July 9, 2009

Home
Playbill Club
Discounts
Benefits
Join Club
Member Services
News
U.S./Canada
International
Tony Awards
Obituaries
Awards Roundup
All
Listings/Tickets
Broadway
Off-Broadway
Regional/Tours
London
Features
Week in Review
Broadway Grosses
On the Record
The DVD Shelf
Stage to Screens
On Opening Night
Inside Track
Playbill Archives
Ask Playbill.com
Special Features
Tony Features
All

Buy Broadway show merchandise
Shop for Broadway Merchandise
Casting & Jobs
Job Listings
Post a Job
Celebrity Buzz
Diva Talk
Brief Encounter
The Leading Men
Cue and A
Onstage & Backstage
Who's Who
Insider Info
Playbill Digital
Multimedia
Photo Galleries
Interactive
Polls
Quizzes
Contests
Theatre Central
Sites
Connections
Reference
Awards Database
Seating Charts
Restaurants
Hotels
FAQs

RSS News Feed


News: Tony Awards
Related Information
Email this Article Email this Article
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly

Bookmark and Share
Have Razor, Will Act: Cueball Is Key to Nomination for Chitty's Kudisch

By Robert Simonson
24 May 2005

Timing is everything, they say. And so it was for Tony-nominated actor Marc Kudisch, when he auditioned for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang last summer.

At the time, Kudisch—who has been nominated at Best Featured Actor in a Musical—was sporting a shaven head while playing a sinister role in the Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim's Assassins. "When I auditioned for Chitty, I was bald. This is how they saw me. It's all they knew me as."

A few months later, he was preparing to play Vincent Van Gogh in Michael John LaChiusa and John Strand's The Highest Yellow at the Signature Theatre in Arlington, Virginia. For that role, Kudisch nursed a full head of hair, as well as a beard and moustache, and that's the coiffure he brought to a fall reading of Chitty.

"They didn't even recognize me," he told. "And they said, 'Oh. You look like too much of a young man to play this role.' And I said, 'You never would have hired me if I'd looked like this when I auditioned, right?'" Kudisch reshaved his dome when it was time to rehearse Chitty.

The actor got a supportive call from another hairless actor the day the nominations were announced: Michael Cerveris, who won a Tony Award in 2004 for playing John Wilkes Booth in Assassins.

"He said, 'See, the bald head works, doesn't it?'"




Keyword:

Features/Location:

Writer:

 


advanced search

Free Membership
Exclusive Ticket Discounts
Join

NEWEST DISCOUNTS
Memphis
The Tempermentals
Tin Pan Alley Rag
Waiting for Godot
Our Town
Girls Night
Stone Soup
South Pacific
Vanities

ALSO SAVE ON BROADWAY'S BEST
Blithe Spirit
Chicago
Hair
Next to Normal
The 39 Steps
The Norman Conquests
The Phantom of
   the Opera
Shrek The Musical
Waiting for Godot
and more!

Latest Podcast:
"Next to Normal" orchestrator Michael Starobin and music director Charlie Alterman


Newest features from PlaybillArts.com:

Photo Journal: Dessay and Pirgu Star in Santa Fe Traviata

"Britain's Got Talent" Winner Paul Potts Brings U.S. Tour to New York July 9

Click here for more classical music, opera, and dance features.


· Schedule of Upcoming Broadway Shows
· Schedule of Upcoming Off-Broadway Shows
· Broadway Rush and Standing Room Only Policies
· Broadway's July 4 Performance Schedule Changes
· Long Runs on Broadway
· Weekly Schedule of Current Broadway Shows
· Upcoming Cast Recordings


Click here to see all of the latest polls !


Email this page to a friend!