Dual Tony nominations make Lelli feel like âthe luckiest drummer boy in the world.â
âItâs kind of ridiculously lucky,â Lelli says. âTo have my first two musicals that I have produced both be nominated for Tonys is an outrageous and outlandish thing to even think about. Iâm just kind of on top of the world.â
The Tony Awards will be given out on Sunday, June 16, at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City and will be broadcast on CBS.
The nominations have Lelli reminiscing about his days at UW-Eau Claire, where he was actively involved in the music program, playing drums in a jazz band and in a house band at The Cabin. Just as important to Lelliâs career was his work helping produce the annual âCabaretâ musical and organizing Jazz Fest that opened his eyes and mind to the behind-the-scenes work â from orchestrating music to working with corporate sponsors â that goes into a production.
âI learned so many important skills â how to work with people, how to delegate tasks to team members,â Lelli says. âI learned so much about managing people, managing productions and running a company. Itâs really wild to think back on it all now.â
Lelli credits Robert Baca, professor of trumpet and director of UW-Eau Claire's jazz studies, and Ronald Keezer, a former associate professor of music, for a supportive learning environment and a âwonderful educational experience.â Baca isnât surprised that Lelli is reaching the heights of Broadway and being nominated for high-caliber awards.
âWhile attending UW-Eau Claire, he was the epitome of a positive, principle-oriented person,â Baca says. âHe worked nonstop on his short- and long-range goals and the word âlimitâ was not in his vocabulary for a period of over 30 years. This award simply draws attention to the results capable of a person with Larryâs gifts. UW-Eau Claire was fortunate to have Larry as a part of our environment.â
Lelliâs successful musical career on Broadway includes performing and conducting in shows such as âThe Producers,â âJekyll & Hydeâ and âA Christmas Story, The Musical.â Lelli has evolved his career from being just a drummer by adding roles as conductor, music director, music supervisor, music contractor and coordinator before trying his hand at producing.
âIt was quite a transition moving, as we call it, across the table,â Lelli says of becoming a producer. âThere are all the people that are on stage, in the pit, behind the scenes making all the magic happen on Broadway. Then there are all these other people on the other side of the table that are involved in raising money, doing the casting, making creative decisions for the show. Itâs a very different kind of mindset to be in.â
It also is big business, as the cost to produce a new Broadway show ranges from $3 million for a small play to $25 million for a massive musical production, Lelli says. He estimates that 80% of shows are not financially successful.
âItâs a lot of money, a lot is at stake,â Lelli says. âItâs very high pressure, very stressful. You have a massive responsibility to all of your investors to create something successful.â
In addition to raising money for the shows, Lelli is heavily involved in the musical aspects of his productions â crafting, underscoring and ensuring songs are in the appropriate place of the show. Once the production moves to the theater for rehearsals, he works 16-hour days with the creative team âfiguring out the best way to express each moment in the show.â
âYou sacrifice a lot of your life to get into this business, whether youâre a performer or producer on a Broadway show,â Lelli says. âItâs all encompassing. We have to make this kind of commitment and sacrifice to make this art.â
Lelliâs two Tony-nominated shows are very different productions. âGutenberg! The Musical!â has a two-person cast; âWater for Elephantsâ is an elaborate production that combines acting, dancing and singing while a circus tent is being constructed before the audienceâs eyes.
âIn both of those productions, we created the best productions we possibly could,â Lelli says. âThey both have been critically successful and commercially successful. The best part for me is that audiences are loving the shows. It makes me so happy that we could create great entertainment for all those people, and create hundreds of jobs for all of my friends in the industry.â
Lelli is appreciative of the Tony nominations and he hopes the productions win their respective awards. He also realizes that UW-Eau Claire helped make these moments possible.
âI didnât know this is where I was going to end up, I didnât know this is where my dreams and my passions were going to lead me,â Lelli says. âIâve had the most wonderful life so far, and I wouldnât change any of it for the world. Iâve played with some of the most famous people in the world, played in some of the biggest and most highly desirable concert halls in New York and all over the world, and I was able to do that with the education I received at UW-Eau Claire.â