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All the songs in ‘Just In Time’ on Broadway

The catalog of 20th-century crooner Bobby Darin — including famous covers like "Mack the Knife" and Darin originals like "Splish Splash" — powers his life story.

Just in Time, a splish-splashy, six-time Tony Award-nominated musical, celebrates the life of crooner Bobby Darin as he rose to stardom and Grammy-winning status on a wave of pop hits.

In the 1950s and '60s, Darin made a name covering chart-toppers by others and penning many of his own. Decades later, tunes like “Dream Lover,” “Mack the Knife,” and “Beyond the Sea” still tickle the ear, doubly so thanks to director Alex Timbers’s nightclub-inspired staging at the Circle in the Square Theatre.

Emmy nominee Matthew Morrison (Glee) stars as Darin through April 19 only, and Tony nominee Jeremy Jordan (Newsies, Floyd Collins) steps into the role from April 21.

Learn more about all the hit songs and deep cuts in Just in Time, then get tickets to the show for the Time of your life.

Get Just in Time tickets now.

Summary

  • Just in Time uses the music of crooner Bobby Darin to chart his life and career
  • Darin's biggest hits included in the show are "Splish Splash"; "Mack the Knife"; "Dream Lover"; and "Beyond the Sea"
1.

“This Could Be the Start of Something Big”

2.

“Just in Time”

3.

“Beyond the Sea”

4.

“Orange Furniture Store”

5.

“My First Real Love”

6.

“Rock Island Line”

7.

“Imitation Medley”

8.

“Splish Splash”

9.

“Who’s Sorry Now”

10.

“That’s All”

11.

“Queen of the Hop”

12.

“The Good Life”

13.

“Lazy River”

14.

“Mack the Knife”

15.

"Dream Lover"

16.

“Not for Me”

17.

“Multiplication”

18.

“Eighteen Yellow Roses”

19.

“Irresistible You”

20.

“Things”

21.

“Rainin’”

22.

“I Am”

23.

“Some of These Days”

24.

“If I Were a Carpenter”

25.

“Once in a Lifetime”

26.

“That’s All”

27.

“The Curtain Falls”

28.

“Curtain Call Medley”

1.

“This Could Be the Start of Something Big”

In 1956, this song replaced the original opening theme to the NBC talk show Tonight Starring Steve Allen. Darin covered the tune, and Just in Time fittingly gets off to an upbeat start with it.

“This Could Be the Start of Something Big”

2.

“Just in Time”

Introduced in the 1956 Broadway musical Bells Are Ringing, the song celebrates the arrival of your soulmate at the right moment. In the show, it makes for a perfect introduction for the lead actor, who speaks to the audience as himself before transforming into Darin.

3.

“Beyond the Sea”

The song, a version of the French ditty “La Mer,” casts its on eye a distant love “who stands on distant sands.” Darin popularized it in 1959, and the show uses it to set up the journey through the life of the singer, who was born Walden Robert Cassotto.

4.

“Orange Furniture Store”

One of Darin’s earliest career moves was writing a commercial jingle with Don Kirschner. “For value you can’t beat, start talking to your feet, we’ll hop a bus and come with us...”

The song isn’t listed in the program, but it’s included on the cast recording as a bonus track.

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09:00

Breakfast at Liberty Bagels

Regularly named one of the city’s best bagel shops, the unassuming Liberty Bagels is the perfect spot to get a classic NYC breakfast sandwich.

10:00

Macy’s Herald Square

One of the world’s largest stores, Macy’s is a sight to behold, especially when it’s decked out for the holidays.

5.

“My First Real Love”

Connie Francis would become one of the biggest pop stars of the late 1950s and early 1960s, and she was a major player in Darin’s life. They share this song, co-written by Darin, that reflects on heartfelt, lasting memories of youthful romance.

“My First Real Love”

6.

“Rock Island Line”

This song about outsmarting authorities was a big hit in the U.K. as Darin was getting his footing as a performer. He lands an early-career break when he performs it on a TV show — even though, as comedically depicted in the show, he couldn't remember the words.

7.

“Imitation Medley”

Breaking through as a musician with something new to say — and sing — wasn’t easy in a time when producers were looking for the next Elvis. This medley includes a mix of songs Darin covered as he found his sound, including “Tutti Frutti,” “Pretty Betty,” “Riders in the Sky (A Cowboy Legend),” “Blue-Eyed Mermaid,” and “Ain’t That a Shame.” It also features “Don’t Call My Name,” which Darin co-wrote.

8.

“Splish Splash”

A family member came up with the idea for this playful rock-and-roll novelty number from 1958 that Darin co-wrote. It’s about a fun, unexpected bathtub party, and it gives Darin's career a major boost. That's all shown in the musical, and plenty of the actor playing Darin is shown, too, in a fan-favorite bathtub sequence.

Just in Time got a popularity boost, and the attention of a new generation, when the "Splish Splash" dance break went viral on social media in 2025.

9.

“Who’s Sorry Now”

Darin’s rise is mirrored by Francis’s in the first half of the show. This tearjerker of a tune that asks “Whose heart is aching for breaking each vow?” was a big hit for her. It’s also a big moment for the actress playing Francis on stage.

“Who’s Sorry Now”

10.

“That’s All”

“I can only give you love that lasts forever and a promise to be near each time you call.” Introduced by Nat King Cole in 1952 and later popularized as the title track of Darin's 1959 album, "That's All" celebrates deep, enduring love and commitment despite life’s ups and downs. In the show, Darin shares the number with Polly, whom he calls Mom.

11.

“Queen of the Hop”

Darin turned this number about the most popular girl at a lively teen dance into a pop hit. In the show, his performance of the song at a New York City ballroom coincides with bad news about his Polly — the queen of his life.

12.

“The Good Life”

“The good life lets you hide all the sadness you feel.” Written in French, the song about avoiding heartbreak was translated and became a hit for Tony Bennett in the early 1960s. In the show, Nina, whom Darin knew as his sister, reveals a startling secret about herself and Polly during this number.

13.

“Lazy River”

“Linger in the shade of a kind, old tree, throw away your troubles, dream a dream with me.” That’s the advice of this 1931 song co-written by Hoagy Carmichael, and Darin's cover reached number 14 on the Hot 100 chart. Life is never really a lazy river for Darin, as the show makes clear.

“Lazy River”

14.

“Mack the Knife”

Written in 1928, the song is from Bertolt Brecht's play The Threepenny Opera, which was revived on Broadway in 1955. Darin put his stamp on the song about a charming, murderous gangster to great success in 1959. This was the year Darin won two Grammys: for Best New Artist and Record of the Year (an album he financed, per the musical). This show uses this breakthrough as a fitting end to Act 1.

15.

"Dream Lover"

In 1959, Darin wrote this swoony tune about ideal romance and released it as a single that hit number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. As Act 2 begins, life is pretty idyllic for Darin: He’s making his movie debut in Come September with Sandra Dee, who’s already a movie star with a Golden Globe.

16.

“Not for Me”

“Ballads are being sung, but not for me. Church bells are being rung, but not for me.” Love is clearly missing in this Darin song released in 1963. In the show, Sandra Dee sings it as she laments about childhood happiness lost to fame.

“Not for Me”

17.

“Multiplication”

Darin's playful early-’60s song celebrates love and starting a family. He achieved moderate international chart success with it, especially in the U.K., and sings it in Come September. In the show, two supporting players perform the song.

18.

“Eighteen Yellow Roses”

“I never doubted your love for a minute, I always thought that you would be true. But now this box and the flowers in it, I guess there's nothin' left for me to do.” Darin wrote this song, released as a single from his same-named album in 1963, to gain favor with Dee’s mother. The show depicts him doing just that as feelings bloom between Darin and Dee during filming.

19.

“Irresistible You”

“Your magic hands, your lovin’ eyes, your kissable lips make my heart realize I’m in love.” Undeniable attraction is the theme of this 1960 Bobby Peterson song, which Darin covered to modest acclaim two years later. The words speak for themselves about the film co-stars’ offscreen lives. At first, anyway.

20.

“Things”

Released in 1962, Darin’s number 3 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 nostalgically reflects on memories of past love. In Just in Time, after Darin and Dee tie the knot, their relationship starts to unravel when she joins him on tour and turns to alcohol and gambling for company while he performs.

“Things”

21.

“Rainin’”

“It keeps on rainin' every day, just keeps on rainin', won't go away.” Darin poured out his heartache over a failing relationship in his 1966 song. The number underscores his divorce in the musical.

22.

“I Am”

“I'm a captain without an ocean and a lover without emotion and a monk free of devotion, but I am. Most of all, I am.” Darin expresses being adrift in his song. On stage, the song is an instrumental number, but it’s performed in full on the Just in Time cast recording.

23.

“Some of These Days”

Darin, who became politically active in the 1960s, covered this 1910 song associated with the performer Sophie Tucker. “If you leave me, you know it’s gonna grieve me,” go the lyrics. In the show, Polly reappears as a long-hidden secret comes out.

“Some of These Days”

24.

“If I Were a Carpenter”

Released in 1966, this folk song expresses unconditional love and devotion. Darin’s version achieved modest chart success.

Though their marriage curdles, Dee and Darin’s relationship sweetens in this moment of the show, when they realize they’re better divorced than married.

25.

“Once in a Lifetime”

The song is from the 1962 Broadway musical Stop the World - I Want to Get Off. It sings of a turning point: “Just once in a lifetime, a man knows a moment, one wonderful moment when fate takes his hand.” In the musical, Darin, a nightclub animal, sings this when he returns to perform in 1972 at his natural habitat: the Copacabana.

26.

“That’s All”

In this reprise of the number sung by Polly in the first act, it is sung by Darin — as if it's a punctuation mark at a pivotal point in his life.

“That’s All”

27.

“The Curtain Falls”

Released in 1966, Darin’s song reflects on the end of a performance. As the makeup comes off, the artist hopes the audience is left happy because... that’s all. Darin died at age 37 after heart surgery.

28.

“Curtain Call Medley”

Don't worry, you won't go home on a downer note. As the cast take their bows, they perform snippets of various songs heard throughout the show. You can sing along, dance along, and even film this part of the show, to rewatch when you inevitably have Darin's tunes stuck in your head on the way home.

Get Just in Time tickets now.

Photo credit: Just in Time on Broadway. (Photos by Matthew Murphy)

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Frequently asked questions

What's the age requirement for Just in Time?

The recommended age for Just in Time is Children under 8 years old will not be admitted..

How do you book tickets for Just in Time?

Book tickets for Just in Time on New York Theatre Guide.

How long is Just in Time?

The running time of Just in Time is 2hr 15min. Incl. intermission.

Where is Just in Time playing?

Just in Time is playing at Circle in the Square Theatre. The theatre is located at 235 West 50th Street , New York, 10019.

What is Just in Time about?

Discover the man behind the music: Just in Time is a new jukebox bio-musical, nominated for six Tony Awards and starring Jonathan Groff as legendary singer Bobby Darin, whose short life was filled with timeless hits — and amazing discoveries that unraveled at every turn.

What are the songs in Just in Time?

As a jukebox musical, this show will feature tons of Bobby Darin's beloved hits, including "Beyond the Sea,” “Mack the Knife,” “Splish Splash,” and “Dream Lover."

Who directed Just in Time?

Tony Award winner Alex Timbers, known for his work on Moulin Rouge!, directs this new production.

Is Just in Time good?

This is a new musical that has not opened yet, but with great ingredients combining the talents of Jonathan Groff's performance, Alex Timbers's direction, and Bobby Darin's music, audiences can expect an amazing time.

Is Just in Time appropriate for kids?

There is no age recommendation yet but audiences four and under are not allowed in Broadway venues.

Who wrote Just in Time?

Alex Timbers developed this show featuring Bobby Darin's music. Warren Leight and Isaac Oliver wrote the book.