Seller, the producer of such lauded musicals as Rent, In the Heights, and Hamilton, chronicles his path from Michigan to Broadway in this graceful memor.He is bracingly forthright about the harsh realities of the industry, as when he mentions a producer who was more upset about a star losing his voice than about a promoter who had just died by suicide.The New Yorker
"Its hard to beat Moss Harts Act One for best Broadway memoir, but Jeffrey Sellers Theater Kid is very much in the running...like Harts classic, Sellers book ends on a high note."AirMail
"Art imitates life in this peek behind the curtain from the award-winning producer of 'Hamilton' and 'Rent.' After an early life marred by poverty and trauma, Seller helped define the modern age of Broadway with shows about rebels, strivers and outsiders much like himself."New York Times Book Review
"[ T]he 60-year-olds path from theater-loving Midwesterner to Broadway impresario is also packed with insider nods and insight.... Theater Kid will resonate with any reader who has tried to manifest their dream job via sheer pluck and commitment.... After decades overseeing such endeavors from the wings, Seller earns his moment to step into the spotlight and take a bow."Washington Post
"[ A] candid and affectionate debut...Seller provides colorful, behind-the-scenes peeks into the challenges and joys of producing a musical...theater buffs would do well to check this out."Publishers Weekly
"[ W]ell-written and compulsively entertaining....Anyone who loves theatrical memoirs will cherish and reread this book."NPR
"In this candid and engaging memoir, he blends his personal and professional stories to deftly capture his childhood dreams and challenges and his eventual journey to a successful career on Broadway. As an adopted child of a dysfunctional family coming to terms with his sexuality and living on the wrong side of town, musical theater is his saving grace. An entertaining and heartfelt look at what it takes to find your true self and not only survive but thrive amidst the neon lights on Broadway."Booklist
"Seller is an engaging storyteller and as passionate about directing summer camp theater as he is about producing award-winning Broadway shows. Highly recommended."Library Journal (Starred Review)
"[ Sellers] writes Theater Kid with the vividness of a graphic novel, the immediacy of a play, the intensity of a big-screen movie. Candid, sometimes explicit about his sexual awakening, fearless about revealing his family's chaos and conflicts and yet filled with love for even his volatile father, Theater Kid reads like the autobiography of someone who has lived with hard truths and made peace with them through his artistry."Detroit Free Press
...A must-read for grown-up theater kids."New York Theater blog
"Lightening struck twice for theater producer Jeffrey Seller, whose creative eye and business acumen are behind two of the most successful musicals of all time: Rent and Hamilton. In his touching memoir, Theater Kid, Seller gets real about growing up outside of Detroit, coming to terms with his sexuality, living through the height of the AIDS crisis, and his rocky rise to fame in the business of Broadway."Queerty In this searing and inspiring memoir, Jeffrey Seller writes the book he wishes hed had as a kid; about a wildly brilliant, closeted young man from tough circumstances in Detroit who finds his way into the wilds of New York and helps develop and support some of the most innovative musical theater of the twentieth and twenty-first century. It belongs on your shelf next to Act One by Moss Hartif you can manage to put it down; I certainly couldnt.Lin-Manuel Miranda
I loved reading the wonderful, inspiring adventures of Jeffrey Sellers life and career. If you feel like an outsider from the poorest part of town, take heart, your dreams can come true.Bernadette Peters
One of the great American coming-of-age stories, Theater Kid exhilarates and transports. The family Jeffrey Seller portrays here is as unique and indelible as any in American literature. Courageous, honest, and compulsively readable, this book will join the very short shelf of indispensable books on the American stage.Oskar Eustis, artistic director, The Public Theater