June 22, 2026
‘The Lost Boys’ Broadway Review: Vampire Musical Scores


โ€œTurning a movie into a musical reeks of desperation,โ€ says a character in the new Broadway musical adaptation of the 1987 film โ€œThe Lost Boys.โ€

That insider wink to the audience gets a big laugh โ€” and truer words were never spoken. But this stunner of a show, based on the Joel Schumacher film, is a solid theatrical transformation, rich in imagination, humor and heart โ€” and with spectacular special effects.

It should also break the curse of flop Broadway musicals about vampires, following the bloodletting of 2002โ€™s โ€œDance of the Vampiresโ€ (music by Jim Steinman), 2004โ€™s โ€œDracula: The Musicalโ€ (music by Frank Wildhorn), and 2006โ€™s โ€œLestatโ€ (music by Elton John). Or at least it has an โ€œOutsidersโ€ chance, what with that 2024 hit musical showing a box office pathway by tapping into the evergreen potential of adolescent angst and pluck. After all, stranger things have happened and the teen strategy certainly worked for the โ€œBuffy, the Vampire Slayer,โ€ โ€œThe Vampire Diaries,โ€ and โ€œTwilightโ€ franchises.

Director Michael Arden (Tony awards for โ€œParadeโ€ and โ€œMaybe Happy Endingโ€) returns in top form here (letโ€™s call โ€œQueen of Versaillesโ€ an outlier) in an epic-yet-elegant production that lives up to the MTV-stylish film that became a Gen X favorite.

Because of the size and scale of the musical production (reportedly in the $25 million-plus range), the show nixed an out-of-town run. While โ€œThe Lost Boysโ€ could have benefitted from more work โ€” particularly in the troublesome second act โ€” the production should still satisfy longtime fans and be an attractive sell for a younger market.

Co-writers David Hornsby (TVโ€™s โ€œItโ€™s Always Sunny in Philadelphiaโ€) and Chris Hoch improve the screenplay, tightening the original storyline, cutting some characters, upping the funny and giving the show more warmth.

The story again centers on just-divorced mom Lucy Emerson (Shoshana Bean, terrific) and her two teenage sons โ€” sullen Michael, 17 and nerdy Sam, 14. Theyโ€™re seeking a fresh start by relocating to a California coastal town where dozens of its residents are mysteriously disappearing. (What is even more strange is that the outbreak of missing persons hasnโ€™t caused a town panic, or made national headlines.)

Feeling restless and reckless, Michael (LJ Benet) is drawn to a hard-rocking local band that is secretly a quartet of young vampires that is literally sucking the life out of the community. The leader of the pack is charismatic David (Ali Louis Bourzgui), played by Keifer Sutherland in the film. Wanting to be break free from his family and with the added seduction of Star (Maria Wirries), Michael is peer-pressured into drinking from a bottle whose contents turns him into a half-vampire. His graduation as a full member of this blood brotherhood awaits after his first kill.

On discovering his brotherโ€™s nocturnal transitioning โ€” โ€œDonโ€™t tell mom!โ€ begs Michael โ€” Sam (Benjamin Pajak), played by Corey Haim in the film, teams up with the Frog Brothers (Jennifer Duka and Miguel Gil), a pair of fellow comic book fanatics and self-styled vampire hunters, to try to save Michael before his first everlasting bite.

Families โ€” lost and found โ€” are at the heart of the show as is the youngโ€™s desperate need to belong โ€”whether itโ€™s in a gang, band, club or coven (or in Lucyโ€™s day, a communal hippie life). Add teen rebellion, father issues, parental abuse, rites of passage and the allure of immortality and you have some potent subjects to deal with, even if they donโ€™t always fit comfortably with the showโ€™s shifting tones.

Benet (Disney Channelโ€™s โ€œDog with a Blogโ€) taps into Michaelโ€™s adolescent vulnerability and handles his big numbers assuredly. Bourzgui, smashing in the title role in โ€œThe Whoโ€™s Tommy,โ€ brings mystery, a cool swagger and menace to the role, as well as a dash of homoeroticism. (The scene where he intimately teaches Michael to play the guitar is swoon-worthy.) Paul Alexander Nolan has charm, smarm and danger as Max, the video store owner, who has duplicitous sights on the Emerson family.

As Sam, Benjamin Pajak, who played Winthrop in โ€œThe Music Manโ€ and the title role in Encore!โ€™s โ€œOliver!โ€, nicely segues his talent to teen-hood as a โ€œnervous dweebโ€ who has an eye for fashionable footwear and a boy crush on Rob Lowe. Samโ€™s coming-of-age arc, where he discovers queerness is his superpower, is one of the fresher elements in the adaptation.

But the broad comedy of that role โ€” and especially that of the Frog Brothers โ€” sometimes imbalances the showโ€™s tone as the musical struggles with the conflicting demands of humor, horror and sentiment.

The L.A. indie-rock group The Rescues gives the show its drive and does well musicalizing its more intimate, playful and personal moments. It also manages to evoke the โ€˜80s sound while still feeling contemporary โ€” and the choral harmonies are lovely, too. The showโ€™s โ€˜80s atmosphere is brat packed with Ryan Parkโ€™s new wave costumes and David Brian Brownโ€™s hair and wig designs โ€” dig those mullets, Mohawks and โ€˜highlighted pompadours. Thereโ€™s even hat tip to the film with a cameo by โ€œthe sweaty sax guy.โ€

The spectacular lighting (Jen Schriever and Arden) and sound design (Adam Fisher) create a world of foreboding and creepiness. Dane Lafreyโ€™s magnificent, multi-level design makes maximum use of the Palaceโ€™s cavernous stage to create a lair to die for.

Itโ€™s also a grand space for mesmerizing aerial work, staged by Gwyneth Larsen and Billy Mulholland. Those exquisite night flights bring to mind another bunch of Neverlanders longing for home. In โ€œThe Lost Boysโ€ at least one of them makes it back.

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