A Civil War regiment wielding musical instruments instead of guns. Fugitive androids leaving Earth on a refurbished spacecraft. Musicians using their art to redesign society.
These are the kinds of characters audiences might encounter in a musical by Assistant Professor of Music , who has won the Kleban Prize for Musical Theatre for most promising lyricist in American musical theater.
The prize is awarded annually by the Kleban Foundation, which was created under the will of lyricist Edward Kleban, who wrote the Tony-winning lyrics for A Chorus Line. This year it carries a $100,000 cash award.
Alvarez, a composer and playwright who joined 天美麻豆 in 2020, called the prize 鈥渓ife-changing.鈥
鈥淎n award like this makes me feel like what I鈥檓 doing is resonating,鈥 said Alvarez, who uses they/them pronouns. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 make the self-doubt go away. It doesn鈥檛 make you able to write great songs every day. It鈥檚 just an incredible boost.鈥
Alvarez鈥檚 work includes five full-length experimental musicals, among them the Lucille Lortel Award-winner FUTURITY, about a Civil War soldier who tries to invent a machine that creates peace. Some involve audience members as co-creators.
In The Universe Is a Small Hat, the audience creates and designs their own characters鈥攈uman refugees who escape Earth with the help of a collective of fugitive androids.

Expanding the Possible
With aesthetic roots in performance art, jazz, and popular music鈥擜lvarez cofounded the indie rock band The Lisps鈥攖hey are 鈥渁 little bit of a permanent outsider鈥 in the theater world.
Dissonant, unusual formally and dramaturgically, their work 鈥渇alls off the edge of what people consider to be a musical,鈥 said Alvarez, who cofounded Polyphone, a festival of new and emerging musicals at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Nonetheless, 鈥渋t鈥檚 meant for a broad audience.鈥
Making 鈥渟pace for strangeness鈥濃攖heir shows feature aliens, ghosts, bugs, and talking plants鈥攅ncourages people to think outside of the knowledge forms they鈥檝e been given, said Alvarez, who uses sound and story to build community and create a sense of freedom.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 so incredible about art is that it actually expands the possible in your own mind. I鈥檓 trying in my work to cause empowerment around who we get to be, and how,鈥 said Alvarez, who was born in Greensboro, N.C., and studied saxophone at Interlochen Arts Academy.
鈥楢 Type of Listening鈥
As an undergraduate at Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Alvarez continued studying saxophone, along with electronic music and interdisciplinary performance. They also started writing songs and large-scale multidisciplinary performances. But it was only around 2008, when they had nearly finished their MFA at Bard College, that they began describing their work as musicals.
鈥淲hat I love about musicals is because they have a story, they cause a type of listening that is really hard to find in any other kind of music,鈥 said Alvarez, who recalls being blown away by A Chorus Line, which they first watched on a tiny screen in the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. 鈥淪ometimes I joke that I write musicals to get people to sit down and listen to my songs.鈥
Among Alvarez鈥檚 other musical theater honors are a Princeton Arts Fellowship and the Jonathan Larson Grant. Currently, they are a Hermitage Fellow.
鈥楬eart-Forward and With Conviction鈥
Alvarez, a self-described 鈥渃ommunitarian artist,鈥 frequently collaborates with their partner鈥攙isual artist and sculptor Emily Orling鈥攁s well as other composers, including music professor , who said it鈥檚 鈥渢hrilling鈥 to see Alvarez honored with the prestigious prize.
鈥淭heir work is expansive, irreverent, playful, earnest, and magnetic, just like them,鈥 Fure said. 鈥淐茅sar lives and teaches as they make art: heart-forward and with conviction. I鈥檝e seen firsthand the impact this energy can have on students, stoking self-expression, fostering community, and tending to the wild side in all of us.鈥
Being selected for the Kleban Prize, which is such a significant honor in the field of musical theater, Alvarez said, feels like an indication that the form is expanding.
鈥淚t makes me hopeful.鈥
A virtual ceremony honoring Alvarez and Isabella Dawis, who won the prize for most promising musical theater librettist, and featuring their videotaped performances, will be available for streaming Feb. 21 to 28 from Broadway On Demand.