FILM

Who knows ‘Theater Camp’ better than theater kids?

Longtime friends have created summer’s most charming comedy

BY LINDSEY BAHR The Associated Press
 
 There’s quite a bit of history between the team behind “Theater Camp,” a loving satire of musical theater kids and their teachers that opens in theaters Friday.
 
 Molly Gordon, Ben Platt, Noah Galvin and Nick Lieberman are all, first and foremost, theater kids themselves. They’re also longtime friends. Lieberman has been making things with Platt since they were in high school. Galvin and Gordon are best friends and did a play together about a decade ago. And Galvin and Platt are currently engaged.
 
 It’s Platt and Gordon’s relationship that stretches back the furthest, though. Both children of parents in the entertainment industry, they’ve been friends since they were 3 years old.
 
 “I was deeply in love with him,” Gordon laughed in an interview with her collaborators during the Sundance Film Festival. “He came out to me and didn’t want to be with me, but I still tried for years.”
 
 The ins and outs of all of their collaborations, musical workshops, web series, comedy videos and hours improvising would require a flow chart to process fully. But what it boils down to is when the four found each other, they didn’t want to let go.
 
 About five years ago, they found themselves with a moment between projects and decided they would finally do something together. So they “stole” some kids from Galvin’s old performing arts high school in Manhattan and put together a short film about a musical theater camp.
 
 “It seemed like the most natural world for us to jump off the ledge into together as this comedy collective for the first time,” Platt said. “We all felt like it really suited us tonally and emotionally. It was exactly the kind of thing we wanted to make. [The short] was a quite a janky, very fast, very, very, very cheap, quick little moment. But it definitely set off an alarm in all of us.”
 
 A few years would go by before they got the green-light for the feature, helped by Picturestart and Topic Studios, as well as Jessica Elbaum of Will Ferrell’s Gloria Sanchez Productions, who’d gotten to know Gordon and Galvin during “Booksmart.”
 
 “I’m such a nerd, so I knew who Jessica was,” Gordon said. “We got lunch one day and she said, ‘I feel like you want more than this. I feel like you want to write things.’ She’s done that to Noah, too. She’s really good at spotting people who want more.”
 
 “Theater Camp” is the feature debut for Gordon and Lieberman. They all wrote the screenplay, and everyone but Lieberman acts in the film. The premise is that a documentary crew has come to make a film about a crumbling but beloved upstate New York camp, AdirondACTS, run by Amy Sedaris’ character. In the first few minutes she has a seizure, and her son, a finance bro (Jimmy Tatro), steps in to try to run the camp. Gordon and Platt play camp teachers and former students, while Galvin is a techie with unsung talents.
 
 “We don’t often give a voice to the tech people,” Galvin said.
 
 Nearly all of the scenarios in the film are based on things that have happened to them or stories they’ve heard from friends.
 
 “Theater is a world of people who are so absurd and in their own worlds. You can get away with them doing things that are ridiculous,” Lieberman said. “But you also want to find a way to ground it.”
 
 “The Bear” breakout Ayo Edebiri — nominated this week for an Emmy — plays a new hire who tries to hide the fact that she has no experience teaching musical theater.
 
 “We all have moments with teachers who are so formative and meaningful and also, like, wildly absurd,” Platt said.
 
 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 
Patti Harrison, from left, Noah Galvin, Jimmy Tatro, Ben Platt, director Nick Lieberman, Owen Thiele and director Molly Gordon pose for a portrait to promote the film “Theater Camp” during the Sundance Film Festival on Jan. 20 in Park City, Utah.