OriginalTickets logo
Broadway

North Coast Repertory Theatre Presents THE MOST HAPPY FELLA

North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach, CA, will stage THE MOST HAPPY FELLA. The theater's marketing director details the production's conception in a new article.

·Jun 15, 2026·via BroadwayWorld
North Coast Repertory Theatre Presents THE MOST HAPPY FELLA

Broadway + NYC

Broadway

Off-Broadway

Off-Off Broadway

Cabaret

Dance

Opera

Classical Music

Eastern

Central

Western

West End

WEST END

UK Regional

International

Canada

Australia / New Zealand

Europe

Asia

Latin America

Africa / Middle East

Entertainment

TV/Movies

Music

Ctrl + K to open · Esc to close

Performances will continue through July 5, 2026.

POPULAR

Get all the top news & discounts for San Diego & beyond.

North Coast Repertory Theatre will present The Most Happy Fella, Frank Loesser 's sweeping, passionate musical masterwork, in an intimate reimagining running now through July 5, 2026. Director Jeffrey B. Moss has stripped the show — traditionally staged in opera houses with casts of 25 to 30 — down to 12 performers and two onstage pianos, revealing a tender love story that thrives precisely because of the theatre's 194-seat scale.

Get all the top news & discounts for San Diego & beyond.

Often described as "everyone's favorite musical they've never seen," The Most Happy Fella is a rarity: a musical that moves between Broadway song-and-dance and full operatic aria without apology. Set in Napa Valley wine country, it follows Tony, an aging Italian vintner who courts a young San Francisco waitress through letters — sending a photo of his handsome ranch hand instead of his own. It is a story of longing, deception, forgiveness, and love, scored with some of the most gorgeous music the American theatre has ever produced.

For this production, the director was granted access to something extraordinary: Project Three — Frank Loesser 's own hand-typed first draft of the show, never publicly produced, which contains not only original versions of songs, lyrics, and scenes, but Loesser's private notes on his characters' inner lives. With the blessing of the Loesser family, the production incorporates a virtually unheard aria for a secondary character, "Marie," drawn directly from these pages — now reimagined as an intimate plea for understanding.

He began with table reads and table work using the lyrics as dialogue, discussing the various characters and the plot twists - often referring to Mr. Loesser's notes to find explanations for character's actions and feelings.

"I was convinced this was a sweet, intimate love story that would feel very much at home at NCRT," the director said. "Small spaces mean whispers matter. The storytelling lives in the eyes of the characters. We were wearing our hearts on our sleeves — and so was Frank Loesser , right there on every page of his notes."

The ensemble of 12 actors some who play multiple roles, stepping fluidly in and out of chorus numbers that were reimagined from the ground up. What was once a parade of strangers is now a tight community of familiar faces. A song once belted by a full chorus becomes a five-voice acappella; a celebratory number becomes an audience sing-along. Two onstage pianists — who double in minor roles and occasionally join the vocal numbers — provide the entire musical world of the show.

The result is a production in which the grand emotions of an American musical classic are delivered up close, personally, and with full force — proving that size of stage has nothing to do with size of heart.

Get an Alert Each Time Stephi Wild Writes

Videos

San Diego SHOWS

Recommended For You

Sign up for announcements, and exclusive discounts on tickets to your favorite shows!

© 2026 - Copyright Wisdom Digital Media , all rights reserved. Privacy Policy

_Originally reported by [BroadwayWorld](https://www.broadwayworld.com/san-diego/article/THE-MOST-HAPPY-FELLA-to-Be-Staged-at-North-Coast-Repertory-Theatre-20260615)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by BroadwayWorld.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…