May 2012 Archives

JessieMueller.jpgThe show in which Jessie Mueller made her Broadway debut -- the revisal of On a Clear Day You Can See Forever -- didn't run very long at all, but Jessie herself is here to stay. This spectacularly talented young woman from Chicago will follow-up her acclaimed performance as '40s-era jazz singer Melinda in that show with a turn in what's sure to be the hot-ticket item of the summer: the Public Theater production of Into the Woods at the Delacorte in Central Park, in which she will play Cinderella. Before that happens, she has a date at the Belasco on Tuesday, June 5 at 2pm, where and when she'll receive a well-deserved Theatre World Award in the company of her fellow New York theater debutant(e)s Tracie Bennett, Phillip Boykin, Crystal A. Dickinson, Russell Harvard, Jeremy Jordan, Joaquina Kalukango, Jennifer Lim, Hettienne Park, Chris Perfetti Finn Wittrock, and Josh Young. I spoke with the delightful Ms. Mueller on a recent early-summer afternoon.

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BROADWAYSTARS.COM: Hi, Jessie. Before we go any further, can you tell me the correct pronunciation of your last name?

JESSIE MUELLER: I was going to ask you the same thing about your name. [I pronounce it for her.] Oh, that's beautiful. Mine is "MULE-urr," as in "mule." You know, "hee-haw." That's it.

STARS: I've been reading your bio, and I'm amazed by the range of roles you've played in Chicago and elsewhere: Adelaide in Guys and Dolls, Amalia in She Loves Me, Veruca Salt in Willy Wonka. How would you describe your voice, or do you even try to?

JESSIE: [Laughs] It's a mystery! I've been so blessed in my career up to this point, to keep getting to do different things. After Clear Day, everyone was saying "You're a jazz singer," and I thought, "Not really..." I like singing jazz, but I love all kinds of music. Most of my experience has been in musical theater, so jazz crooning was fun because it was something I hadn't done yet.

STARS: According to a previous interview, you considered a career as a classical singer. Is that right?

JESSIE: Yes, I studied classical voice in college for awhile. I was in the drama department at Syracuse University, and we took voice lessons through the voice department. There was classical training built into the program there, which I really enjoyed, and they sort of took me through the questions. "What do you think about training classically?" I thought about it, and I'm glad I was exposed to that world, but the discipline it requires -- I'm not sure I could do it. It kind of takes over your whole life.

STARS: On the other hand, they don't have to sing eight times a week.

JESSIE: [As if the thought hadn't occurred to her:] That's true!

STARS: Maybe you should reconsider?

JESSIE: [Laughing:] I know! Is it too late?

STARS: Do you think of yourself as having different "parts" of your voice, or not really?

JESSIE: I don't know; that's an interesting question. I think, sometimes, one of the trickiest thing is to keep a connection between the parts of your voice and, if you're required to go back and forth, to make it sound like it's all coming from the same person. I like attacking things from a vocal point of view, figuring out the character would sound. I read an interview with Christopher Guest, who I think is an amazing performer, and he said he comes up with the sound of the character first. Sometimes it's a physiological thing as to where you place things in your voice, but for me, it's all about how I think the character might sound.

STARS: Maybe it's best not to over-analyze it. I've interviewed Barbara Cook on this subject, and I get the feeling that she doesn't really like to analyze how she does what she does.

JESSIE: Hmmm. I think that's one of the things I like about her. She always comes at it from the standpoint of, "What are you trying to say? What do the lyrics mean?" That's why she's such a brilliant singer and interpreter of songs. And I think that approach can give you a lot of freedom, rather than focusing on how you want to sound.

STARS: Back to Willy Wonka for a moment: I'm assuming you were in a musical version with the Newley-Bricusse songs from the movie. Is that right?

JESSIE: Yes. It was a children's theater musical version.

STARS: Were you a child when you did the show?

JESSIE: No, I was an adult playing a child. It was fun to wear pink, fluffy duds and be nasty and say all those things you can't say in the real world. "I Want it Now!"

STARS: I'm so sorry there isn't a cast album of On a Clear Day. It would have been great to have a recording of you singing those songs.

JESSIE: I was hoping to have that experience, but there were so many factors at hand. Our producers worked as hard as they could, but sometimes it just didn't happen. A cast recording is expensive.

STARS: I was wondering if you worked at all with David Turner, who played the reincarnated version of your character, in terms of trying to copy each other's mannerisms, body language, or anything of that sort.

JESSIE: We did have conversations about how much that wanted or needed to occur. We talked about certain gestures that we could maybe share in the moments where the transition was made from one life to the other, to come up with a physicality to sort of link Melinda and Davey, but part of the plot is that one life of the character possesses things that the other one needs but doesn't have. So, in a lot of ways, they're really different. But I'll never forget what happened at rehearsal one day: David said, "You know, you remind me of my mom," and he showed me an old picture of her. It was kind of uncanny. In the production, I don't think David and I looked anything alike, but I really look like his mom in that photo.

STARS: That's a great story. Anyway, I wish there was a cast album.

JESSIE: Let's start a petition! Isn't that what Facebook is good for?

STARS: Great idea. Before I let you go, please let me congratulate you on your Theatre World Award.

JESSIE: Thank you. I came to New York trying not to expect a lot, and it's been wonderful to receive such a welcome. The history of the Theatre World Awards fascinates me -- to see who was recognized for their debuts throughout the years, and where those people are now. I went to school with Josh Young...

STARS: Really?

JESSIE: Yes, at Syracuse. He was a senior when I got there, so we didn't know each other that well and we never really worked together, except that I assisted the director on a show he was in.

STARS: Well, then the awards ceremony should be a big event for both of you.

JESSIE: It's quite an honor, and very humbling.

The Hot Guys of BLONDES

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The 1953 film version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes provides equal opportunity for oglers -- whether they be male or female, straight or gay. In addition to starring two of the most voluptuous women in cinema history, Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell, the flick was unusual for its day in its inclusion of "Ain't There Anyone Here for Love?", a production number in which scantily clad male athletes (actually dancers, of course) are unabashedly presented as sex objects while Russell cavorts with them in a shipboard gym.

That number is not in the original stage version of Blondes, which is being presented May 9-13 as part of the City Center Encores! series, with Megan Hilty as Lorelei Lee and Rachel York as Dorothy Shaw; but there will still be opportunity for the admiration of lean and muscular male bodies in a number called "I Love What I'm Doing (When I'm Doing it for Love)." Randy Skinner, choreographer of the Encores! production, explains: "It was originally a big old chorus number that had nothing to do with anything, but we've reworked it for Dorothy and the five male dancers who are playing the 1924 Olympic track team." (He promises that each of the guys will be wearing sexy "track suits" designed by David C. Woolard.)

"Four of the five boys are new to me," says Skinner. "When you cast an Encores! show, you usually want to use people you've already worked with; since the rehearsal period is so concentrated, it helps to know going in that you're on the same wavelength with the dancers. But here, we really had to look for the boys, because in addition to their dancing ability, they had to be believable as Olympic athletes. So we went out and found Callan Bergman, Eric Bourne, Kyle Brown, Luke Hawkins, and Nick McGough. The only one I had already worked with is Luke, in No, No, Nanette at Encores! and in White Christmas."

You can judge for yourself whether Skinner and director John Rando were successful in their search. I got to shoot the boys during a break in a recent rehearsal; here are the pix, along the boys' bios as they will appear in the Playbill.

[All photos Copyright 2012 by Michael Portantiere.]

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CALLAN BERGMANN could not be more thrilled to be making his New York City Center debut in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. He comes directly from the Off-Broadway hit Silence! The Musical (Dream Hannibal). Other NY credits: Off Broadway's Lucky Guy (Buckaroo). Regional: Paper Mill Playhouse, Pittsburgh CLO, The Muny, NSMT. Proud graduate of Point Park University. This one's for you, Olivia!

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ERIC BOURNE grew up in Midland, MI and started dancing at 16 years old. His formal training began while attending Ryerson University in Toronto and spending summers studying at Perry-Mansfield in Colorado. Moving to New York City in 2007, he danced the role of James in the North American Tour of Twyla Tharp's Movin' Out. Since August 2008, Eric has been a company member of Parsons Dance Co., dancing repertory of David Parsons. He is very excited to be on the Encores! stage with Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.

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KYLE BROWN is excited to be making his Encores! debut! Broadway credits include: Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Legally Blonde. National Tour: Legally Blonde. Training: CCM, WHS. Thank you Nick for your love and support. I love you Mom.

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LUKE HAWKINS Broadway: Xanadu. City Center Encores!: No, No Nanette. Cirque du Soleil: Banana Shpeel. Regional: Irving Berlin's White Christmas, Big River (Huck), Gypsy (Tulsa), Johnny Guitar (Turkey), Over The Tavern (Rudy Pazinsky). Favorites among 11 California Musical Theater's Broadway Series and Music Circus shows were Singin' in the Rain, Annie Get Your Gun, The Producers, and Miss Saigon. Thanks, Mom!

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NICK McGOUGH is excited to join this season of Encores! Tours: Movin' Out (Eddie/understudy James), Cats (Tumblebrutus/Misto). Regional: Tarzan (aerialist), HMS Pinafore (dance captain/swing), Radio City Christmas Spectacular (ensemble), Tokyo Disney-Encore(dancer). Thanks to my friends, family for their support and patience, and to my grandma and grandpa for everything!

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This page is an archive of entries from May 2012 listed from newest to oldest.

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