By Andrew Gans
Q: What was your first professional gig in New York?
Q: Are you involved in any other projects at the moment?
Q: One last question: Why do you think Wicked is so popular?
DIVA TIDBITS
Marin Mazzie has joined the cast of the upcoming City Center Encores! presentation of Kismet, which will feature her frequent co-star, Tony Award winner Brian Stokes Mitchell. Lonny Price will direct the musical, which will play Feb. 9-12, 2006. Mazzie, who will play Lalume, and Mitchell, who will play the Poet, have previously appeared together on Broadway in Ragtime, Man of La Mancha and Kiss Me, Kate. For more information, visit www.citycenter.org.
The company members of Broadway's Wicked are producing a benefit for the victims of Hurricane Katrina, which will be held Sept. 25 at the Gershwin Theatre. The 8:30 PM concert will feature the talents of Ben Vereen, Liza Minnelli, Bebe Neuwirth, Bryan Batt, Shoshana Bean, Victoria Clark, Charlotte d'Amboise, Jill Eikenberry, Raul Esparza, Shuler Hensley, Megan Hilty, Bill Irwin, Brian d'Arcy James, Isabelle Keating, Adriane Lenox, Terrence Mann, Rue McClanahan, Michael McElroy, Julia Murney, Bebe Neuwirth, Kelli O'Hara, Denis O'Hare, David Hyde Pierce, Carole Shelley, Christopher Sieber, Michael Tucker, Frederick Weller and The Broadway Inspirational Voices. The evening will also boast performances from the casts of The Light in the Piazza, Hairspray, Mamma Mia!, All Shook Up, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Two Gentlemen of Verona and Wicked. Profits from Broadway's Celebrity Benefit for Hurricane Relief will go directly to America's Second Harvest and Quilts for Kids, two organizations working directly with the Katrina victims. Tickets for the concert are priced $100 and $300 and are available by visiting the Gershwin Theatre box office, by calling (212) 307-4100 or by logging on to www.ticketmaster.com. The Gershwin Theatre is located at 222 West 51st Street.
With songs by Stephen Sondheim, Cole Porter, Jerry Herman and Noël Coward, Elaine Stritch opened her brand-new cabaret act, At Home at the Carlyle, earlier this week to rave reviews. The Tony and Emmy Award-winning performer will play the famed Carlyle through Oct. 29. Featuring musical direction by Rob Bowman, Stritch is backed by a six-piece band comprising Bowman on piano, Lou Bruno on bass, Dave Gale on trumpet, Jack Gale on trombone, Paul Pizzuti on drums and Les Scott on reeds. Jonathan Tunick penned the arrangements and Tony winner Jules Fisher has designed the lights for Stritch's show. I thought you'd be interested to see Stritch's set list, which includes "Yes, I Can," "Perfectly Marvelous," "I Think I Like You," "I Wanna Get Married," "I Get a Kick Out of You," "Why Him," "I Went to a Marvelous Party," "He Was Too Good to Me," "That's Him," "I've Been Alone Too Long," "Fifty Percent," "Dear World," "You're the Pop (You're the Top)," "Could I Leave You?," "Heart" and "It Amazes Me." The Café Carlyle is located within the Carlyle Hotel at Madison Avenue and 76th Street. Cover charge is $105 Tuesday-Thursday evenings and $125 Friday and Saturday nights. For reservations call (212) 744-1600 or log on to www.thecarlyle.com.
Mamma Mia!'s Karen Mason has an especially busy fall schedule. After starring as Dorothy Parker in the New York Music Theatre Festival's production of You Might As Well Live (Sept. 22-Oct. 2 at the 45th Street Theatre), Mason will release her latest solo recording. Entitled "The Sweetest of Nights," the CD features musical direction by Christopher Denny and will hit stores in the beginning of October on Zevely Records Inc. Song titles include "A Whole New World," "You and I," "Watch What Happens"/"I Will Wait for You," "Almost Like Being in Love," "My Foolish Heart," "He's Got a Way," "Everything"/"Married," "What's Wrong With This Picture," "Cold Enough to Cross," "The Winner Takes It All," "Let's Face the Music and Dance," "People" and "The Sweetest of Nights." Mason will then celebrate the release of her fifth solo recording with a two-week engagement at the new Manhattan cabaret space, The Encore. The singer-actress will play the intimate venue Oct. 27-Nov. 7. Performances are Thursday-Monday evenings; cover charge is $30. The Encore is located at 226 West 47th Street; call (212) 221-3960 for reservations. (For tickets to You Might As Well Live, visit www.nymf.org.)
Well, that's all for now. Happy diva-watching! E-mail questions or comments to agans@playbill.com.
16 Sep 2005
Kassebaum: Soon after I got to New York, I got my Equity card doing Chorus Line in Bridgeport. That's where I got my card, and then I just worked around. I worked at a lot of regional [theatres], and then I started working with Rent, my second home. [Laughs.]
Kassebaum: Right now, no. There was a Richard Maltby project that's still in the running called The Sixties Project that's very dear to him and his wife. I had been involved with that since the beginning, but I don't know if that's still happening. It's actually a beautiful show — using the music from that time period and telling the stories of the struggles in the sixties. Young men going off to war. [In the show I'm] involved in an interracial relationship, which was quite a scandal then. . . . We had done two or three readings. It's Richard Maltby and his wife's [project], and Richard was directing.
Kassebaum: I think it's universal with humans that sometimes you just don't quite fit into the mold of what people or society wants you to be. I think anytime you see an underdog, you want to root for that person. And I think that's why it's huge with a lot of young women.
Those wishing to study with Tony Award winner Betty Buckley can do so this month! There are still a small number of spaces open for Buckley's master classes at the T. Schreiber Studios. A long-time instructor at the Schreiber Studio, Buckley will offer classes in Song Interpretation Sept. 19, 21, 23, 25, 28 and 29. The 7 PM classes will begin with a lecture/demonstration focusing on Buckley's tools, philosophy and relaxation-meditation techniques. Subsequent classes will begin with meditation and then focus on individual work; an accompanist will be provided. Auditors are also welcome at a reduced fee. Established in 1969, the T. Schreiber Studio is recognized as one of the foremost acting schools and professional theatre labs in New York City and is located at 151 W. 26th Street on the 7th floor. Those interested in studying with the star of Cats, Sunset Boulevard and Triumph of Love should call (212) 741-0209.
DIVA TALK: Chatting with Wicked's Kendra Kassebaum Plus News of Buckley, Mason and Mazzie
[Wicked plays Denver's Buell Theatre Sept. 16-Oct. 2. For tickets, call (303) 893-4100 or visit www.denvercenter.org.]



