How an eclectic score brings ‘Come From Away’ to life



A group of performers sit in seats under a sign that reads

From Jewish cantillations to 1990s power ballads, “Come From Away” is a musical that boasts an impressively wide-ranging score.

“They've got me playing some shakers … I get to play a cajon with a kick pedal,” said Ben Yats, one of the percussionists in the Guthrie Theater’s production of the show, who also plays instruments like the Irish bodhrán and West African djembe.

“I have 18 different instruments,” said renowned local Celtic folk musician Laura MacKenzie, who is also lending her talents to the production. “They’re mostly whistles, from very low bass whistles to little teeny high ones, and a couple of wooden flutes and Uilleann Pipes.”

The choice to have an eclectic range of instruments is in line with the show’s plot, which is based on the true story of international travelers stranded in a small town in Newfoundland, Canada, following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that caused the U.S. airspace to close.

“A lot of [the] instruments are not used in what I would presume is a traditional sense,” said Yats. He gave the example of the udu, a Nigerian instrument that resembles a clay pot, which he uses when an Egyptian character in the show is on stage. Yats said the score doesn’t have exact directions on how the instrument should be played, so he uses a technique he picked up from playing a South Asian instrument.

“[The composers] really found a clever way, I think, to sneak in a lot of different outside world influences onto this score,” Yats said.

At the core of the show’s music, however, is the English and Celtic-inspired folk music found in Atlantic Canada, which is why musicians like Yats and MacKenzie were brought on to play the show.

A man stands on a table on stage, surrounded by other performers.
Much of the music in "Come From Away" is inspired by the English and Celtic-influenced music found in Atlantic Canada, where the show is set.
Dan Norman, courtesy of the Guthrie Theater

“The traditional music, from what I've heard in Newfoundland, is more of sort of the pub music, ballad singing tradition. So heavy Irish influence, a little Scottish and a lot of English influence as well,” said MacKenzie, who has been called a “High Priestess of Celtic music.”

The musical doesn’t shy away from some of those influences. In one scene, the characters coalesce at a local bar where they sing songs together—one of which is a sea shanty.

“I love this show, because it seems that the composers really wanted it grounded in the people's music, and so they have that flavor of Newfoundland folk music,” said MacKenzie.

Those more joyous moments of pub singing are contrasted with slower ballads and quiet moments of a cappella, all of which capture the rollercoaster of emotions some were experiencing in the wake of 9/11.

“There's such high moments, and all of a sudden you're just trying to hold it together,” said Ben Yats. “I think the musicians are reflecting that kind of emotional gravity on stage.”

“Come From Away"' runs through Aug. 9 at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis.



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Jackie Tohn is opening up about her health.

While appearing on Today on Friday (May 15), the 45-year-old Nobody Wants This actress revealed that she recently underwent a preventative double mastectomy after a cancer scare in her family.

“In January of 2025, my dad found lumps under his arm and went to the doctor and they turned out to be metastatic carcinomas,” Jackie shared. “They couldn’t find where the primary cancer in his body was, so they gave him a panel of hereditary genetic testing to try and figure it out.”

Her father subsequently tested positive for the BRCA1 gene mutation, which is a common indicator of breast cancer.

“I got tested shortly thereafter, and when I was in the doctor’s office she was like, ‘You have a 50 percent chance of having it and let’s see what happens,’” she recalled. “I went for a routine mammogram and mentioned it when I was there … and their energy changes a little bit and they’re like, ‘You know what, don’t leave today without being tested.’”

After wrapping season two of Nobody Wants This in 2025, Jackie took the BRCA test.

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EXCLUSIVE: Jackie Tohn opens up to #JennaandSheinelle about her recent health scare where she learned she has an 85% chance of developing breast cancer and her decision to undergo a double mastectomy.

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“I found out that I am BRCA1 positive, and I met with a genetic counselor. It turned out that I have an 85 percent chance of getting breast cancer,” Jackie explained. “What’s crazy is when you get a diagnosis like this, you don’t know your options.”

She subsequently “put on [her] big girl pants” and sought ways to deal with her medical situation.

“Then, I had to find a whole medical team, and I love who I landed on,” she said. “[On] December 1, 2025, I got [a] straight to reconstruction double mastectomy.”

A double mastectomy is a surgical procedure to remove both breasts, per the Cleveland Clinic. A surgeon can later reconstruct the tissue or add implants to the patient’s chest.

Following the procedure, Jackie is now advocating for early detection and genetic testing.

“So many things had to happen to line up for me to have this information, but they say that the three things you should look out for are rare, young and multiple,” Jackie shared. “If there’s a rare cancer in your family like with my dad it was male breast cancer [or] ovarian, pancreatic [or] somebody had it young … those are the people that make the most sense to get it.”

The post ‘Nobody Wants This’ Actress Jackie Tohn Reveals She Got Double Mastectomy After Cancer Scare appeared first on Just Jared – Celebrity News and Gossip | Entertainment.



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