PLAYBILL.COM BRIEF ENCOUNTER With William Finn
By Robert Simonson
15 Nov 2007
William Finn
photo by Joan Marcus
Tony Award winner William Finn talks about the roots of Make Me a Song , the Off-Broadway revue of his work.
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William Finn is one lucky composer. The stagehands strike has shuttered much of Broadway, but the theatre that houses his long-running hit The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee , Circle in the Square, is one of the few stages that is unaffected by the contract dispute. What's more, Finn's new revue Make Me a Song , which collects songs from several of Finn's previous works, recently opened Off-Broadway to largely glowing reviews. The songwriter talked to Playbill.com about his good fortune.
Playbill.com: Some years ago, I saw you perform your Infinite Joy revue at Joe's Pub. Make Me a Song shares a number of songs with that revue. Is it an evolution of the earlier show?
William Finn: Rob Ruggiero, who did the show in spite of any encouragement from me — I told him he could do it as long as I had nothing to do with it — used Infinite Joy as a kind of a template, as a beginning point.
Playbill.com: And was the production at TheaterWorks in Hartford his next step?
WF: Yes. He's the [associate] artistic director at TheaterWorks, which is a 200-seat theatre, the same as we are in New York. He did it there and it was a big success.
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Playbill.com: Were you involved in the concept and the selection of songs and the casting?
WF: No. I was only involved with it since Hartford. I had nothing to do with it before then.
Playbill.com: What were your feelings about having another revue of your songs so soon after Elegies at Lincoln Center?
WF: Well, Elegies isn't a revue. Those songs were written specifically for one piece. It's a song cycle.
Playbill.com: So you view them as very different animals.
WF: Very different animals. To my mind, Elegies is the best thing I've ever written.
Playbill.com: Yes — I read once where you said the best things you'd ever done were Elegies, Falsettos and The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee . Do you still feel that way?
WF: Well, I certainly think Elegies is the best thing I've ever done. The writing is just on a higher level.
Playbill.com: You don't ever mention A New Brain as being one of your best works. Don't you have good memories of that show?
WF: Ohhhh. I don't. But it was a difficult time for me, and, perhaps because of that the production's a bit colored for me.
Playbill.com: Would you like to see the show revisited?
WF: Actually, James Lapine and I were going to try and revisit it. We'll see what happens with that.
Playbill.com: Spelling Bee is now going to close after a long run on Broadway. What are your feelings on that?
WF: I feel like I'm losing a bathroom in Midtown, but I'm gaining one just down the street [at New World Stages]. (Laughs.)
Playbill.com: Were you surprised that Spelling Bee did so well in the commercial sector?
WF: I don't think I was. But I'm always surprised how unsuccessful so many of my shows are. (Laughs) I always expect them to be successful. I always like them a lot. When they're not successful, I never understand. People should want to see [Spelling Bee ]. It's funny and moving. What else do you want?
Playbill.com: You performed some songs in Infinite Joy . Are you tempted to step into Make Me a Song and perform a song or two?
WF: I performed some songs badly in Infinite Joy . I can't imagine my singing a song would help the show at all. (Laughs.)
Playbill.com: Infinite Joy was recorded. Will Make Me a Song be recorded as well?
WF: It is going to be recorded. Sh-K-Boom will do it.