- Chelsea Sheehan-Gaiger鈥檚 鈥淭herapy: The Musical鈥 explores grief and trauma through song, based on her experiences.
- The show, featuring Mario Sadra-de Jong, debuted at Dunedin鈥檚 Fringe Festival, winning the NZ Fringe Touring Award.
- Performances are on March 5 and 6 at Aubyn Live Theatre in Hastings.
An award-winning Kiwi musical made for people who hate musicals and based on true events is heading to Hastings for two performances in March.
Written and performed by Chelsea Sheehan-Gaiger from Hastings, Therapy: The Musical follows a woman鈥檚 reluctant visits to a therapist鈥檚 office.
Grief, trauma and the embarrassment of being human are explored through song, and the show is based on Sheehan-Gaiger鈥檚 real-life experiences.
But Sheehan-Gaiger said don鈥檛 mistake it for a sad story, as it is anything but.
Written as part of her postgraduate programme at Otago University alongside her musical accompanist Mario Sadra-de Jong, Sheehan-Gaiger debuted the show at Dunedin鈥檚 Fringe Festival in 2024 where it was nominated for best comedy and best in Fringe and won the New Zealand Fringe Touring Award.
Sheehan-Gaiger remembered coming up with the idea for the musical when Sadra-de Jong was showing her songs from his stand-up comedy material.
鈥淚 just remember I was laughing my head off saying these are such relatable songs,鈥 she recalled.
鈥淭hey were about saying the wrong thing in public and then thinking about it for far too long afterwards, and that sort of thing, and I just thought this is exactly what I would want to have in my show.鈥
The show consists of Sheehan-Gaiger on stage alongside Sadra-de Jong as accompanist and 鈥渄ream ghost鈥 in a two-person show of sorts.
Sheehan-Gaiger said singing songs about her own traumatic and personal experiences in a room full of strangers is 鈥渆mpowering and therapeutic鈥.
鈥淎 big part of my studies has been how we navigate trauma on stage safely as actors and for the sake of our audience,鈥 she said.
鈥淢y director for this show, Dr Marea Columbo, she also has a PhD in psychology and is a lecturer at the university.
鈥淪he has been amazing in helping me work out how to do it safely, so that I鈥檓 not reliving trauma and not making my audience uncomfortable and finding those differences between real Chelsea and stage Chelsea.
鈥淏ut it鈥檚 quite fun and it鈥檚 also nice because I鈥檝e had some big things happen in my life and it鈥檚 lovely to be the one in control of telling my story.鈥
Sheehan-Gaiger said she is a little nervous about bringing Therapy: The Musical to her home audience, as some of the potential audience members may have influenced parts of the show.
鈥淚鈥檝e tried really hard to word this show in a way that is really respectful and loving of the people that I do talk about, but is also very honest about what it鈥檚 like to have these experiences,鈥 she said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important as humans that we keep evolving and changing so if people feel challenged by the show, that鈥檚 not a bad thing.鈥
Even though she does not outright name anyone, Sheehan-Gaiger has a feeling the people the songs are about will know that she is singing about them.
鈥淚f they go 鈥榟ang on, that鈥檚 not how it happened鈥, it would be like 鈥榦h, so you鈥檙e admitting it happened鈥,鈥 she laughed.
鈥淚 think anyone who鈥檚 happy to put their hand up and say 鈥榯hat鈥檚 me', will be because I speak about them very lovingly.鈥
Therapy: The Musical will be on for two nightly only on March 5 and 6 at Aubyn Live Theatre.
Jack Riddell is a multimedia journalist with Hawke鈥檚 Bay Today and spent the last 15 years working in radio and media in Auckland, London, Berlin, and Napier. He reports on all stories relevant to residents of the region.
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