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DIVA TALK: Chatting with Wicked's Kendra Kassebaum Plus News of Buckley, Mason and Mazzie

By Andrew Gans
16 Sep 2005

Kendra Kassebaum
Kendra Kassebaum

News, views and reviews about the multi-talented women of the musical theatre and the concert/cabaret stage.

KENDRA KASSEBAUM
Las Vegas may have scooped up Avenue Q and Spamalot, but Wicked is taking the entire country by storm. In fact, Glindas and Elphabas (or should that be Glindi and Elphabi?) are popping up throughout the land with a sit-down production in Chicago and a national tour crossing the country. The tour, which is currently playing Denver's Buell Theatre, is headed by The Boy From Oz's Stephanie J. Block as Elphaba and Kendra Kassebaum as Glinda.

Kassebaum — whose Broadway credits include Rent and the Tony-winning revival of Assassins — has received glowing notices for her performance in the role created on Broadway by Kristin Chenoweth. Some of the bouquets tossed at the actress: "Kassebaum, like her fellow witch, has an amazing voice and a disarming sass that reduces Glinda's self-absorption from an annoying character flaw to a charming eccentricity. . . . This may be Elphaba's story but it's Kassebaum's Glinda, a spastic goofball of a spoiled little rich girl, who steals the show, with the kicky makeover anthem 'Popular.' . . . Both actresses bring a yielding sense of possibilities to their roles. Kassebaum brings a shade of self-doubt, a distinct flicker of needy sadness in Glinda, even when she's manically flirting with a new dreamboat student or twitchily coaching Elphaba on how to be 'popular.'"

I recently had the chance to speak with Kassebaum during the San Francisco engagement of Wicked, which featured Eden Espinosa filling in for an injured Block as the green-faced witch. That brief chat follows:

Question: How did you originally become involved with Wicked?
Kendra Kassebaum: I auditioned when they first started mounting the show. It was so long ago I can't remember the exact details, but I was hired to cover Kristin [Chenoweth], and at the time, I just didn't think it was right for me. Doing Assassins brought the project around again, and [director] Joe Mantello told me, "Why don't you go back in?" I did, and then I got the call to do the tour.

Q: Had you ever toured before?
Kassebaum: I've done small tours, but [Wicked] is my first national tour.

Q: What's it like traveling from city to city?
Kassebaum: It's been great. We're in the rock-star phase of the tour. We're just being welcomed [and] everyone's waiting for us. We sit down for a long time, and you just get taken care of. We're in the sweet end of the deal! [Laughs.]

Q: You've had the chance to work with a few different Elphabas so far. Tell me about working with Stephanie J. Block and now Eden Espinosa.
Kassebaum: That part's been trippy. You don't realize how different takes on the role can change the whole relationship between the two women. They're both beautiful relationships, but they have definitely been different. It teaches you as an actor to be open — that's for sure. [Laughs.] I am going to miss Eden terribly, though, when she leaves. She leaves us here in San Francisco.

Q: Glinda is such a demanding role vocally. How are you finding doing eight shows a week?
Kassebaum: It's fine. It definitely is a challenge because I came to Glinda through more of an acting standpoint. I never really trained to be an opera singer or anything like that, so that's been definitely a challenge. But right now I'm at the point where I feel really good in the tour. I'm having fun. I'm not having to think about the [singing] technique. [Laughs.] Now it's fun — six months into it.

Q: Do you have any rituals or warm-ups you do before a performance?
Kassebaum: I was finding that [I would] get obsessed in the beginning [of the tour]. I was doing these 40-minute warm-ups, just giving myself a workout, and I came across a wonderful speech pathologist in Chicago, and she was like, "Kendra, just warm it up a little. Save it for the stage." [Laughs.] Mentally, I always thought that singers spent all this time [warming up], and some of them do because it's what [they] have to do, but I found for me, I just have to check if everything's there and then just go out and do it.

Q: Do you have a favorite moment or scene in Wicked for Glinda?
Kassebaum: I think probably the favorite moment is when the stage is silent and [Glinda and Elphaba] do that dance together. I love that Elphaba dance. I think it's just a nice moment. I remember seeing the show [in New York]. I saw it once, and that one five-second [moment] is the thing I carried away with me from the show.

Q: Did you see the original cast?
Kassebaum: Yeah, I did. I saw it with Kristin [Chenoweth] and Idina [Menzel]. I saw a matinee and had no clue how the hell they were doing that! I marveled at it because the show's a beast from the audience [view point] — it's huge. I didn't understand how their bodies and their voices were doing that at two in the afternoon!

Q: How long are you contracted with the tour?
Kassebaum: The majority of us are contracted a year, but I'll be heading out in February.

Q: Any chance you might go to the New York company?
Kassebaum: Well, that would be great. [Laughs.] Who knows? There are a lot of good Glindas out there I'm finding, but I definitely would welcome the idea.

Q: Tell me about your experience in Assassins.
Kassebaum: That was probably one of the highlights of my career, coming to work and seeing Stephen Sondheim standing there. It was such a small, intimate gig. You felt like you were doing something really important, especially during the time of the election. You felt like you were part of something a little bit bigger, contributing something. That's the best way I can explain it. It didn't seem like a commercial musical theatre moment. It felt more artistic.

Q: Back-tracking a bit, where were you born and raised, and when did you start performing.
Kassebaum: [I was born and raised in] St. Louis, Missouri, which we're going to hit [on the tour], which will be so much fun. I started performing probably like 15 years ago — getting paid at least.

Q: When do you think you knew it would be your career?
Kassebaum: I think I started knowing when I went on a non-Equity tour. I did study [theatre] in school. I got a degree, but I always thought I would take the theatre arts therapy [route], working with children, using it in that way. Then I went on a non-Equity tour and met some people from New York, and then I kind of knew — the typical get-off-the-bus with some money and see what happens. And, I've been very lucky. Continued...

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