About Grease

Summary

Here is Rydell High’s senior class of 1959: duck-tailed, hot-rodding “Burger Palace Boys’ and their gum-snapping, hip-shaking “Pink Ladies” in bobby sox and pedal pushers, evoking the look and sound of the 1950s in this rollicking musical. Head “greaser” Danny Zuko and new (good) girl Sandy Dumbrowski try to relive the high romance of their “Summer Nights” as the rest of the gang sings and dances its way through such songs as “Greased Lightnin’,” “It’s Raining on Prom Night” and “Alone at the Drive-In Movie,” recalling the music of Buddy Holly, Little Richard and Elvis Presley that became the soundtrack of a generation. An eight-year run on Broadway and two subsequent revivals, along with innumerable school and community productions, place Grease among the world’s most popular musicals.

History

Grease debuted off-Broadway on February 14, 1972 at the Eden Theatre in New York City. The show transferred to Broadway’s Broadhurst Theatre, and later to the Royale Theatre, closing on April 13, 1980 after a record-breaking 3,388 performances. The film adaptation of Grease premiered in 1978 and became the highest-grossing movie musical of all time. Grease returned to Broadway twice, in a 1994 revival directed and choreographed by Jeff Calhoun and in a 2007 revival directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall.

Glen Allen High School

The Glen Allen Theatre Company has a rich tradition cultivating young talents and preparing them for careers in the theater industry and beyond! Our Theater program, headed by Sarah White Pruden, offers courses Theatre I-3, Honors Theatre IV, Drama Club, Improv Club, and an opportunity to earn points to join our International Thespian Society troupe, which is an honors society that recognizes, rewards, and encourages student achievement and celebrates the work of students in all aspects of theatre – performance and production. Each student is dignified on a national level and gains access to opportunities and resources beyond those of their school.

We believe that Theater is essential in public education and that it creates social tolerance and empathy, encourages positive behavior, builds confidence, fosters creativity, improves critical thinking and reading comprehension, and fosters general academic excellence. We need Theater now more than ever!

CHICAGO 2023