New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu



 

“Little Girl Blue” Honors Nina Simone


By Karen Nowosad

originally published: 03/19/2022

A new musical is now playing at New World StagesLittle Girl Blue is a retrospective of American singer, songwriter, arranger, pianist, and civil rights activist Nina Simone. The production informs, entertains, and engages the audience. The excellent direction of this show is by Devanand Janki. Before opening in NY, this show premiered at George Street Playhouse, New Brunswick, NJ in February 2019. In summer 2021, it was part of the Goodspeed by the River series.

The multi-talented Laiona Michelle plays the leading role as Nina Simone. She also wrote the book for the show. Her performance embodies the spirit of the artist and makes you feel like you are actually at a Nina Simone concert. She captures her audience with passion and outstanding vocals when she sings. Michelle also plays the piano very well on several songs. She turns in a first rate acting performance portraying Nina Simone. This is a performance you will long remember seeing.

In addition to Laiona Michelle, the show brings the band onstage with her. Mike Fifer plays Keyboard and Conducts. He also serves as the show’s Music Director and Arranger. Kenneth Salters plays Drums and Saadi Zain plays Double Bass/Electric Bass.

Story and Music

The stage is set to be a cabaret club with a piano and musical instruments on stage. But Nina Simone and her band enter from the back of the theater escorted by two police officers. The police stand at either side of the stage. Eventually they leave only to return at a tense point in the performance.




Promote your shows at New Jersey Stage! Click here for info



It is 3 days after Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassination and concerns about rioting taking place are in the air. Mention is made that Simone has to be careful about what songs she performs and what she says on stage. She’s been told not stir things up. Well written dialog in this Act allows her character to express how she is feeling about losing Dr. King. She has stood by his side and she expresses what a loss his death is.

The show begins with the song “Feeling Good.” This song, a fervent call for freedom, is a perfect way to begin the show that evening with all that is gong on and the obvious despair Simone feels. As the performance continues, she tells stories between songs about significant events in her life. Born Eunice Waymon in North Carolina, she tells of taking piano lessons as a child. Her lifelong desire is to be a classical pianist and she was a staunch admirer of Bach’s music. A devastating life event was when she was turned away from entering the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Instead, she tells of performing “jazz,” writing her own music, and covering the music of others composers always with her own unique interpretation.

Songs accompany the stories the character tells such as her relationship with “My Father.” She meets a man who becomes her controlling husband and we hear “I Put a Spell on You” and “Little Liza Jane.” As the show continues, tension mounts as Simone is reaching a point where she expresses anger. The police return. That leads to the final song of the act, “Angry Black Woman.”

“Angry Black Woman”

In a recent interview with Playbill.com, Laiona Michelle recounts that Nina Simone was often called an “Angry Black Woman.” She says, “I wanted to give Nina’s anger context. I wanted to remind people why she was angry, why she wrote protest songs like ‘Mississippi Goddamn.’ Here she was, supposedly a citizen of this country, and yet she and her people had to march and demand human rights in a country that hailed itself the ‘Land of the Free.’  She wasn’t free in her own country.”

Michelle then explains that she wrote the song “Angry Black Woman” with Musical Director Mark Fifer. The song opens with a few chords from “Mississippi Goddam” which closed the first act in the New Brunswick run of this show. This new song closes the First Act. It is powerful and it makes a strong impact as she leaves the stage using the same route as she came in on.

Second Act Little Girl Blue




Promote your shows at New Jersey Stage! Click here for info



This act takes place in Mintreux, Switzerland also in a cabaret club venue. It opens with the title song of the show “Little Girl Blue.” It is 8 years later and much has happened in Simone’s life. We learn that her husband became violent and she lost a child she was carrying. Her marriage is no more and she experiences mental challenges which plague her throughout the rest of her life. She moved to Europe and travels to many places including a trip to Liberia. Several songs in this Act that really standout are Jacques Brel’s “Ne Me Quitte Pas,” and “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood.” The final song provides a positive ending to the show as Simone, dressed in a beautiful gown adorned with fine accessories, sings “My Way.” Her regal appearance well portrayed by Laiona Michelle solidifies the heights she reached in her lifetime.

Going to See Little Girl Blue

reviewed this show when it ran at George Street Playhouse and thought it was sensational. It was a thrill to see it again at New World Stages this past week. It was very good in New Brunswick (sorry I missed CT) and now with some changes and additions, it is sure to be a hit.

As a very young girl, I remember some of the music of Nina Simone. I did not understand the deeper levels of her music then. I could sing along to the words and think they sounded good. But what the words actually meant to Nina Simone, well, I’m still learning that. This show is a good step in that direction for me. I hope many will feel the same way because there are a lot of Civil Rights struggles still going on. Can’t help but wonder what Nina would think today.

To read more about Little Girl Blue, or to purchase tickets, go to the official website for the show, littlegirlblue.nyc . Ticketing is through Telecharge.



Little Girl Blue is scheduled to run through May 22, 2022 at New World Stages. 

New World Stages is in the heart of the theatre district, west of Times Square between 8th and 9th Avenues, easily accessed by four major subway lines. Parking is conveniently located on 49th and 50th Streets, as well as many other neighborhood lots using an app like Best Parking or Spot Hero. There are a number of restaurants in and around Worldwide Plaza and on 9th Avenue in nearby Hell’s Kitchen.

 Photos by Julieta Cervantes


Let's Go to the Theater helps people learn more about about live theater and develop appreciation for this art form. Karen M. Nowosad is the founder of the site. The enjoyment Karen gets from going to the theater is something she wants to share with others.

FEATURED EVENTS

ART | COMEDY | DANCE | FILM | MUSIC | THEATRE | COMMUNITY

To narrow results by date range, categories,
or region of New Jersey
click here for our advanced search.


Crossroads

Crossroads Theatre Company presents Genesis Festival of New Plays: Jamie Goodwin's in shame & in pride: a biomythography

Thursday, April 03, 2025 @ 7:00pm
New Brunswick Performing Arts Center (NBPAC)
11 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre


 

STOMP

STOMP

Thursday, April 03, 2025 @ 7:30pm
Count Basie Center for the Arts
99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
category: theatre


 

George

George Street Playhouse presents "King James"

Thursday, April 03, 2025 @ 7:30pm
New Brunswick Performing Arts Center (NBPAC)
11 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre


 

George

George Street Playhouse presents "King James"

Thursday, April 03, 2025 @ 2:00pm
New Brunswick Performing Arts Center (NBPAC)
11 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre


 

Vivid

Vivid Stage presents In The Mix: An Evening of Short Plays

Thursday, April 03, 2025 @ 8:00pm
Oakes Center
120 Morris Avenue, Summit, NJ 07901
category: theatre


 


 

EVENT PREVIEWS

Crossroads

Crossroads Theatre Company presents The Genesis Festival of New Plays This Week

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- Crossroads Theatre Company presents The Genesis Festival of New Plays from April 2-7, 2025 at the New Brunswick Performing Arts Center. This year's line up includes: Pearls by Silma Sierra Berrada; in shame & in pride: a biomythography by Jamie Goodwin; The Carelessness of Love by Michael Dinwiddie; and hop tha A by James Anthony Tyler.



Kean

Kean Theatre Conservatory presents "They Promised Her the Moon"

(UNION, NJ) -- Kean Theatre Conservatory presents They Promised Her the Moon from April 4-12, 2025. The play by Laurel Ollstein takes place in 1961 when the first American woman to test for space flight stepped into an isolation tank for a record-breaking nine hours, outlasting all of the men in NASA's emerging Mercury 7 program.



Ayhan

Ayhan Hulagu to Bring Traditional Turkish Theater to Princeton University

(PRINCETON, NJ) -- 700-year-old traditional Turkish Theatre in America. Recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage, Turkish shadow theater will be showcased at Princeton University. Actor and playwright Ayhan Hulagu adapts the 700-year-old Karagöz tradition in The Forest of the Witch for American audiences.



"The

"The Wind in the Willows" to be Performed at RVCC

(BRANCHBURG, NJ) -- Raritan Valley Community College's Arts & Design department will present The Wind in the Willows by Ken Grahame, April 9-11, 2025. The production, which is free of charge and open to the public, will be staged in the Welpe Theatre at the College's Branchburg campus. Showtime is 7:00pm each night.



King James

'King James' at GSP – Entertaining, Clever, and Heartwarming

One of the great gifts a person can have in life is a good friendship. Once found, we are fortunate if it continues to develop and thrive for a long time. This is what happens in the play King James, currently playing at George Street Playhouse. Written by Rajiv Joseph, the show centers around a friendship which develops due to the amazing career of NBA superstar LeBron James. The friendship is between two young men who both love basketball. But it becomes more than that as it goes on.