Ali Wong and Bill Hader have taken on executive-producer roles for Riki Lindhome’s stage musical “Dead Inside,” backing a project that blends stand-up candor with original songs about the comedian-songwriter’s protracted fertility odyssey. The 90-minute solo show, directed by Brian McElhaney, arrives at Washington, D.C.’s Woolly Mammoth Theatre in July after a sold-out run at the Edinburgh Fringe and a spring engagement at New York’s Solo Show Festival.
Lindhome’s score marries ukulele and synth pop to IVF needle jokes, a contrast she says “keeps the audience laughing while I’m bleeding,” according to promotional materials. Wong and Hader, long-time friends of Lindhome from the Los Angeles comedy circuit, will help shepherd a cast album and explore filmed versions once the stage schedule stabilises, a person close to the production said on condition of anonymity because financial terms remain private.
Their involvement signals a wider industry appetite for genre-mixing musicals: ScreenRant counts more than a dozen horror-comedy hybrids set for 2025 release, crediting social-media virality with boosting pre-sales for quirky, song-driven stories. Analysts also point to modest hits such as Clown in a Cornfield, which opened to $3.9 million on a $6 million budget, as evidence that audiences will gamble on left-field concepts if marketing leans into humour.
“Dead Inside” skews personal rather than macabre, yet the team believes its irreverent tone positions it well for streaming platforms hunting event specials after Hamilton and Come From Away proved lucrative sign-ups. Earlier cult efforts—Travis Betz’s micro-budget zombie tuner The Dead Inside (2011) among them—never reached mass viewers, but they demonstrated the format’s creative elasticity.
Wong brings recent Emmy and Golden Globe momentum from Netflix’s Beef, plus a multi-city stand-up tour that routinely tops Ticketmaster comedy charts. Hader, whose HBO series Barry finished its four-season run last year, has meanwhile pivoted to producing through his company Aggregate, giving “Dead Inside” access to a studio infrastructure experienced in dark comedy.
Woolly Mammoth says single-ticket demand spiked 40 percent after Wong and Hader’s names appeared on marketing blasts, prompting the nonprofit to eye an extended run if schedules permit. Whether the show ultimately leaps to Broadway or the screen, its backers argue that raw honesty, a small band and two marquee comedians make for a scalable proposition in a marketplace suddenly keen on musicals about everything— even hormone injections.