THE LEADING MEN: "Boyz" in the Band

By Wayman Wong
01 Sep 2004

Cheyenne Jackson
Cheyenne Jackson
Photo by Ben Strothmann

Try to remember "the fire of September" and you'll find three hot young guys ablaze with talent: Cheyenne Jackson (Altar Boyz), Darren Ritchie (Dracula) and Noah Racey (Where's Charley?).

JACKSON: HE'S SO CHEY

In two short years, Cheyenne Jackson has understudied the roles of Jimmy and Trevor in Thoroughly Modern Millie and Radames in Aida, and gone on dozens of times, so he can really standby and deliver. Most recently, this sexy 6-foot-3 star signed up to be Jarrod Emick's understudy in the new Elvis musical All Shook Up, which previews this winter in Chicago and opens March 24 at the Palace.

Jackson, who's as sunny as his nickname of "Shiney," says, "I've understudied Marc Kudisch, Gavin Creel, Christopher Sieber, Will Chase, Adam Pascal and soon Jarrod Emick, and they're all great guys. I'd love to originate a role, but meantime, I'm just enjoying the ride. I know my day will come." Well, that day is nearly here. He will star in Altar Boyz, a new musical comedy about a Christian boy band, Sept. 16-25 at the New York Musical Theatre Festival. Written by Kevin Del Aguila, Gary Adler and Michael Patrick Walker, it's a cross between 'N Sync and Nunsense. Jackson will play Matthew, the lead singer ("Thank God, Matthew Morrison was too busy"), and their hit single is a salute to celibacy called "Girl, You Make Me Want to Wait." His posse of pop features Ryan Duncan, David Josefsberg, Andy Karl and Tyler Maynard.

Born in Newport, Washington, Jackson did tons of theatre in the Pacific Northwest. He was "the darling of Seattle," says Kudisch, when Jackson understudied him in The Prince and the Pauper at the 5th Avenue Theatre. "Cheyenne is one of the most striking-looking men I've ever met, wow, and I'm straight. He's sweet, strapping as all get-out, and he's got a gorgeous voice and a humongous heart. I told him, 'Dude, you've got to come to New York.'" Kudisch gave him his agent's number and he soon joined Millie. At home in Manhattan, Jackson, 29, enjoys spending time with his "awesome" partner of four years and their dog, Zorra ("I sing love songs to her").



Question: First, is Cheyenne really your actual name?
Cheyenne Jackson: Yes. I'm one-16th Cheyenne Indian, so I'd like to say it's based on that. But I really got that name because my parents were fans of this 1950s TV show, "Cheyenne." It was like "Bonanza" but with worse acting. It's funny. When most people hear my name, they expect to see a sassy little black girl.

Q: How did you first get involved with Altar Boyz?
Jackson: Two years ago, I just joined Millie and heard about it through Darren Ritchie. I went to private Christian school, and I love singing pop. Omigod, I had to be a part of it, and I've done nine readings of it. It's about five guys who love God and each other: Matthew, Mark, Luke, Juan and Abe. And it's about losing your faith and regaining it. Parts of it are funny and other parts are poignant, and it's got a lot of heart. But what keeps it altogether is Michael and Gary's music. It's so good and melodic. You could take a bunch of these songs and put them on top-40 radio.

Q: Which boy bands do you enjoy?
Jackson: I love Boyz II Men and Take 6. A lot of boy bands today have a couple of good singers and the others are blenders. You don't want to hear them sing solos. But our guys are Broadway boys. They're all fantastic.

Q: Were you ever a real altar boy?
Jackson: No, I'm not Catholic, but my parents were elders in a [charismatic] church, so I know where Matthew's coming from. When I was 15, 16 and 17, I spent my summers in Mexico with Youth With a Mission, and helped build orphanages and dig ditches. I also passed out Bibles, but my Spanish wasn't too good. We went to homes and I was supposed to ask: Is your father at home? "Esta tu papá?" But I was always asking "Esta tu papa?," which meant "Is your potato at home?"

Q: How did you get hooked on showtunes?
Jackson: When I was seven, I got the soundtrack to "Annie" with Aileen Quinn and Carol Burnett, and I loved it! I started going to garage sales and collecting wonderful old cast albums. Then I'd hole up in my bedroom and mimic all the voices. As soon as I found out about Broadway, I knew I had to get there.

Q: Has it been a challenge to be out and true to your faith?
Jackson: It's been difficult sometimes, but I am who I am. My family and friends know that. All I care about is that I treat people well. It's so bizarre that it's such a big deal. I get cast in these big masculine roles and I've been out since I was 18. And I always had girlfriends [growing up], but it always ended badly. I think I knew I was gay ever since I was five, six, seven. Even though I'm a big guy, I've always been gentle and soft-spoken, and I got teased for it. You know the top [of a carton] of homogenized milk? It just says "homo," and on my first day of public school [in eighth grade], someone had put one of those caps on my desk. Kids can be cruel. Coming out was crazy hard. We had a family powwow and it was tough, but my parents rock.

Q: You once said that your parents are "bigtime Elvis fans," so how did they react when you were cast in All Shook Up?
Jackson: My mom was screaming into the phone when I told her. And I grew up watching "Viva, Las Vegas." I understudy Jarrod, who plays this Elvis character who comes to town, swivels his hips and tells everyone to follow his dream. It's kinda based on Twelfth Night with mistaken identities. I'm so thrilled to be in it.

Q: Congratulations! Do you ever count your lucky stars?
Jackson: Every single day. I remember once in Millie, I was hiding in a laundry cart with Sutton Foster and I whispered to her: "Three and a half months ago, I was watching you win the Tony and now I'm in this laundry cart about to kiss you. It blows my mind." She said, "I know. Dreams come true." That doesn't mean I haven't had my share of disappointments, but I can't believe this is my life.

For more information, visit www.cheyennejackson.com.

RITCHIE: BAT'S ENTERTAINMENT!

Darren Ritchie plays Jonathan Harker in Dracula, so he's got a real stake in the new vampire musical at the Belasco, but even if he didn't, the Carnegie Mellon grad would be happy to go to bat for Frank Wildhorn. Ritchie, who plays a Brit trying to save his wife (Melissa Errico) from Dracula (Tom Hewitt), says, "I love Frank's music. He's very underrated and he's written a beautiful score. I have this gorgeous song [‘Before the Summer Ends'] in Act II. I'm a hopeless romantic, and the idea that you might have to kill someone you love is awful. But I love singing that song every night."

Wildhorn is equally wild about Ritchie, whom he "discovered" from Camille Claudel, which starred Linda Eder and played Goodspeed's Norma Terris last fall: "Darren's got this great pop sensibility, and though he's playing a period guy, he transcends that and speaks to everyone, and I love that about him."

It might be risky to stick your neck out in a musical about Dracula, especially after last year's Dance of the Vampires, but Ritchie, 26, insists, "Our show isn't campy. We're not doing Bela Lugosi. We're doing an erotic romance, and Tom plays it sexy. Dracula can put women – and men – under his romantic spell."

As for the show's nudity, the charming six-foot actor says, "It's been blown out of proportion. It isn't gratuitous. It's artistic. When Kelli O'Hara's dress rips off, it's so beautiful. When you're in one of Des McAnuff's shows, you feel like you're in a painting that moves. Visually, he's brilliant." When told that O'Hara and Errico get paid extra for their nudity, Ritchie wisecracks, "Well, I rip my shirt open. I didn't know that!"

A recent standby for Doug Sills in Little Shop of Horrors and a cover for Gavin Creel in Thoroughly Modern Millie, Ritchie is thrilled to originate his first lead role on Broadway. He gushes that Hewitt and Errico "have been so great to me." And though he hasn't seen any backstage ghosts at the Belasco, he says some cast members have felt their presence. Does he believe in ghosts? "I think so. If they're here, there's a reason why they haven't made it to heaven or hell."

Born in Columbia, S.C., Ritchie later moved to Sarasota, Fla., with his dad, and became an expert on bats – and balls - as a teenaged pitcher. The budding baseball prospect played satellite ball until he got bit by the theater bug. Still a good sport and athlete ("I'd like to be an action hero in the movies"), he met the Joy of his life in the Broadway Softball League: actress fiancée Joy Suprano. He swears, "She's not only an amazing second basewoman, she inspires me everyday." They're getting married Sept. 3, 2005, and how Ritchie proposed to her last October was a gem: "I have a pug named Nemo, and I put the [engagement] ring on his collar and attached a note with a ribbon that said, ‘Be my wife.' Then I let Nemo trot up to her with it. Once she realized I wasn't kidding, she cried. Joy's really the best thing that's ever happened to me."

For more information, visit www.darrenritchie.net. Continued...