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Addams Family Musical Album Cover

"Addams Family Musical" Soundtrack Lyrics

Musical • 2010

Track Listing



"Addams Family Musical" Soundtrack: Description.

Addams Family Musical soundtrack, 2010
The Addams Family Musical — trailer pulse, the famous snap-snap promise, 2010s era

Production Background

From single-panel cartoons to a full-throated stage beast

Music & lyrics by Andrew Lippa. Book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice. The show doesn’t recycle the TV plots or the ‘90s films; it raids Charles Addams’ original cartoons—those beautiful little ink traps—and spins an original story about a family that thrives in the dark and gets hives in the sunlight. It bowed on Broadway in 2010, all velvet gloom and wry grins, and immediately planted itself in the public imagination like a carnivorous houseplant.

The cast album that bottled the fog

The Original Broadway Cast Recording (OBCR) dropped in June 2010. You can hear the orchestra wink more than it roars, the percussion hit like a dusty coffin lid, and the brass lean into Latin flourishes that feel both seductive and mischievous. It’s glossy, sure, but not airless—like someone cracked a window in the mausoleum at midnight.

Plot & Characters

A dinner invitation, a lie with good intentions, and a crossbow

Wednesday Addams falls in love with Lucas Beineke, a boy from a very… beige family. She invites the Beinekes over and begs her clan for “one normal night.” Gomez promises to keep Wednesday’s secret from Morticia—strike one. By dessert, truths spill like marbles on a staircase. Uncle Fester literally moons over the moon, Pugsley panics about losing his favorite tormentor, and Lurch rumbles through the chaos like a friendly thundercloud. In the end, honesty wins, because in the Addams house the truth is the only thing that can actually scare you into being brave.

Character sketchbook

  • Gomez — Romantic swordsman, allergic to lying, except when he tries it for love and immediately breaks out in guilt.
  • Morticia — Queen of the calm stare; death’s most stylish publicist; wrestling with time and the dread of becoming ordinary.
  • Wednesday — A sharpshooting soprano: heart newly messy, consonants crisp like cracked sugar.
  • Pugsley — Little chaos engine; fears sister’s happiness will cancel their favorite torture rituals. Tender, in a warped way.
  • Uncle Fester — Matchmaker with moon fever, vaudeville glow included.
  • Lurch — Timpani disguised as a man; every groan lands like punctuation.
  • Mal & Alice Beineke — Polite facades that crumble beautifully under a party game called “Full Disclosure.”

Musical Styles & Track Highlights

How it sounds when the lights go a little too dim

Andrew Lippa writes as if the pit is a mischievous accomplice. Woodwinds slither, brass flirts, strings find the bruise and press. The score nods to tango and torch songs, but it’s not just pastiche; it keeps its own crooked grin. The famous finger-snap DNA is there, tucked into orchestrational jokes and rhythmic winks, but the album stands on its own feet (boots, really).

Track highlights, scene by scene

  1. When You’re an Addams — Graveyard anthem and family constitution. Ancestors rise, harmonies bloom like night flowers. Instant mood-setter.
  2. Pulled — Wednesday’s confession aria; furious at feelings, bargaining with herself in bright, bell-clear belts. A go-to audition piece for a reason.
  3. One Normal Night — The impossible request. Ensemble pulses; you can practically hear the scenic doors twitch.
  4. Full Disclosure (Parts 1 & 2) — Dinner-party grenade. Call-and-response chaos, the album’s purest comic engine.
  5. Just Around the Corner — Morticia serenades mortality like an old fling. Camp with a cat-eye liner flick.
  6. The Moon and Me — Fester’s lullaby to his celestial crush. On paper, ridiculous; in sound, it floats—oddly sincere.
  7. Happy/Sad — Gomez sings the ache of letting go; the kind of song that sneaks up on you at 2 a.m.
  8. Crazier Than You — Lovers duel with arrows and upper-mix notes. It’s a rom-com standoff wearing combat boots.
  9. Move Toward the Darkness — Curtain-call thesis: love the shadows, don’t fear them. A warm, gothic benediction.

Behind-the-Scenes & Evolution

Tryout winds, Broadway thunder

The show’s pre-Broadway momentum was massive. Designers went maximal: puppetry flourishes, shimmery bone-white costumes for the Ancestors, lights that painted the stage like midnight in a bottle. Later tour versions trimmed jokes, tightened book beats, and leaned harder into the songs audiences kept humming in the lobby.

How the album captures the room

Vocals are forward without sanding off the weird. Nathan Lane’s Gomez slides from suave to soft-dad in a heartbeat; Bebe Neuwirth’s Morticia purrs through her vowels like she’s tracing them in eyeliner. Orchestrations snap shut like mousetraps, then release with a giggle. You can almost hear the cast making eye contact over the music stands.

Reviews & Social Proof

Critics brought knives; the audience brought snacks

Some reviewers wanted more bite, less gloss. Others melted for the star power and the candy-shop design. Box office? Healthy. The tension is part of the legend: a show that critics side-eyed but fans kept buying tickets for—then licensed like crazy. High schools, tours, community theaters… the afterlife is the point.

Fan temperature check

“Pulled” is still the audition weapon of choice. “Crazier Than You” wrecks in gymnasiums and black boxes alike. I still remember the first time that “Happy/Sad” bridge landed—felt like a handshake across generations, a dad telling you he’s okay with you changing, even if it stings.

Cast by Years

Original Broadway Cast (2010)

  • Gomez Addams — Nathan Lane
  • Morticia Addams — Bebe Neuwirth
  • Uncle Fester — Kevin Chamberlin
  • Wednesday Addams — Krysta Rodriguez
  • Pugsley Addams — Adam Riegler
  • Lurch — Zachary James
  • Grandma — Jackie Hoffman
  • Mal Beineke — Terrence Mann
  • Alice Beineke — Carolee Carmello
  • Lucas Beineke — Wesley Taylor

Broadway Replacements & Final Company (2011)

  • Gomez Addams — Roger Rees
  • Morticia Addams — Brooke Shields
  • Uncle Fester — Brad Oscar
  • Wednesday Addams — Rachel Potter
  • Pugsley Addams — Adam Riegler
  • Lurch — Zachary James
  • Grandma — Jackie Hoffman
  • Mal Beineke — Adam Grupper
  • Alice Beineke — Heidi Blickenstaff
  • Lucas Beineke — Jesse Swenson

Notable Later Productions

  • US National Tour (2011–2012) — A tightened book; audiences leaned in.
  • UK & Ireland Tours (2017, return engagements beyond) — Marketing leaned on the snap motif, with lively new casts tuning the comedy to local tastes.

Release Info & Tech Notes

  • Type: Musical (Stage) / Original Broadway Cast Recording
  • Year: 2010
  • Label: Decca Broadway
  • OBCR Release Date: June 8, 2010
  • Recording: New York, spring 2010
  • Key Songs: When You’re an Addams, Pulled, One Normal Night, Full Disclosure, Just Around the Corner, The Moon and Me, Happy/Sad, Crazier Than You, Move Toward the Darkness

Quotes

“Move toward the darkness.” A hokey line on paper; somehow a warm philosophy when the chorus swells.
“Lane works like a joyful maniac.” That’s not a complaint; it’s a love note to precision clowning.

Small Human Notes

Why this album keeps getting dusted off

Because it’s playable in the best sense—singable, direct, cheeky. You don’t need a Broadway budget to sell “Full Disclosure,” just timing and nerve. And when “Happy/Sad” arrives, even the jokers in the back row go a little quiet. That balance—gallows humor with a soft center—makes it stick.

The vibe in one image

Imagine a candlelit living room, the rug slightly frayed, a family you’d cross the street to avoid. Then they start harmonizing and you realize they’re kinder, in their way, than half the normal folks you know.

FAQ

Is the musical based on the TV show?
No, it’s rooted in Charles Addams’ original cartoons, with a fresh plot built around a disastrous family dinner.
When was the cast album released?
June 8, 2010, on Decca Broadway.
What songs are most popular for auditions?
“Pulled” for powerhouse sopranos; “Crazier Than You” for comic duos who like a dare.
Does the album include the famous finger snaps?
Yes—woven into the orchestration and rhythmic jokes, not just pasted on top.
Is it family-friendly?
Macabre and cheeky rather than graphic; the humor is dark but affectionate.

September, 22nd 2025


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