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A musical comedy that famously imploded just days before a planned Broadway debut is finally reaching the stage. Nerds, which charts the rivalry and friendship between Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, opens today at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, nearly a decade after its 2016 collapse earned it the nickname “the Fyre Festival of Broadway”.
First conceived for the New York Musical Theatre Festival in 2005, Nerds follows Gates and Jobs from tinkering in suburban garages to commanding the global tech boom. Years of workshops and regional productions culminated in a scheduled Broadway run at the Longacre Theatre in 2016. Two weeks before previews, producer Carl Levin cancelled the show, citing a vanished investor. A six million dollar lawsuit later alleged that most of the financing had never been secured, forcing the production into limbo and becoming one of Broadway’s most notorious last minute cancellations.
Carl Levin is no longer involved. Writers Jordan Allen Dutton and Erik Weiner, together with composer Hal Goldberg, have teamed with producer Paul Taylor Mills to mount a new version at Underbelly’s Cowbarn space. They call the Fringe “the world’s scrappiest, boldest stage”, fitting for a story about innovators who disrupted the status quo. The Edinburgh run, scheduled from 30 July to 25 August, will feature eight performers mixing pop songs, rap battles and comic misadventures, complete with “robotic jazz hands”.
Farnham jeans, turtlenecks and bad Eighties fashion aside, Gates and Jobs remain cultural icons whose inventions shape daily life. Nerds mines that impact for humour and pathos, portraying two socially awkward visionaries who “built things that go beep” and accidentally changed civilisation. The creators promise a “dot comedy” full of tech references, tongue in cheek dance numbers and an anthem redefining “nerd kind”.
Paul Taylor Mills, whose previous Fringe projects I Wish You Well and My Son’s a Queer transferred to the West End, hopes Edinburgh will give Nerds the fresh momentum Broadway’s implosion denied. If audience buzz is strong, a UK or international tour could follow.
Audiences can look forward to Gates and Jobs squaring off in a rap showdown, a musical ode to early home computing and a finale celebrating the dawn of the digital age. For theatre fans who relish comeback stories, Nerds offers a behind the screens look at Silicon Valley lore, proving that even after a catastrophic crash, a bold idea can reboot.
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