
I spent a delicious week in Provincetown, and now I'm starting a terrifying/thrilling downhill slope to They're Playing Our Song.
It's on Aug. 30, which means it's less than 30 days away! I've been out of town almost every week and Sutton Foster has been busy preparing to open Trust at Second Stage (this Thursday), so we haven't been able to start rehearsing until right now. We just did our first read-thru of the script at Denis Jones' apartment (who's directing/choreographing), and it went great! It's such a funny script, and it was so fun to make Sutton laugh. I've never [AUDIO-LEFT]played a part opposite her, and I was amazed at how full her natural speaking voice is. No wonder she's such an amazing singer. Her voice just fills every cavity in her face and has a crazy resonance that had me searching her hairline for a hidden body mic. If you want tix, go to www.ActorsFund.org!
Let me now write about amazing Provincetown. On Monday night James, Juli and I took a short drive across the Cape to Dennis, MA, and went to see Hairspray at the historic Cape Playhouse. I hadn't been there since 1994 when I did a short run of Forever Plaid right after it closed Off-Broadway. I loved the backstage of the theatre because there are posters from all of the old shows that played there. There are two posters that feature Vivian Vance that I used to look at every night over and over again because I'm obsessed with her. Right after Hairspray ended, I ran backstage with James and Juli and I was so happy to see that the posters were still there! Hairspray was great, and Chris Sieber was a brava as Edna. Also, he's such a good-looking guy that when he got in full make-up during "Welcome to the 60's," he looked stunning! I was also phenomenally impressed with Jim Walton, who played Chris' husband, Wilbur. Their Act Two duet ("You're Timeless to Me") was brilliant. Jim is such a great dancer, and he combined his hoofing with a trunk-full of vaudeville shtick to make the number fantastic. I loved how Chris hauled out Paul Lynde in Shrek, and he did it again during his part in the duet. But, this time Jim Walton did it back, and it became a hilarious version of dueling Lyndes. I wish Alice Ghostley had walked out onstage to make it a trio.
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Varla Jean Merman |
ME: Won't be able to sing the concert? You say that every year.
JEFF: Yes, but this year it's true! I couldn't take it anymore, so finally I did what most people on Broadway do if they're sick; I called Barry Kohn. Barry is an allergist (whom Charles Busch based his play The Tale Of The Allergist's Wife on), and he helps out most everybody on the theatre scene. I reached him immediately, and he prescribed medication for Jeff over the phone. Through the miracle of steroids, Jeff got his voice back! And, he lifted my piano over his head. Brava, Barry!
Mark (Jeff's manager and opera tenor) asked me if I'd be able to do something to fill out the concert, and I told him I could play "Rhapsody in Blue." It's a pretty hard piece, but I wasn't nervous to play it since I had recently done it in June. Until, right before the concert began, I ran into a friend of mine I hadn't seen for 20 years. He's a musician also, and we went to Oberlin together. Suddenly having a trained musician in the audience changed my whole relaxed attitude of "I love this piece! Who's going to know if I mess up?" into a terrified "There's someone in the audience listening and judging every single note." Yay. It's fun to feel like that through an incredibly long piece that has non-stop sections featuring technical bravura. Regardless, I got through it and actually got a standing ovation. Was it worth the near thrombosis? I guess the good news is that I can call Barry to start on a heart medication regime.
Mark Cortale sang a slew of opera songs that had him hitting non-stop high notes, and the audience ate it up. And speaking of high notes, Nell Snaidas was the soprano of the evening and brought down the house with her "Glitter and Be Gay." She is a brilliant soprano, and she's also on my Hair CD singing all the crazy coloratura stuff in "Hare Krishna." Here she is singing her specialty, which is early music: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MW7OPnPvNu4.
Near the end, Varla came out and told everyone she was going to sing from The Magic Flute. She introduced it with "Does anybody know what The Magic Flute is about?" (Pause.) "Well, it's about four hours. And that's three and a half hours too long." As they said in Mozart's time, true 'dat. Varla talked about the crazy high notes in the Queen of the Night aria and that since she couldn't hit them, she was going to play them on her iPhone. Seriously. There's an ocarina app that Varla has gotten incredibly adept at playing, and she used it to do the signature high coloratura part. Of course, because it was a Varla show, she combined the aria with Lady Gaga's "Telephone." In the middle, Papageno comes out singing "Pa-pa-pa-pa-geno." Then he comes out again singing "Pop-pop-pop-pop-Popeye's" but holding a bag of fried chicken. Then finally, he comes out singing and holding "Pop-pop-pop-poppers," which Varla sniffs and therefore ends the song by singing a high F sharp above high C! It's cra-za-zy and Jeff told me the trick is to breathe in as you sing. Here's a video! http://sethrudetsky.com/blog/
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Seth on "My Life on the D-list" |
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photo courtesy BravoTV |
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Cashetta |
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.