Rick Elice was born in Manhattan, and as a kid growing up in New York, he  didn’t care much for New Jersey.
He only had to put up with the Garden State when his parents would make the  45-mile drive down to see his aunt and uncle’s family in Middletown. But he  hated it. “New Jersey was always associated, for me, with very, very bad smells, very,  very claustrophobic car rides, and varying degrees of nausea because of the  smells and the car rides,” Elice says.
“New Jersey was always associated, for me, with very, very bad smells, very,  very claustrophobic car rides, and varying degrees of nausea because of the  smells and the car rides,” Elice says.
Then he co-wrote “Jersey Boys” with Marshall Brickman. And now?
“Oh,” he says, “it’s my favorite place in the whole world!”
The hugely successful and popular Broadway musical – which begins an  all-but-sold-out three-week run at Belk Theater in Charlotte on Wednesday –  centers on the rise and fall of The Four Seasons. The pop-rock group was founded  by Frankie Valli and Bob Gaudio in Newark, N.J.
Elice and Brickman wrote the book for the show and received a Tony Award  nomination in 2006 for their efforts, but Elice says it’s the music that  ultimately makes the play work.
“The connection that I see in the theater between people and the songs is  really palpable, and very, very moving, and blasts the show into that rarefied  place of real smash hit. I’d like to take credit for it … but the fact is, when  those songs start coming, the audience goes into almost like a feeding  frenzy.
“I imagine that almost anybody could have written this show, and I’m just  glad that we did.”
In Sunday’s Carolina Living section in the Charlotte Observer, hear more from Elice and get the dirt on  N.J. from four real-life Jersey boys.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
He's got plenty of 'Jersey' pride now
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