Eventually, other projects drove Aronson to leave the show behind. To enlist some help with his La Boheme project, the writer approached some acquaintances at the theater Playwrights Horizons, who put him in touch with composer (and part-time restaurant waiter) Jonathan Larson. "I love working with musicals and dance, but I don’t write music," Aronson said. Billy Aronson provided the initial lyrics for three of Rent's most beloved songs. Soon, he hatched the idea of adapting La Boheme into a musical that would be set in New York during the AIDS crisis. Many plot points in Rent mirror La Boheme, including the relationship between Mimi and Roger (in Puccini’s opera, much of the drama stems from Rodolfo, a poet, and his rocky affair with a poor woman named Mimi, who ultimately dies of tuberculosis) and Angel’s decision to kill an obnoxious dog for money (in La Boheme, one character earns some badly-needed cash by doing away with a pesky parrot).
"I remember walking home … and noticing the contrast between the luscious world of the opera and the world I lived in," Aronson told Mediander. Still, in their strife, the artists find camaraderie. To make matters worse, their city has fallen prey to a raging tuberculosis epidemic.
The four main characters share a crowded living space which sometimes gets so cold that they must burn their own works for warmth. The opera, written by the Italian composer Giacomo Puccini, is a four-act masterpiece about a group of penniless, starving artists in 19th-century Paris. One night, Aronson caught a performance of La Boheme. Homelessness was a huge issue in the city at that time, as was the emergence of AIDS, which would affect 1096 new victims by year's end. The story of Rent began with playwright Billy Aronson, who moved to Manhattan's Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood in 1983. It's loosely based on the 1896 opera La Boheme. Before you rock out to the live version, study up on these facts about the original play. The rock opera’s uplifting message still strikes a chord with audiences everywhere.
Fox's live performance of Rent, the Broadway musical that ushered in a new age of pop-rock music on the Great White Way, has finally arrived.