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Rock Of Ages Youth Edition Script Pdf May 2026

If you plan to perform the show, apply for licensing well in advance (allow 8–12 weeks for processing).


This overview is for informational purposes only. All rights to Rock of Ages: Youth Edition are owned by Concord Theatricals and the original authors (Chris D’Arienzo, book; various songwriters). Always secure legal scripts and licenses for any production or study use.


The only way to obtain a legitimate Rock Of Ages Youth Edition Script PDF is through an authorized licensing house. In North America, that is MTI (Music Theatre International) . Here is the step-by-step process:

While the script is clean, the demands remain high.

Yes – with caveats.

This show is perfect if your teen cast loves Glee, Stranger Things (Season 2), or classic rock. The audience will sing along. It is a crowd-pleaser that sells tickets.

However, it is a difficult show. The vocal demands are high. The rhythm changes (going from a ballad to a power anthem in 2 seconds) require a strong pit band or high-quality backing tracks.

Do not let the lack of a free PDF stop you. The official PDF is worth the licensing fee because it protects you from liability and gives you resources (the choreography notes alone save 20 hours of rehearsal).

If you only need an excerpt for study/audition: Rock Of Ages Youth Edition Script Pdf

Even in the script format, the driving force of Rock of Ages is the soundtrack. The Youth Edition script includes the stage directions and lyrics for the show's biggest hits. Directors can expect to see the lyrics for powerhouse anthems such as:

These songs provide excellent opportunities for ensemble singing and choreography, allowing a large cast to feel involved throughout the performance.

Many directors accidentally buy the rights to the Original Broadway Version because it is cheaper or more readily available. Do not let that happen. Here is a side-by-side comparison.

| Feature | Original Broadway | Youth Edition (High School) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Sexual Content | Full nudity (strip club), blatant innuendo, sexual acts implied. | References to "wild strip club" but happens offstage. No nudity. | | Language | Frequent F-bombs, strong sexual references. | "PG-13" language (damn, hell, crap). No F-bombs. | | Alcohol/Drugs | Cocaine use on stage, drunken abuse. | Characters get "drunk" (acting only), no drugs. | | Character of Lonny | Swinging sexuality, crude jokes. | Wacky, energetic narrator. Still funny but clean. | | Appropriate Age | 17+ (college/adult). | 13+ (middle school with guidance, high school ideal). | | Vocal Range | Extreme high rock tenor (Drew hits high D's). | Keys lowered by a third for teen voices. | If you plan to perform the show, apply

Case study: A high school in Texas tried to perform the original script in 2019. Parents walked out during the strip club scene. The drama director was fired. Conversely, a youth group in Ohio performed the Youth Edition and received standing ovations because the kids could focus on the music and the "save the historic venue" plot.

The Youth Edition script follows the standard musical theatre book format:

Lonny’s role as a fourth-wall-breaking narrator remains, but his risqué jokes are replaced with age-appropriate humor.

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