Blue Man Group is at the Fox Theatre from April 7 to 12.

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JESSE NOLAN FEELS just a wee bit sorry for the typical patron enjoying a Blue Man Group performance.

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All photos courtesy of Blue Man Group

“I can’t help it,” he says. “I feel bad for audience members who see just one show because I’m the one who gets so much spontaneous joy night after night after night. Even I can’t believe how lucky I am to get to go to work and have all this fun.”

As resident music director for the North American tour and one of two drummers in the live band, Nolan has tallied more than 700 performances of the show that blends comedy, improvisation, innovation, slapstick comedy, “stupid human tricks,” technology and original music – but no words.

Nolan, who grew up outside Chicago, was 12, when the aunt who bought him his first drum set took him to see Blue Man Group in New York. “That was the beginning of my fascination with this crazy, wacky show,” he says.

Being part of it never gets old, says this former music teacher, whereas “130 performances of West Side Story was enough.”

Can one show really be so different from the next?

Absolutely, Nolan says. “There’s an order to things, but you never know what might happen in-between those things.”

bmgp-651_Fianl_CropTime and again, Blue Man Group is described as “indescribable,” as a theatrical entertainment that defies categorization. Even its own website says Blue Man Group “cannot be explained; it can only be experienced.” Adds Nolan: “It really is still pretty radical.”

If Blue Man Group is “about” anything, it’s about two different cultures coming together to try to learn more about each other, says Nolan. Those cultures are the bald Blue Men and the audience. The Blue Men explore the audience, as if getting familiar with a new species.

The always-silent, always-curious Blue Man character was created 25 years ago by Phil Stanton, Chris Wink and Matt Goldman. These first Blue Men staged “small disturbances” around New York City well before they took to an actual stage and started selling tickets. To date, Blue Man Group has been seen by millions worldwide and has numerous productions, including permanent shows in New York, Orlando and Las Vegas.

Its basic mission, or universal “message,” has been the same since the beginning. The Blue Men, like the show itself, strive to remind us that humans have a basic need to connect with other humans.

By the end of the interactive show “people are attached to the Blue Man character,” Nolan says. “They forge a relationship with this character. When you see a more traditional show, like Beauty and the Beast, the relationship is between the characters onstage. But here, the relationship is between the audience member and the Blue Man.”

Blue Man Group Finale 2The Blue Man is the show’s poster boy, but Nolan considers the tribal music its guiding force. “The job of the music is to create a sonic landscape for an otherwise silent character to exist in and to move through. A lot of the performance energy of the show has to be translated through the music. How do we make a sound that supports the feeling that the Blue Man is conveying at any given moment?”

He answers that soon enough: “We try to live in those moments, accept it all while it’s happening and go with it.”

Nolan calls the connection between the three Blue Men and the band “the center of the show. It’s pretty cool. It can seem almost telepathic.”

When you put three Blue Men and more than 2,000 audience members in one place, “something is going to happen,” Nolan says. “Make that something great is going to happen, but you don’t know what.”

And the not knowing, he adds, well, that’s another something great.

About Kathy Janich

Kathy Janich is a longtime arts journalist who has been seeing, working in or writing about the performing arts for most of her life. She's a member of the Theatre Communications Group, the Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas, Americans for the Arts and the National Arts Marketing Project. Full disclosure: She’s also an artistic associate at Synchronicity Theatre.

View all posts by Kathy Janich