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DIVA TALK: Chatting with Avenue Q's Ann Sanders Plus News of LaMott, LuPone, Krakowski and Menzel
By Andrew Gans
News, views and reviews about the multi-talented women of the musical theatre and the concert/cabaret stage. ANN SANDERS Being Jewish, I don't have too much experience with Christmas Eve, but the two I've encountered on Broadway — that zesty, comedic belter Ann Harada and her understudy, Ann Sanders — have both been terrific. Sanders, who is currently playing the role of the Japanese therapist while Harada is on maternity leave (she recently gave birth to Elvis Harada Litman), is delightful in the part, bringing her strong, rangy alto and wonderful comic timing to the Tony-winning musical at the Golden Theatre. Avenue Q, it should be noted, remains what is perhaps the most enjoyable musical now running on Broadway. The cast, led by the multi-talented John Tartaglia and the incandescent Stephanie D'Abruzzo, is better than ever, and Sanders fits in beautifully. I recently had the chance to chat with the actress, who has also appeared on Broadway in Beauty and the Beast as well as in the German mountings of Beast (as Belle) and Miss Saigon (as Ellen). That interview follows:
Question: When and how did you become involved with Avenue Q?
Q: Were the auditions with members of the cast or did you read with a casting director?
Q: Had you seen the show at that point?
Q: At that point, did you think of yourself as possibly playing Christmas Eve? Did you see that as a role you wanted to do or was that an idea that came later?
Q: Do you remember the first time you had the chance to go on as Christmas Eve?
Q: What's it like being an understudy? Is it nerve-wracking not knowing when you might go on?
Q: How does it feel now that you've been able to play the role for a period of time?
Q: I was really impressed again last night that everyone is still giving 100 percent to their roles. You wouldn't know that the show's been running for over a year.
Q: Do you have a favorite moment as Christmas Eve?
Q: Do you enjoy performing "The More You Ruv Someone"?
Q: What do you think it's going to be like going back to covering rather than playing the role every night?
Q: Tell me a little bit about your history. Where did you grow up, and when did you know you wanted to be a performer?
Q: Were those productions in English?
Q: Did you speak German before?
Q: You did Beauty and the Beast here as well, right?
Q: Do you find it at all difficult being Asian-American to find roles or has that not really affected you?
Q: Speaking of playing the role, should Ann Harada not want to play Vegas, is that something you would like to do?
Q: Do you have any dream roles, any musicals you'd love to do?
Q: Do you have any other projects in the works? [Sanders will offer her final performance as Christmas Eve Jan. 23, and the role's superb originator, Ann Harada, returns Jan. 25. Whether you visit Avenue Q before or after the 23rd, however, you'll be treated to an evening of wonderful gifts.]
DIVA TIDBITS I was more than thrilled earlier this week to receive a copy of the forthcoming CD, "Nancy LaMott—Live at Tavern on the Green." After an eight-year wait, this "new" LaMott recording — taped live at Tavern on the Green just weeks before her untimely death — will arrive in stores Feb. 1 on the Midder Music label (with distribution by LML Music). That same day will also mark the re-release of five of LaMott's previous magnificent recordings: "Beautiful Baby," "Come Rain or Come Shine: The Songs of Johnny Mercer," "My Foolish Heart," "Listen to My Heart" and "What's Good About Goodbye?" (All discs are being released on the Midder Music label with distribution by LML Music.) The Tavern on the Green CD — which I will review next week — was taped at the famed Manhattan landmark during LaMott's final cabaret engagement, which began Oct. 27, 1995. LaMott's producer, David Friedman — who also penned such LaMott signature tunes as "Listen to My Heart," "We Can Be Kind" and "Help Is on the Way" — created the new recording from various performances during that final run, and the single disc also includes LaMott's engaging and often humorous patter. The complete song list for the recording, which features musical director Christopher Marlowe on piano, Steve LaSpina on bass and John Redsecker on drums, follows: "Listen to My Heart" (David Friedman), "The People That You Never Get to Love" (Rupert Holmes), "Sailin' On" (Alan Menken-Dean Pitchford), "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" (Richard Rodgers-Lorenz Hart), "Jeepers Creepers" (Harry Warren-Johnny Mercer), "How Deep Is the Ocean" (Irving Berlin), "Waters of March" (Antonio Carlos Jobim), "I Got the Sun in the Morning" (Irving Berlin), "The Promise" (Alan and Marilyn Bergman-David Shire), "Help Is On the Way" (David Friedman) and "The Secret O' Life " (James Taylor) Visit www.nancylamott.com for more information.
It was announced earlier this week that Patti LuPone will guest star in an upcoming episode of the hit NBC situation comedy "Will & Grace." LuPone will play herself in the Emmy-winning series, which often features celebrity guests. Others who have made appearances as their celebrity selves include Cher, Jennifer Lopez, Janet Jackson and Tony Award winner Bebe Neuwirth. It's an especially busy time for the Tony and Olivier Award-winning LuPone, who is touring her acclaimed Matters of the Heart concert throughout the country. As previously announced, La LuPone will star in concert stagings of Regina at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts March 10-12. Following that D.C. appearance, she will return to New York for her third solo Carnegie Hall concert. The March 14 evening is titled "The Lady with the Torch" and will feature songs culled from her recent appearances at Feinstein's at the Regency. She'll end the month of March playing Fosca in the American Songbook presentation of Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine's Passion. That March 30-April 1 staging also features Tony Award winners Audra McDonald and Michael Cerveris.
Tony Award winner Jane Krakowski, currently in negotiations to star in the Donmar Warehouse's production of Guys and Dolls, has titled her upcoming Lincoln Center concert Better When It's Banned: Selections From a Sinful Songbook of Prohibition and Hayes Code Era Gems. The Feb. 1 evening at the Time Warner Center's Allen Room, will mark Krakowski's solo concert debut and will feature musical direction and piano accompaniment by Michael Kozarin. The original one-woman show will boast such classics as "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" and "Mad About the Boy" as well as rarities like "When I'm Low I Get High," "But in the Morning No," "A Guy What Takes His Time," "Wacky Dust" and "Gloomy Sunday." Krakowski, according to a press statement, has "long been fascinated by this controversial period in history. She has been especially moved by stories of artists directly affected by these moral codes and the great music that was lost because of them, as well as what these codes, though no longer in effect, tell us now about current battles with censorship." Tickets for the 7:30 and 9:30 PM concerts — priced at $40, $55 and $70 — are available at the Alice Tully Hall box office (Broadway and 65th Street), by calling (212) 721-6500 or by visiting www.lincolncenter.org.
Wicked's Idina Menzel ends her Tony Award-winning run as Elphaba this Sunday (Jan. 9) at the Gershwin Theatre. On her newly updated website, the actress-singer says, "In 2003 I was cast as Elphaba, the wicked witch of the west in Wicked. Words can't express the overwhelmingly profound experience it has been both personally and professionally." Menzel, who will soon begin filming the role that launched her stage career — Maureen in Jonathan Larson's Rent — will be succeeded in Wicked by Shoshana Bean, who begins performances in the Stephen Schwartz musical Jan. 11.
Well, that's all for now. Happy diva-watching! E-mail questions or comments to agans@playbill.com. |
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