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Nick Jonas & Adrienne Warren Tackle Heartbreak in The Last Five Years

nick jonas breakup musical the last five years

Jason Robert Brown’s The Last Five Years has returned to Broadway with a much-anticipated revival at the Hudson Theatre. Directed by Whitney White, this new production stars pop icon Nick Jonas as Jamie Wellerstein and Tony Award-winner Adrienne Warren as Cathy Hiatt. While the musical remains a beloved standard among college theatre programs and regional playhouses, this latest staging revives long-standing questions about the show’s emotional balance—and how to navigate its tricky portrayal of ambition, intimacy, and the slow unraveling of a marriage.

Set against the backdrop of creative dreams and personal disillusionment, The Last Five Years is a two-character musical that explores the highs and lows of a romantic relationship between a young, rising novelist and a struggling actress. What makes the musical structurally unique is its storytelling format: Cathy tells the story in reverse chronological order—from the end of their marriage to their first date—while Jamie narrates it from beginning to end. The result is a touching and, at times, jarring juxtaposition of hope and heartbreak, love and loneliness.

The Real-Life Backstory Behind the Musical

Jason Robert Brown wrote The Last Five Years during a period of personal upheaval. In 1999, at just 29 years old, Brown had already won a Tony Award for his work on Parade, but his marriage to actress Theresa O’Neill had dissolved. By 2001, The Last Five Years had its world premiere in Skokie, Illinois, and its deeply autobiographical nature—though publicly denied by Brown—sparked legal controversy.

O’Neill filed a lawsuit, claiming that the character of Cathy too closely resembled her and violated their divorce terms. As a result, Brown made significant changes to the musical, including rewriting one of the show’s earliest songs to make Cathy less identifiable. These disputes reportedly caused Lincoln Center to withdraw from producing the musical’s original New York debut in 2002. Eventually, the show opened Off-Broadway and found a loyal audience, but the origins of its storytelling remain steeped in emotional complexity.

Adrienne Warren Shines as Cathy—A Portrait of Frustrated Talent

In Whitney White’s revival, Adrienne Warren delivers a luminous, emotionally devastating performance as Cathy. Known for her award-winning turn as Tina Turner on Broadway, Warren brings a magnetic vulnerability to the role of a young actress who struggles to secure meaningful work while watching her partner’s star rise.

Her portrayal of Cathy is a career-highlight performance, especially during the number “Climbing Uphill,” where she rehearses for a soul-crushing audition. As Cathy sings about casting directors who won’t look up from their phones and a director who seems preoccupied with his crotch, Warren executes the song’s frantic blend of self-doubt and satire with surgical precision. Her physical comedy and vocal delivery capture not only the humor but also the deep-seated anxiety that so many performers feel when trying to break into an industry that often reduces them to stereotypes.

In Warren’s hands, Cathy becomes more than a spurned lover—she becomes a stand-in for countless artists navigating a system that rewards visibility over substance. Her vocal power and emotional accessibility ensure that the audience’s heart remains tethered to her experience throughout the show.

Nick Jonas as Jamie: Charisma Without Complexity?

Nick Jonas as Jamie Charisma Without Complexity

The casting of Nick Jonas as Jamie brought considerable buzz to the production. Jonas, known for his chart-topping music career and occasional acting roles, brings name recognition and vocal strength to the stage. However, despite his pop-star polish, his performance as Jamie falls short of offering the nuanced portrayal the role demands.

Jamie begins the story as an excited young writer, fresh off his first book deal, filled with charm and confidence. His early number, “Shiksa Goddess,” is a tongue-in-cheek ode to his non-Jewish girlfriend Cathy, brimming with enthusiasm and cultural self-awareness. While Jonas navigates the song’s playfulness well, the deeper emotional notes—especially the tension between career success and relationship strain—are missing.

As the show progresses, Jonas’s Jamie doesn’t fully evolve. Songs like “The Schmuel Song,” which are intended to show Jamie’s affection and encouragement for Cathy, instead come off as ego-driven performances. In key confrontational scenes, where Jamie is supposed to wrestle with the tension of loving someone who feels increasingly left behind, Jonas’s delivery feels too casual, too surface-level. His Jamie reads more like a textbook “selfish boyfriend” than a complicated man torn between ambition and affection.

Whitney White’s Direction: Elegant, But Emotionally Uneven

Director Whitney White takes a sleek, modern approach to the production, allowing the story’s emotional beats to unfold with minimal distractions. The staging is understated, allowing the actors to remain front and center. Stacey Derosier’s lighting design—featuring a palette of blues, golds, and oranges—creates a powerful visual metaphor for the show’s dual timelines and emotional polarity.

However, the direction doesn’t quite solve the musical’s core issue: the imbalance of sympathy between the two characters. From the beginning, the narrative seems rigged in Cathy’s favor. Her heartbreak is palpable, her struggles grounded. Meanwhile, Jamie’s downfall is hastily sketched, and his emotional arc lacks the same vulnerability. White seems content to lean into this imbalance rather than interrogate or complicate it.

There are missed opportunities to deepen Jamie’s character. His closing number, where he leaves Cathy and sings about needing to move on, should be a devastating confession of emotional fatigue. Instead, it reads more as resignation than heartbreak.

A Message or Just a Story?

Jason Robert Brown has long insisted that The Last Five Years isn’t meant to deliver a moral lesson. “There’s no message to the show,” he told Playbill in a 2022 interview. “It’s just a story about two people who want desperately to be together and can’t be… It’s just a tiny bird that flies beautifully.”

Yet, for many viewers and critics, that bird doesn’t always soar equally from both sides of the stage. The structure of the musical—one character telling the story in reverse, the other moving forward—creates an inherently lopsided sympathy. Cathy begins the play devastated and ends in love; Jamie begins in love and ends leaving a note behind. Without a fully fleshed-out Jamie, the show can easily become a tale of one person’s betrayal rather than two people’s mutual failure to grow together.

Celebrity Casting and Modern Tweaks

This Broadway revival introduces a few minor changes reflective of current trends, including choreography from brothers Rick and Jeff Kuperman that occasionally nods to Jewish folk traditions. These moments offer some charm but don’t significantly alter the show’s central dynamics.

As with many contemporary Broadway revivals, this production leans into celebrity casting—Nick Jonas being the clearest example. While this can drive ticket sales and widen the show’s appeal, it also raises questions about substance versus style. In this case, Jonas’s star power doesn’t fully compensate for a lack of emotional depth in the role.

A Soaring Cathy and a Grounded Jamie

At its core, The Last Five Years is a meditation on how relationships fall apart not only due to betrayal, but due to timing, ambition, and unmet emotional needs. It’s about how two people can love each other deeply and still fail to meet in the middle.

In this production, that emotional truth rests almost entirely on the shoulders of Adrienne Warren. Her portrayal of Cathy is so rich, so specific, and so haunting that it’s easy to wonder if Jamie deserves her at all. When she sings “I Can Do Better Than That,” it feels less like hope and more like prophecy.

Though the show remains beloved for its structure and songs, this revival reminds us that staging The Last Five Years means more than just casting recognizable names—it requires diving deep into the emotional contradictions of both characters. Without that, all that remains is one person walking away, and another left asking why.


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