instagram or biohacker bros in Silicon Valley - maybe even a vigilante. 'But ultimately these people don't provide real answers, just like the institutions that are failing,' said Bradford.
That disenchantment was evident at Monday night's sold-out 'Luigi' show at the Independent, where an attendee was spotted in a Luigi T-shirt and the audience of around 200 roared in laughter as Bankman-Fried (André Margatini) sang about being a 'Bay Area baby,' growing up where it's normal to fake it till you make it and about how 'you gotta have a little fraud in your company.'
Before the show, a 31-year-old accountant in the audience proclaimed the show was made for people like her, a former theater kid and self-described 'Hamilton liberal' who now considers herself a 'Luigi leftist.'
'It's not that I believe in violence against the individual,' Kathleen Koomen said. 'But I do believe that a state that monopolizes violence begets violence, and I think Luigi represents that.'
Stephanie Allen, a 50-year-old mortgage broker who'd traveled from Napa to see the show, was intrigued by the satirical take on a serious subject. The United States 'is one of the richest countries in the world,' Allen noted. She dropped an expletive when describing how she feels about the lack of affordable health care, adding: 'Why is this happening?'
The San Francisco Chronicle's review says the production is 'the most talked-about play in S.F. It's also terrible.' The writer is among several who've suggested it might be too soon to tackle Mangione's case onstage, earnestly asking: 'How do you explore, honestly and with depth, what's made an accused killer a folk hero to some while neither glorifying nor trivializing his alleged crime?'
The show opens with disclaimer reminding attendees not to take what is about to unfold too seriously. It's satire and such speech is protected by the First Amendment, a disembodied voice says, spurring anxious chuckles from the crowd.
The characters' varied worlds is played for laughs, conflict and, ultimately, a few notes of harmony. The show points out that Bankman-Fried and Diddy (Janeé Lucas) are both businessmen who love money and the spotlight. Luigi, the relative nobody, becomes a kind of peacemaker between the two famous men. He's also the only one getting fan mail while in prison, with fictional yet relatable tales of sickness, pain and denied health-care claims.
Sure, the actors' voices and dance moves aren't the smoothest. The between-act set changes are a little clumsy. Every show, a different actor fumbles a handful of lines, Zeringue admitted.
But the production's amateur nature is also the source of its charm. The bumbling feels appropriate when lampooning these men in various stages of felony cases. With such messy muses, why not lean into the improv of it all?
Bradford cited 'Chicago' as one of her influences, as it's another true-crime satire set in a prison, as well as 'Avenue Q' and 'Book of Mormon,' two boundary-pushing musicals that were formative in her upbringing as a theater kid in Colorado. The show joins a long line of musicals about controversial real-life characters, ranging from more serious, like 'Hamilton' and 'Evita,' to the more gimmicky, like 'Gwyneth Goes Skiing' and TV's 'Prince Andrew: The Musical.'
Bradford finds her show draws younger crowds than the typical musical. And by building a production around three very different characters, 'we're able to have jokes … that appeal to audiences who have different media they're familiar with, and different comedy preferences,' said Bradford, who's in talks to bring 'Luigi' to Los Angeles and New York after Edinburgh.
Eve Hroziencik is one of those young theatergoers. The 23-year-old brought her dad along as a birthday gift. Her father, Mike, who works as a criminal defense lawyer in nearby Burlingame, said he thought the show was 'hilarious and ridiculous.'
Hroziencik said 'Luigi' made her 'hopeful' about the future because the show's 'humor and absurdity makes all the misery of the world a little more bearable.'
Related Content
Ukraine scrambles to roll back Russian eastern advance as summit takes place
Her dogs kept dying, and she got cancer. Then they tested her water.
D.C.'s homeless begin to see the effects of Trump's crackdown
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Verge
13 minutes ago
- The Verge
Teenage Engineering did it again
Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 94, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you're new here, welcome, did you hydrate today, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) This week, I'm visiting LinkedIn way too much because of Mini Sudoku, looking at the fake texts in Apple's marketing materials, marveling at tiny doodles on microchips, listening to Taylor Swift's New Heights podcast episode, learning about model railroad power debates, reading about the death of expertise, catching up on my favorite HGTV home renovation show, and watching a very good drumline. I also have for you some durable cables, a great new Alien show, a strange RPG, and more. (As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What do you want to know more about? What awesome tricks do you know that everyone else should? What app should everyone be using? Tell me everything: [email protected]. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them and tell them to subscribe here.) This week I'm featuring Soren Iverson, who you may recognize as the person who posts unhinged design concepts on social media like an iOS app icon filling up based on how many notifications the app has. Whenever these cross my feed, I nearly always cackle. I expected him to bring some of that chaos on his actual homescreen, but I was surprised to learn that his homescreen is even more minimal than mine — which inspired me to make mine a little less busy, too. The phone: iPhone 15 Pro The wallpaper: A black screen. I try to make time on my phone intentional, I call, text, or take notes most frequently. Everything else I bury as a more intentional action I have to take so that I'm generally more focused. The apps: Phone, Messages, Notes I also asked Soren to share a few things he's into right now. Here's what he said: Here's what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you're into right now as well! Email [email protected] with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we'll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on The Verge, this post on Threads, and this post on Bluesky. 'Buying a bunch of Ubiquiti gear for the new house that totally isn't overkill.' — SorryAboutYourCat 'Model railroading. Been holding off converting to DCC from DC hoping a well designed modern alternative will appear, but it's the same over priced out of date market it's always been.' — RoboticsRob 'I've been playing Merge Maestro way too much. It's a fun match game with Super Auto Pets-like emoji artwork. Free-to-start on mobile with a $2 price for the entire game.' — Dominick 'Reading: The Next Conversation by Jefferson Fisher. Playing: Dishonored for the first time. Watching: Mr. Robot and Murderbot (does this count as a theme?) Rabbit hole: Home Assistant and generally reducing my digital footprint (I say as making this public post).' — Omega86 'Just got to watching The Penguin, and it's a really fun gangster romp set in Gotham. I've mostly tired of the superhero stuff, but I'm always a sucker for good origin tales, and this really delivers. And the secret is, it's really about Sofia Falcone and her war with her patriarchal mob family. Cristin Milioti is fantastic in the role.' — verge_user_m573tv18 'UFO 50 just came out on the Nintendo Switch. I've been following the podcast Eggplant: The Secret Lives of Gamers, which is going through each of the 50 games in a book club-like format, with just one game a week.' — -goobers 'I, like many other people, watched Barbarian recently on Netflix. It's leaving on August 31st. The director's new movie, Weapons, just came out. Highly, highly recommend Barbarian. It's fun to go in blind, and even if you've seen the trailer, you'll still be spared some of its great twists. There's more humor in it than you might expect, and the gruesome aspects aren't over-the-top.' — Cameron Google is about to kick off the 2025 gadget season with its Pixel launch event on August 20th. I'd love to hear from you all: Are you planning to upgrade anything this year, and if so, why? What are you hoping Apple, Google, and others will announce? Or are you going to keep holding onto your gear? See you next week! Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Jay Peters Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Installer Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Tech
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Former Solid Snake Actor Makes Admission About Metal Gear Solid 5
Former Solid Snake Actor Makes Admission About Metal Gear Solid 5 originally appeared on GameDaily. For a very long time, David Hayter was synonymous with Solid Snake. He was the first actor to voice the character in 1998's Metal Gear Solid and held onto the role until he was recast for Kiefer Sutherland for Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. Hayer was very attached to the character and didn't take losing the role well. He swore off playing MGS5 for a very long time, but is finally starting to move on. Hayter is back in the role with the upcoming Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, and he finally decided to give The Phantom Pain a chance. "Well, there was reluctance," Hayter said of playing MGS5 in an interview with PC Gamer. "I didn't want to play the game because I figured it would hurt my feelings. Then, you know, 10 years went by and I was like, 'Ah, to hell with my feelings. What do I care?' … I'm a screenwriter, so I get fired for a living, like I literally, eventually, get fired from every single gig that I've got, and I'm not a child." "I was like, 'Stop being a baby and play the game.' So I played it. It's amazing," Hayter added. The Phantom Pain is light on story compared to other MGS games, but it has some of the best stealth gameplay ever produced, so it's good that Hayter finally gave it a shot. It also helped that he spent some time with Sutherland, who sounds like a great hang. "I ran into Kiefer Sutherland at a bar in Dallas," Hayter said, "and we had a bunch of drinks. And he's a great guy, you know? No, no ill will. All is forgiven." This story was originally reported by GameDaily on Aug 15, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword
%2520copy.jpg&w=3840&q=100)

Vogue
17 minutes ago
- Vogue
From the Archives: Jeffrey Steingarten on Gourmet Doggy Dining
'Give a Dog a Bone,' by Jeffrey Steingarten, was originally published in the December 1998 issue of Vogue. For more of the best from Vogue's archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here. "A fat bitch," I announced, licking the juice of a wood-grilled lamb sausage from my fingers, "is never an easy whelper." I was reading from the breeding section of a book called The Golden Retriever: 47Exciting Full-Color Photos. Sky King listened intently but said nothing, and not simply because he had not yet learned to talk. I have found that young males of all species have a limited attention span when it comes to discussions of whelping and obesity. But, as always, Sky King's gaze was eloquent—as it had been earlier that evening when I dumped a plastic cupful of upscale dry dog-food pellets into his bowl and turned away to take care of my own dinner, a half-dozen fat little sausages crackling over a smoldering fire of oak and mesquite on the grill just outside the kitchen door. "I know that you are a fair-minded human," he seemed to be saying, "and that you have only my best interests at heart. But are you absolutely sure that I should be eating this pile of dead and desiccated pellets while you experience the feral delights of sizzling flesh? Who's the carnivore here anyway?" I glanced back at Sky as if to say, "Cats are carnivores, dogs are not." But I had gotten his message. Dogs did not evolve eating dry dog food, and they do not prefer it now. Sky likes a good tomato, a hunk of raw steak, a hunk of grilled steak, pitted cherries, peaches, pizza, overcooked lamb sausages, running shoes, and Fudgsicles. He is neutral on the subject of heavily salted corn chips and has little use for Good & Plentys. Sky loves to eat in bed. Once our respective dinners were through, Sky and I watched the sun setting over San Diego, where he lives and to which I was paying one of my frequent visits. We went back inside and together began to formulate a plan for answering the critical question: What on earth is a growing dog supposed to eat? We ordered a dozen books over the Internet, settled into a comfortable chair, and began reading the relevant sections of The Golden Retriever: 47 Exciting Full-Color Photos, the only research resource immediately at hand. Apart from the caution concerning obese females, its culinary advice was sketchy: Dry dog food is the easiest, served four times a day and moistened with hot water for the youngest puppies, less of- ten and with less water as the puppy matures, and dry as a bone for adults. (The reasons: nutritional balance, total convenience, and minuscule stools.) This was the advice we had followed thus far with Sky King, whom my wife had named after a popular serial hero of radio and black-and-white TV in the forties and fifties, a fictional and fearless rancher-pilot who performed daring rescue and law-enforcement missions in his small private propeller plane. "Out of the clear blue of the Western sky comes Skyyyy Kiiiing!" each episode began. Sky's name is not yet among the top ten for North American dogs, which are currently Sam, Max, Lady, Bear, Mag- gie, Buddy, Tasha, Chelsea, Holly, and Shasta. Tasha?