Wesla Whitfield to Sing Rodgers, Hart & Arlen in NYC March 17-21 | Playbill

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News Wesla Whitfield to Sing Rodgers, Hart & Arlen in NYC March 17-21 San Francisco chanteuse Wesla Whitfield, who recently appeared in the Lincoln Center "American Songbook" tribute to Richard Rodgers, will sing Rodgers, Hart and Harold Arlen works March 17-21, at the Jazz Standard in Manhattan.

San Francisco chanteuse Wesla Whitfield, who recently appeared in the Lincoln Center "American Songbook" tribute to Richard Rodgers, will sing Rodgers, Hart and Harold Arlen works March 17-21, at the Jazz Standard in Manhattan.

The five-day run will be her first multi-day Manhattan appearance since her fall 1998 run at Off-Broadway's Kaufman Theatre.

With husband Mike Greensill on piano and Michael Moore on bass, Whitfield will offer two sets nightly: Easy to Remember: Songs of Lorenz Hart (early show) and My Shining Hour: Songs of Harold Arlen (late show).

Shows are 8 & 10 PM March 17-18, 8 & 10:30 PM March 19-20 and 7 & 9 PM March 21. There is a cover and drink minimum charge.

The Jazz Standard is at 116 E. 27th St. in Manhattan. Call (212) 576 2232. *

Whitfield's Off-Broadway debut, Life Upon the Wicked Stage, played Oct. 13-Nov. 1, 1998. Her following in New York is rooted in her 1993 debut at (and subsequent returns to) the Algonquin Hotel. At Alice Tully Hall March 5-6, 1999, she appeared in With a Song in My Heart, the all-star "American Songbook" tribute to Rodgers.

In fall 1998, Whitfield, known for her sunny, swinging interpretations of pop standards and show tunes at nightspots on both coasts, told Playbill On-Line she wanted to try something new, so in her Wicked Stage solo show she shared anecdotes about her life with a songlist that includes "The Other Side of the Tracks" (from Little Me), "There's No Business Like Show Business" (from Annie Get Your Gun), "Almost Like Being in Love" (from Brigadoon) and more.

The show, whose title is borrowed from a song in Show Boat, later played the Plush Room of the York Hotel in her hometown, San Francisco, Nov. 17-Dec. 31, 1998.

Among her tales was the rarely discussed, 1977 random shooting that left her unable to walk. The fiftysomething Whitfield sings and talks about her view from "this position in life."

In Wicked Stage, Whitfield, whose on stage collaborator is pianist arranger-husband Greensill, charts her career from singing waitress to San Francisco Opera singer to cabaret star at the Algonquin and elsewhere.

New for the singer in 1998 was the spelling of her first name, which used to be spelled "Weslia" and was always supposed to be pronounced "Wesla," as it is among family and friends. But after years of people calling her Wes-lee-uh (because of the obvious spelling) she finally changed it to avoid confusion. All but one of her 11 recordings bear the name "Weslia Whitfield."

As early as 1990, Whitfield was opening for Michael Feinstein concerts, singing a hip, optimistic version of "The Trolley Song." Her early independent recordings are harder to come by, but such discs as "Lucky to Be Me" and her new release, "High Standards," are common in record stores' cabaret or vocal sections, particularly on the coasts.

-- By Kenneth Jones

 
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