Show Synopsis: A young aspiring author named Jo is living in New York, and she is upset that her friend, the German professor Friedrich Bhaer, does not care for her latest story. She remembers when she was full of hope for her writing career as a young woman growing up in Concord, Massachusetts during the Civil War with her three sisters. She remembers a Christmas when they put on a play that she wrote while missing their father, who was fighting in the war. Jo meets a neighbor boy Laurie at a dance while her older sister Meg begins to fall in love with Laurie?s tutor Mr. Brooke. The third sister, Beth, becomes a friend of Laurie?s grumpy grandfather Mr. Lawrence and Jo learns the importance of sisterly love when Amy angers her but Jo saves her from falling into a frozen pond. Mr. Brooke and Meg become engaged, but Jo rejects Laurie?s marriage proposal and begins to focus on her writing career. Back in New York, Jo tells Professor Bhaer that she has sold a story to a notorious editor just before she finds out that Beth has scarlet fever and she must return to Concord. Beth dies and Jo grieves by writing the story of her life with her sisters, which becomes Little Women. Laurie and Amy marry and Professor Bhaer proposes to Jo and tells her that he has sold her manuscript for publication. Character: Jo March, a fiesty, stubborn, and slightly awkward aspiring writer; does not care for the stiffing expectations of women. Beth March, a shy and timid girl who loves her family and simple pleasures. Song Context: Jo and Beth are at the seashore in hopes that Beth will regain her strength, but Beth knows that she is going to die fairly soon. She wants to let Jo know how much her love has meant, and that she has accepted her death. " Fun Facts: 1. This musical was based on Louisa May Alcott?s famous novel of the same name, which is loosely based on Alcott?s life story and relationships with her sisters. 2. Sutton Foster originated the role of Jo on Broadway. In an interview with the publicity team of the show, she said ?I honestly feel like I'm most one with Jo,"" she said. ""The sisters are all so different, and so specific. I'm not a Meg, I'm not a Beth?I don't know if anyone is a Beth! Amy ... well, maybe, because I was a bit of a terror when I was a child. But like Jo, I was always inviting friends over and writing scripts and making them act in these sort of murder-mystery plays, whether they wanted to or not. Jo's an incredible character to play. It's been really fun getting to know her more and more?because every night you perform it, you learn more and more about the part you're playing.? 3. In the original novel, Jo and Beth share a special bond between the two of them, as do Meg and Amy, and the older girls take care of their younger sisters, which is why Beth?s death devastates Jo."
"BETH Let's pretend we're riding on a kite. Let's imagine we're flying through the air! JO We'll ascend until we're out of sight. Light as paper, we'll soar! BETH Let's be wild, up high above the sand, feel the wind, the world at our command. Let's enjoy the view, and never land. JO Floating far from the shore. BETH Some things are meant to be, the clouds moving fast and free. JO The sun on a silver sea. BOTH A sky that's bright and blue. BETH And some things will never end. JO The thrill of our magic ride. BETH The love that I feel inside for you. JO We'll climb high beyond the break of day. BETH Sleep on stardust, and dine on bits of moon JO You and I will find the Milky Way. We'll be mad, and explore. We'll recline aloft upon the breeze. Dart about, sail on with windy ease. Pass the days doing only as we please, that's what living is for. BETH We'll be mad, and explore. We'll recline a loft upon the breeze. Dart about sail on wit with ease. Pass the days doing only as we please, that's what living is for. Some things are meant to be, the tide turning endlessly, the way it takes hold of me, no matter what I do, and some things will never die, the promise of who you are, the memories when I am far from you. All my life, I've lived for loving you; let me go now."