Greetings from Paris, France! I mean, Red Deer, Canada. I get them mixed up because of all the similarities. For instance, they both take many hours in an airplane to get to. And thus ends the similarity.
Anyhoo, it's my second time here, and it actually is a very nice, albeit small town. The audience has been very welcoming, and the Ignition Theater Company went all out and put together my original tech for the show, which includes more than 70 cues and non-stop projections. Brava, [AUDIO-LEFT]Matt Grue! I'm still in the midst of my crazy non-stop traveling, but I'm also about to start rehearsals for [title of show] at the George Street Playhouse. I can't wait to work with that super-talented cast.
George Street has a Facebook page, and they posted my newest deconstruction for Sony Masterworks of Patti LuPone singing "Blow Gabriel Blow" in honor of our first rehearsal. However, the link they put up didn't lead to my deconstruction, it led to Matt Morrison singing "Younger Than Springtime." http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid89965101001?bclid=53925544001&bctid=632027659001. Hmph…passive/aggressive. Here's the actual link: http://www.masterworksbroadway.com/news/seth-rudetsky-deconstructs-blow-gabriel-blow.
David was also the conductor of one of my early 80's faves: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. He recalled the time the show got a visit from the composer, Andrew Lloyd Webber. This was way before he was a Sir or a Lord. Everyone simply called him Andy. OK, maybe that part is a lie. Regardless, ALW watched the show and thought the sound was horrible. He yelled that he had a good mind to close the show immediately. Well, they were on one of those crazy random Broadway schedules that had Thursdays off. Andrew came to the show the next night, saw that the theatre was closed and was horrified that everyone took him seriously! And from then on, he's never yelled at anybody. OK, maybe that part is also a lie.
David also conducted the first big three Disney musical movies: "The Little Mermaid," "Beauty and the Beast" and "Aladdin." He's such an excellent conductor and is confident enough to trust the musicians — meaning that if the orchestra didn't follow him, he wouldn't blame the musicians, he would assume it was a problem with his conducting. He said that Disney filmed all the recording sessions, and afterwards he would watch himself. Lo and behold, if there was a mistake, he would see that it was because he wasn't being clear at that moment. But the mistakes were rare; I asked him about the opening sequence of "Beauty and the Beast," which was what they call "free time" in films. Many of the songs done in films are click-tracked meaning that everyone wears headphones where you can hear a metronome. The opening of "Beauty…" was conducted out of time until something happened on screen that had a musical sting. I actually got to play piano for a few films that John Kander scored ("Billy Bathgate," "The Boys Next Door" and "Breathing Lessons"), and in free-time sections, the film is shown on a screen and underneath it is an animated fuse. When the fuse gets to the end of the screen, the conductor knows that's when the next musical button happens. So, because film orchestras are often conducted by the composer, who is usually not a trained conductor and since the beginning of "Beauty…" was around nine minutes long, Disney gave David a three-hour slot to get the opening recorded. And…he did it in one take. Brava to a two hour and 51 minute break!
David also conducted the Broadway show that had a non-stop running highly memorable (and annoying) commercial in 1970's…Sarava. Mitch Leigh, who wrote Man of La Mancha figured out a way to keep audiences coming. He played the commercial non-stop and kept the critics away. How did he keep them away? He refused to officially open the show! It ran in previews for six months! Finally, David said, the critics essentially stormed the theatre to review, the reviews clanked and the show closed. It starred Tovah Feldshuh, and David says that she taught him how to do an interview. While she was starring in Sarava, she was booked on the Joey Adams show with David. The show often has a very Jewish theme and since Tovah had played Yentl on Broadway, Joey kept asking questions about that show. But Tovah knew her objective was to publicize Sarava. So, David said the interview went like this: JOEY: Tovah, what was Yentl like?
TOVAH: Wonderful. (Full of energy.) But Sarava is a whole new experience for me and the audiences are going crazy (etc….).
JOEY: What was it like being nominated for a Tony Award for Yentl.
TOVAH: Fantastic. (Full of energy.) And hopefully, Sarava will garner me one as well. After all, audiences are loving it (etc…).
When I asked David a follow-up question, he gave a one-word answer and then immediately started plugging the Nancy LaMott DVD showing at Don't Tell Mama. Brava, Tovah Friedman!
OK. I'm about to leave Red Deer. When I get back, I start [title of show] rehearsals, plus I have to film my new Playbill Obsessed videos (latest hi-larious Judy Gold one here http://www.playbill.com/multimedia/video/4396.html ), and I have to film my new Sony Masterworks deconstructions. And I have to rehearse for the Nov. 1 Only Make Believe benefit. I've been doing this event for years, and this year we're in the fabulous Shubert Theatre again. It's hosted by Ian McKellen, and I'll be doing two sections from Broadway 101. For tickets, get thee to OnlyMakeBelieve.org. And I'm out!
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Seth Rudetsky has played piano in the pits of many Broadway shows including Ragtime, Grease and The Phantom of the Opera. He was the artistic producer/conductor for the first five Actors Fund concerts including Dreamgirls and Hair, which were both recorded. As a performer, he appeared on Broadway in The Ritz and on TV in "All My Children," "Law and Order C.I." and on MTV's "Made" and "Legally Blonde: The Search for the Next Elle Woods." He has written the books "The Q Guide to Broadway" and "Broadway Nights," which was recorded as an audio book on Audible.com. He is currently the afternoon Broadway host on Sirius/XM radio and tours the country doing his comedy show, "Deconstructing Broadway." He can be contacted at his website SethRudetsky.com, where he has posted many video deconstructions.)