By Andrew Gans
Question: Going back to Parade, was that your Broadway debut?
Question: What was that experience like?
Question: Have you had a chance to see 13 yet?
10 Oct 2008
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Christy Carlson Romano with Brent Carver in Parade
photo by Joan Marcus
Romano: Yeah, that was my Broadway debut.
Romano: It was great. Lincoln Center is very different from working in a small Broadway theatre. I had gone to high school up there, at PCS, but at that time I wasn't going to PCS, I was going to a high school in Connecticut. So it was really funny, because I would end up going back to PCS and graduating from there. Parade was great. Jason Robert Brown is amazing. We still talk because we share a stage door. I was 13 when I had done Parade, so he's like, "This is so funny that now you're all grown up, and now I'm working with a bunch of 13-year-olds. How time flies!" Jason Robert Brown, Alfred Uhry and Hal [Prince]… I was so blessed to work with them. I had a principal role, and it was a memorable role, and I'm on the soundtrack. I didn't know at the time how amazing it was. I was so young, but now I come back to theatre and I'm like, "That was pretty amazing."
Romano: I thought it was great. Jason's music is always epic. It's always memorable and very beautiful and very catchy. It's funny because his elements are there. He has this blues element in his music always. I remember hearing that he had started [his career playing] in a piano bar and in the cabaret world. I find that he has a touch of that in his [music]. He has the blues and the soul and the cabaret, and I think that's what people enjoy from modern musicians. The modern ear is so used to hearing hip hop and hearing so many bluesy elements in their everyday music — that's what I think makes Jason very accessible to people of all ages.
Romano: No. I used to. When I was growing up and I was angsty, I would sort of feel like I didn't like being different. Now I look back and I see all of these amazing experiences that I've had. I got to meet multiple presidents at one time, and I got to travel the country twice by the time I was 17, and I would never take that back for a million years. And I worked, and I earned it. Kids generally have to do mundane things and be bored in their life. I never knew what it was to be bored. I'm grateful.
Question: Was your mom a performer at one time?
Romano: Believe it or not, nobody has been a performer [in my family]. I think my great great uncle is Red Skelton... People always ask me, "Are you related to Ray Romano?" And I'm like, "No." [Laughs.] I actually came out of the theatre the other night, and somebody said, "Hey, I love your dad!"
Question: Do you have a preference for TV or theatre?
Romano: I think right now I'm very into theatre, but I also love TV. In TV you get paid very well, and you have a set schedule. It's 12 hours a day, and it's just a whole different experience. Theatre is unlike any other medium. You get that instant gratification, and it's pretty cool. You get the adrenaline rush. You don't get that [with TV] because you know you can mess up and start over again. It puts that much more perspective on your actual acting ability.
Question: Talking about the kids that are in 13, what advice would you give to young performers?
Romano: I think those kids are super-talented. I've met them. When I went over there, Jason asked me to go down and speak with them. I just checked in and said, "Hey, what's up guys? I'm next door if you ever want to hang out or ask me any questions." I know how it is to be at that age and to be working with so many other kids. To have all those weird questions and the hormones raging and, on top of that, being expected to carry the weight of the show. I think all of those kids are so special. You can see it when you watch the show because [they all have] their own characters that they've created. Jason knew that . . . He and Robert [Horn] cast these special kids. On the surface they just seem like normal kids, but they are very special, and each is [his or her] own person. I'm quite an advocate for children at that age, at the "tween" age. For some reason, I have a kind of connection with kids at that age because of the work that I've done with Disney . . . .It's cool because I feel they can come to me and they can ask me questions. I've been there, so I kind of feel like a role model to those kids, and I mean it. If they really have any questions to ask me, they should totally come by and ask me. That goes for any kid trying to make it in the business. I definitely understand. I don't regret the path that I've taken, but it was a long, hard, committed path.
Question: What's next for you?
Romano: I don't know. [Laughs.] I'm hoping to maybe stay in New York and hopefully go to another show. We'll see because I don't want to leave. I love it here, and I have such a family here and so much support and love, and I feel so blessed. I would love to stay around for a little while, but we'll see. The sunny side of the country might call me again, and I might have to try and go work in TV again. But I have new representation, and I have a team of people that discuss these things with me. Just to have been called upon to be a part of Avenue Q, I just feel honored everyday going to work.
[Avenue Q plays the John Golden Theatre, 252 West 45th Street. For tickets call (212) 239-6200 or visit www.telecharge.com or AvenueQ.com.]
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FOR THE RECORD
"Patti LuPone at Les Mouches" (Ghostlight Records)
Christmas will come a month early for the legion of Patti LuPone fans when "Patti LuPone at Les Mouches" arrives Nov. 11 from Ghostlight Records.
It was during LuPone's Tony-winning run in the original Broadway production of Evita when the current Gypsy star also took the cabaret world by storm performing a record-breaking, sold-out 27 weeks at the now-closed Manhattan nightclub Les Mouches.
The new, must-have disc — which bursts forth as if LuPone were singing directly to you — was compiled from live recordings made during that six-month period. Created and written by David Lewis and LuPone, the high-voltage act is an exhilarating mix of show tunes, standards, pop hits and disco tunes and features a young, golden-voiced LuPone thrillingly belting out showstopper after showstopper. Much of LuPone's giddy patter is also included in the 20-track disc, which features music arrangements and direction by Lewis. In fact, it's almost as much fun to hear LuPone's gushing over closing-night audience member Stephen Sondheim as it is to hear her lovely performance of Sondheim's "Not While I'm Around."
After a musical intro led by the fantastic disco-tinged band, LuPone bounces onto the stage to belt out the catchy "Latin from Manhattan," which leads into a portion of the Gershwin classic "I Got Rhythm." Her enthusiasm is simply infectious, and one can't help ride the wave of positive emotion that LuPone delivers in song after song.
Among the disc's numerous highlights are a stentorian version of Stephen Schwartz's "Meadowlark" from "that gobbler" The Baker's Wife; the touching "Everything I Am," which was penned by music director Lewis; a version of "Mr. Tambourine Man" that LuPone imbues with depths of passion; two riveting Evita selections, a dazzling, from-the-guts "Rainbow High" and a moving "Don't Cry for Me Argentina"; a great take on the '60s hit "Downtown" that slightly alters the melody; and a beautiful reading of the Norma Rae anthem, "It Goes Like it Goes."
Truly, each track is a rediscovered gem.
["Patti LuPone at Les Mouches" is produced by Kurt Deutsch and Joel Moss and co-produced by David Lewis and Ben Rimalower.]
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13 (Ghostlight Records)
Of the three-named composers of his generation, Jason Robert Brown's work has always been the most tuneful. There were portions of his Tony-winning score for Parade that were simply ravishing, and his compositions for The Last Five Years and Songs for a New World also revealed a wonderful gift for melody. Brown's latest score for the new Broadway musical 13, which is purposefully less sophisticated than Parade, is also loaded with melodic, ear-catching songs. The new musical, which is currently playing the Bernard Jacobs Theatre, boasts a cast and band composed entirely of multi-talented teenagers. Standouts include the show's two leads, Graham Phillips, who plays Evan, the 12-year-old who is about to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah just as his mother decides to relocate from Manhattan to Indiana; and Allie Trimm as Patrice, the new friend Evan lets down and eventually reconciles with on his journey to becoming a man. There are many highlights to the rock-influenced score, including the show's toe-tapping opening number, "13"; the humorous "The Lamest Place in the World"; the ballad "What It Means to Be a Friend," delivered beautifully by young actress Trimm; "All Hail the Brain," in which Evan details his schemes to help his new friends; the interestingly rhythmic "If That's What It Is"; and the utterly moving "A Little More Homework."
[The 13 original cast recording — now available at your favorite digital online music source, such as iTunes, or at the Ghostlight website — is produced by Jeffrey Lesser and composer Brown and executive produced by Ghostlight president Kurt Deutsch and Bill Rosenfield. The disc will be available in stores for the holidays.]
DIVA TIDBITS
Bailey Hanks, who won her role in Broadway's Legally Blonde via the MTV reality series "Legally Blonde The Musical: The Search for Elle Woods," will play Sharpay in the Paper Mill Playhouse's upcoming production of Disney's High School Musical. Paper Mill artistic director Mark S. Hoebee will direct the musical, which will play the New Jersey venue Nov. 5-Dec. 7. Denis Jones will choreograph. Tickets are available by calling (973) 376-4343 or by visiting www.papermill.org. The Paper Mill Playhouse is located on Brookside Drive in Millburn, NJ.
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Emmy Award-winning actress and comedian Judy Gold will host Broadway Loves Joe's Pub, a Nov. 2 concert featuring performers who have played the intimate stage over the past decade. Presented and directed by Jamie McGonnigal with music direction by Lynne Shankel, the one-night-only event will begin at 9:30 PM. The evening will boast performances by Tony winners Laura Benanti and Cady Huffman as well as Gavin Creel and Steven Pasquale. Additional performers will be announced shortly. Joe's Pub is located within the Public Theater at 425 Lafayette Street. Tickets, priced $50, are available by calling (212) 967-7555 or by visiting visit www.joespub.com.
Tony Award winner Carol Channing, who is currently recovering from surgery following a broken femur and hip, will make her first post-surgery public appearance in November at the Celebration of Caring 2008. The Nov. 15 event, which benefits Actors and Others for Animals, will be held at the Universal Hilton and Tower Ballroom in Universal City, CA. The Celebration will also toast the award-winning career of Channing; expected guests include JoAnne Worley, Betty White, Dick Van Dyke, Tippi Hedren, Carole Cook and Bruce Vilanch. The event will begin at 11 AM with a cocktail reception and silent auction followed by a gourmet vegetarian lunch at 12:30 PM and the program and toast at 1:30 PM. Universal Hilton and Tower Ballroom is located at 555 Universal Hollywood Drive in Universal City. Tickets, priced $175-$225, are available by calling (818) 755-5080 or by visiting www.actorsandothers.com.
The Actors Fund of America's Musical Mondays concert series, held in the lobby of the Pantages Theatre, will present Lainie Kazan Oct. 27 and Stephen Schwartz Nov. 24. For the latter, the Wicked composer will be joined by Tony Award winner Debbie Gravitte as well as Jason Alexander, Susan Egan, Jason Graae, Karen Morrow and Hila Plitmann. The evenings begin with a pre-show cocktail reception at 7:30 PM, followed by the performance and a post-show dessert reception with the artists. The Pantages Theater is located at 6233 Hollywood Blvd. in Los Angeles, CA. Tickets, priced $125 ($200 for both concerts), are available by calling (323) 933-9244, ext. 54.
And, finally, a shout out to the terrifically talented cast of [title of show] — Hunter Bell, Susan Blackwell, Heidi Blickenstaff and Jeff Bowen — as they head into their final weekend at the Lyceum Theatre. Thanks for kicking off the season with a show filled with such warmth, joy, humor, hummable tunes and heart-touching moments. I had the great pleasure of revisiting the little-musical-that-did Thursday night, and I was again thrilled by the talent and moved by its message. [title of show] may not have run a decade on Broadway, but who knows how many "vampires" it killed: How many long-forgotten novels have been taken out of desk drawers or how many new musicals are now in the works? If you haven't had the pleasure of enjoying this intimate, often hilarious musical, get thee to the Lyceum this weekend.
Well, that's all for now. Happy diva-watching! E-mail questions or comments to agans@playbill.com.





![Heidi Blickenstaff, Jeff Bowen, Hunter Bell and Susan Blackwell who are part of it all in [titile of show].](/images/photo/[/t/[titleofshow]bway460d.jpg)
