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Musical about UnitedHealthcare CEO killer Luigi Mangioni premiering in S.F.
Musical about UnitedHealthcare CEO killer Luigi Mangioni premiering in S.F.

San Francisco Chronicle​

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Musical about UnitedHealthcare CEO killer Luigi Mangioni premiering in S.F.

Having already dominated social media and thirsty group chats, Luigi Mangione is poised to take over another medium: musical theater. But 'Luigi the Musical,' which opens June 13, at the Taylor Street Theatre (formerly the Exit on Taylor), isn't just about the 26-year-old prime suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Nova Bradford, Arielle Johnson, André Margatini and Caleb Zeringue's show was inspired by an extraordinary coincidence of celebrity inmates. Zeringue, who produces and plays a guard in the show as well as co-writes, recalled how, one night at South of Market leather bar the SF Eagle, Bradford said to him, 'Did you hear that Luigi's in the same prison with Diddy and Sam Bankman-Fried? I wanna write a musical about that.' In the show, set at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center, rapper and music producer Sean 'Diddy' Combs, who last year was charged with sex trafficking and racketeering, and the fallen FTX CEO are characters too, played by Janeé Lucas and Margatini, respectively. '​​These three people represent these big pillars of institutions in society that are failing in their trust: health care, Hollywood and then big tech,' Zeringue told the Chronicle. Bradford, Johnson and Zeringue all know each other from San Francisco's stand-up comedy scene. They felt that Mangione and his fellow inmates lent themselves to musical theater for several reasons. 'Luigi the character, as we've written him, is dead serious about his thoughts and goals,' Johnson said. 'There's something campy about the whole 'good guy with a gun' premise.' One inspiration for the show was 'Chicago,' with its cellblock numbers, Johnson noted, so in the production, audiences will see Luigi (Jonny Stein) burst into song behind bars, lamenting, 'I shouldn't have bought those hash browns in that Pennsylvania Mickey D's.' For his part, the character of Bankman-Fried gives a Ted Talk into a camera from his prison cell. 'He literally just podcasted with Tucker Carlson from the prison cell with Diddy,' Zeringue pointed out, referring to the Bay Area crypto currency entrepreneur's appearance on 'The Tucker Carlson Show' in March. 'So I'm like, did we write this musical or did it write itself?' 'One of the central ideas that we wanted to explore with this musical is this tendency for us to project meaning onto these types of figures,' she said. She also noted the surprise value in a musical that's so immediate and zeitgeist-y it's 'of Twitter right now.' Johnson's other writing credit in the genre, 'The Minotaur: A Dark Comedy About Losing Your Mind in Grad School,' took five years to pen. By contrast, Johnson and Bradford whipped up 'Luigi the Musical' in two months — far beating out any hypothetical miniseries that has the internet demanding that Palo Alto's own Dave Franco (of the 'Now You See Me' film franchise) to play Mangione. But it was important to the trio that their show not glorify homicide or any of the allegations against their other subjects. 'We're not valorizing any of these characters, and we're also not trivializing any of their actions or alleged actions,' Bradford emphasized. Still, she continued, 'Comedy inherently plays at the margins of social acceptability.' Zeringue pointed out that comedy is often called a 'benign violation.' If Mangione taps into what the betrayal that so many feel about health care and other institutions, comedy is perfectly poised to heal. 'When people interact with these systems that they've lost trust in, it creates such a sense of isolation, and comedy inherently is connective,' Bradford said.

‘Luigi the Musical' sells out in San Francisco
‘Luigi the Musical' sells out in San Francisco

San Francisco Chronicle​

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

‘Luigi the Musical' sells out in San Francisco

A new musical about Luigi Mangione has sold out more than a month before its premiere in San Francisco. Inspired by the social media frenzy surrounding Mangione, the prime suspect in the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, ' Luigi the Musical ' is set to open on June 13 at the Taylor Street Theatre — and all five scheduled performances have already sold out. Developed by Nova Bradford, Arielle Johnson, André Margatini and Caleb Zeringue, the satirical stage production at the former Exit on Taylor will feature Mangione and a fictional rag-tag group of prison-mates: rapper Sean 'Diddy' Combs, who was charged with sex trafficking and racketeering last year, and fallen FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. '​​These three people represent these big pillars of institutions in society that are failing in their trust: health care, Hollywood and then big tech,' Zeringue, who produces and co-writes the show in addition to playing a guard, told the Chronicle. The satirical stage production is set at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center, and was in part inspired by the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical, 'Chicago,' which features various cellblock numbers. It was written by Johnson and Bradford in the span of two months. But while the show is a comedy at heart, its creators said they want to make sure that the project doesn't undermine the severity of the allegations at hand. 'We're not valorizing any of these characters, and we're also not trivializing any of their actions or alleged actions,' Bradford said. 'Comedy inherently plays at the margins of social acceptability.' As the musical's premiere approaches, the real Mangione remains entangled in a federal murder case. Last month, the 26-year-old pleaded not guilty to four federal charges against him for the murder of Thompson in December. He is also facing charges in Pennsylvania and New York, the latter of which his legal team has filed a motion to dismiss under the argument that prosecuting Mangione in multiple states constitutes double jeopardy. His next court appearance is set for June 26.

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