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Trey Parker and Matt Stone on The Book of Mormon

We sit down with the South Park stars in advance of the musical’s Chicago premiere.

By Kris Vire
Published: December 6, 2012

406.ac.ft.bookofMormon
Trey Parker (left) and Matt Stone (right), writers of the play Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon creative team of Robert Lopez, Matt Stone, Trey Parker and Casey Nicholaw
Book of Mormon
  • Trey Parker (left) and Matt Stone (right), writers of the play Book of Mormon

    South Park creators Trey Parker, left, and Matt Stone have another hit with The Book of Mormon.

    Photo: Tom M. Johnson406.th.ft.bookofmormon.treymatt1xSS.jpgTrey Parker (left) and Matt Stone (right), writers of the play Book of Mormon159125361
  • The Book of Mormon creative team of Robert Lopez, Matt Stone, Trey Parker and Casey Nicholaw

    Avenue Q co-creator Robert Lopez, from left, Stone, Parker and director-choreographer Casey Nicholaw worked together to make
    The Book of Mormon a hit.

    Photo: Joan Marcus406.ac.ft.BookofMormon.LopezStoneParkerNicholawxSS.jpgThe Book of Mormon creative team of Robert Lopez, Matt Stone, Trey Parker and Casey Nicholaw159125262
  • Book of Mormon

    Rema Webb, from left, Andrew Rannells as Elder Price and Josh Gad as Elder Cunningham in the original Broadway production of Mormon

    Photo: Joan Marcus406.ac.ft.BookofMormon.BroadwayproductionxSS.jpgBook of Mormon159125213

South Park creators Trey Parker, left, and Matt Stone have another hit with The Book of Mormon.

Photo: Tom M. Johnson

Richard Rodgers attended Columbia University with his future musical-theater collaborator Oscar Hammerstein II. Leonard Bernstein and Adolph Green (On the Town) were co-counselors at a Jewish summer camp. And what brought together the collaborative team of The Book of Mormon, the smash-hit musical comedy that won nine Tony Awards in 2011 and opens a dedicated Chicago production this week? An interest in prurient puppets.

South Park honchos Trey Parker and Matt Stone were in the planning stages for their 2004 film Team America: World Police, an action-movie spoof peopled with marionettes, when Avenue Q, the adult-oriented puppet show authored by Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx and Jeff Whitty, made a splash Off Broadway, eventually transferring to Broadway and winning three Tonys. In 2003, Parker and Stone went to see Avenue Q—on a night Lopez happened to be in the house.

“I was really excited to see them, because they’re heroes of mine,” Lopez says. Stone and Parker’s work on South Park had influenced Avenue Q to the point that the two men were thanked in the Playbill.

The three went out for drinks after the show, and conversation turned to future projects. “I mentioned that I had this idea for a show about Mormons,” Lopez recalls. “And they said, ‘No way, that’s crazy. That’s sort of what we want to do, too.’ ”

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