man on stage kicking one foot, 2 people seated behind him, all dressed in black
Benjamin Kintisch (L), creator of "Life Review: The Hospice Musical". Photo via Kintisch's Facebook page.

A unique theatrical experience, โ€œLife Review: The Hospice Musical,โ€ will be performed on May 9 as a one-night concert and live album recording in the Arellano Theater in Levering Hall on Johns Hopkins University’s Homewood Campus.

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The hospice experience may not initially evoke thoughts of โ€œmusical theater,โ€ but if music expresses that which cannot be put into words, the subject matter put to music makes a lot of sense. Benjamin Kintisch is a trained cantor and former chaplain from Columbia, Maryland. He created โ€œLife Reviewโ€ from real hospice patient stories over more than a decade, turning those conversations into songs.

The show has been performed before and received accolades at the Asheville Fringe Festival, the Charm City Fringe Festival, and virtually from London. It is a 2025 Maryland State Arts Council Creativity Grant recipient.

โ€œLife Review: The Hospice Musicalโ€ is set in โ€œHopeful Hospiceโ€ โ€“ the final home for a group of hospice patients. The audience is witness to private conversations between the patients and their chaplain, a rabbi, transformed into song. Each patientโ€™s story invites reflection on oneโ€™s own life, relationships, and memories.

โ€œThis is a musical about listening, about presence, and about what it means to truly be heard,โ€ wrote Kintisch on his Kickstarter page for the project. He describes it as a cross between โ€œA Chorus Lineโ€ and โ€œFiddler on the Roof.โ€

The May 9 performance will include five musicians from Peabody Institute playing the violin, cello, clarinet, flute, and piano. Five professional vocalists from Baltimore will perform the piece for this full live album recording, which will allow the creators to share the music beyond the concert hall.

Kintisch began the Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for covering costs of the May 9 performance and recording. There, he addressed the frequently-asked question, โ€œIs this some kind of joke?โ€

โ€œ’Life Review: The Hospice Musical’ is a real show, a new musical comedy about love and loss in three seasons at a residential hospice,โ€ Kintisch wrote. โ€œYour questions โ€˜is this a jokeโ€™ is not an uncommon one. We have lots of good jokes in the dialogue, but we also take very seriously the important themes of our play.โ€

Those themes? The inevitability of death, celebration of love and friendship, grief and loss, disability, aging, and more. Kintisch wrote that he uses music โ€œto engage with these topics with feeling and beauty,โ€ and that โ€˜[a]n over-arching theme of the play is the power of story telling and holy listening.โ€

The show runs around 90 minutes, and following the performance there will be a dessert reception. For those interested, there will also be optional small group discussions related to themes highlighted in the show. Group choices include:

  • โ€œSpoiler alert!โ€ – Dark humor and our shared mortality
  • โ€œSend Me a Sign!โ€ – Theological Issues at End-of-Life
  • โ€œWith These Handsโ€ – the blessings and challenges of the body through aging and illness
  •  โ€œLife Reviewโ€ – an interactive story telling workshop

Tickets range in price from $23.18 to $108.55, and can be purchased until the day of the performance.

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