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Alicia Keys Steps Into a New Spotlight

“Hell’s Kitchen,” a musical inspired by the singer-songwriter’s teenage years in New York, is set to open Off Broadway.

A portrait of a woman, who is wearing a beige top and pants and two necklaces, one gold and one silver. She is sitting at a piano, but her body is facing left, with her right arm leaning onto the piano keys and her head resting on her right hand.
The goal with her new musical, Alicia Keys said, is “for it to be tremendously beloved and really something that comes into the world in a way that is just like a storm, an incredible storm.”Credit...Elias Williams for The New York Times

One night this summer, Alicia Keys fell asleep listening to show tunes.

She was on vacation following a five-week concert tour, but her mind was still at work: For 12 years, she has been developing “Hell’s Kitchen,” a musical based on her adolescence in a then-gritty New York neighborhood, and at the top of her to-do list was writing a new song for the actress playing the main character’s mother.

So she took a nap with her headphones on, listening to a playlist of theatrical mom songs (think “Rose’s Turn” from “Gypsy” and “Little Girls” from “Annie”). When she woke up, she could feel the rhythm. She could hear the chords. She could see the title.

She ducked into a closet and began to sing into her phone. She hopped online, doing a little research to strengthen her lyrics. And then, when she returned to New York, she began to write, in the wee hours after the meetings and the calls and the rehearsals, noodling at an upright piano in her Chelsea recording studio.

“This is occupying a lot of space in my mind,” Keys said about the musical, considered but candid as she was driven to a downtown rehearsal hall, tuning out the traffic and focusing on getting where she wants to go.

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Maleah Joi Moon is making her professional stage debut as the show’s protagonist, the 17-year-old Ali.Credit...Elias Williams for The New York Times

That day, where she wanted to go was the Public Theater, the celebrated but pandemic-weakened nonprofit where “Hell’s Kitchen” is to begin an Off Broadway run on Oct. 24. Even though Keys is not in it, demand is high: Each time more tickets go on sale, they are snatched up.


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