New Jersey Stage 2017: Issue 4 | Page 28

This isn’t the first time Rea has collaborated with her husband. The couple, who lives in Haw- thorne, first met while working on a project together. Rea had been out on the road doing a tour of Tommy and wanted to get an al- bum of hers produced. A mutual friend suggest Rick as the pro- ducer and the two of them got together to discuss the project. “He talked his way out of doing the album and asked me out on a date,” recalled Rea. “Later on we collaborated on it. He’s like, ‘You’re no dummy. You knew I’d do it for free if you went out with me!’ But Hit Her with the Skates was the first time writing musical theatre together.” Rea knew husband was per- fect for the project because he understands all of the different genres in the show. She was able to simply describe the character and give Rick an idea of what type of musical signature she NJ STAGE 2017 - Vol. 4 No. 4 envisioned and he knew exactly what to come up with whether it was genres as varied as doo- wop or punk rock or disco. “That’s what I loved as a kid in 1979 going to the rink,” said Rea. “You could be out on the floor dancing to a Bee Gee’s tune and the next song was from the Ohio Players. The same people who were dancing to the disco tune would be slow danc- ing to ‘Beth’ by Kiss. There was something great about this time in U.S. history.” The show has steadily moved forward since Rea invited some friends to her living room to hear the play read for the first time. Each reading helped them learn a bit more about the play, tweak it, and see how it worked with a revision. After the play’s last industry reading last year, they knew that it had come as far as it could go. It needed to be staged to move forward on the path to INDEX NEXT ARTICLE 28