ELLEN GREENE
I have to admit that when I first heard Ellen Greene would play the long-suffering Miss Adelaide in Guys and Dolls in Concert at the Hollywood Bowl — July 31-Aug. 2 — I thought it the most genius casting of the year. Greene, who originated the role of Audrey in the original Off-Broadway production of Little Shop of Horrors and subsequently re-created her simultaneously humorous and touching performance on screen, possesses every ounce of charm, vulnerability, comic timing and vocal prowess that one needs to play the role in the classic Frank Loesser musical. Add to that her brilliance as an actress, and it's the perfect fit of the season.
The casting was the idea of director Richard Jay-Alexander, who last season also helmed the critically hailed Les Misérables in Concert at the famed California venue. "Richard called me up at two o'clock in the morning," Greene told me earlier this week, "and said, 'Would you be interested in playing Adelaide in Guys and Dolls?' It's the quickest I ever accepted [a part], and I just said, 'Yes!'"
"To be honest," Greene continues, "I did this show in high school. There were two Skys. My brother played one Sky, and I was the part of Agatha. I never got lead roles in high school!"
That unfathomable bit of trivia has thankfully been rectified, and Greene now leads a starry cast that also boasts film actress Jessica Biel (Sarah Brown), stage and screen star Scott Bakula (Nathan Detroit), Tony Award winner Brian Stokes Mitchell (Sky Masterson), theatre veteran Ken Page (Nicely-Nicely Johnson), Emmy Award winner Beau Bridges (Arvide Abernathy) and Broadway favorite Ruth Williamson (General Matilda Cartwright) as well as Herschel Sparber (Big Jule), Jason Graae (Benny Southstreet), Bill Lewis (Harry the Horse), Danny Stiles (Rusty Charlie), Amir Talai (Angie the Ox/Joey Biltmore), Jody Ashworth (Lt. Brannigan), Cindy Benson (Agatha) and Grace Wall (Martha) with Sandahl Bergman, Valarie Pettiford, Jane Lanier, Kathryn Wright, Jillana Laufer and Tracy Powell as The Hot Box Girls.
photo by Ed Krieger |
Greene is equally excited to be working with A Chorus Line Tony winner Donna McKechnie, who is choreographing the production, and musical director Kevin Stites. "Donna had given me . . . the blocking to 'Take Back Your Mink.' [During the read through], I'd do a gesture and they'd laugh, and I'd go, 'Donna!' I keep singing, and I'd do another gesture, and they'd laugh, and I'd go, 'Donna!' It was like four times, so I went over to Donna and said, 'Did you see how fabulous your choreography is?' And, that's just her blocking! It's not overdone — it's right to the point. And James Kinney, the associate choreographer, has been so wonderful." About Stites Greene says, "Kevin is such a wonderful conductor. I found myself watching him when I should have been watching the actors for a moment here and there. He really is a wonderful, wonderful conductor with such great phrasing."
The aforementioned first day of rehearsal also gave Greene the chance to perform "Adelaide's Lament" for her co-stars. "It was exciting," she says, "because I really started seeing my character… [When I'm creating a role] it's like I have no face. I become somebody else. We're now working with the wigs and the costumes and the makeup design — I'm starting to see her become someone unto herself. When I start with a role, I have no clue about the character. I'm letting myself loose, and sometimes a really wonderful thing comes out if I can get free enough and out of my own way, somebody emerges, with the help of everybody involved, of course."
And, how does Greene view Adelaide, the perennial bride-to-be?
"My spin is I'm making her hopefully dear and very accessible," explains Greene. "I don't want to make her ballsy. All she cares about is getting married. She's wanted to get married since the minute she met this man. She loves this man. Funnily in the script, they say, 'How long have you been engaged?' She says, '14 years.' 'How long have you known her?' '14 years!' So they must have gotten engaged the minute they met, which I find very funny. They've been married, in letters, for 12 years. So she's been fibbing to both her mother and Nathan for 12 years, making up this whole counter-story.
"The Adelaide I think I've created revolves all around Nathan. She leads with her heart. She wears her heart on her sleeve. Nathan's her world, and her world is Nathan. I wouldn't say she's the smartest peg, but she's really gentle."
photo by ABC |
[Guys and Dolls in Concert with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra will be presented July 31 and Aug. 1 at 8:30 PM and Aug. 2 at 7:30 PM. The Hollywood Bowl is located at 2301 North Highland Avenue in Hollywood, CA. For tickets call (323) 850-2000. Visit www.hollywoodbowl.com for more information.]
THE LADY IS A TROMP!
Last month singer, actress and all-around funny gal Christine Pedi presented a nearly month-long run of her one-woman show Great Dames at the Jermyn Street Theatre in London. "The past year I've [also] been to South Africa doing Great Dames three times," Pedi recently told me. "If I do the math, my pianist Matthew Ward and I have spent something like seven-and-a-half days in cabs, trains or planes getting to and from South Africa. It's a travel day (door to door) of over 30 hours each way! Going to London's Jermyn Street Theatre after that was like hopping on the Times Square shuttle by comparison."
Pedi said she had a wonderful time performing for London audiences and was also thrilled to be part of the free theatre festival West End Live while she was abroad. "I went on right after the blockbuster Thriller — Live's performance — this was the Sunday before [Michael Jackson] passed away. I was impressed and intimidated by the various and assorted singer/dancers re-creating Michael Jackson routines from 'I Want You Back' to 'Billy Jean.' They had booming tracks, and the Leicester Square audience was rocking out. Then I tiptoe on with my little electric piano accompaniment — no crazy lights or smoke, thumping bass or infectious drum machine. Just l'il ole me and a few show tunes, but the audience was awesome! When I sang 'Lady Is a Tramp,' I got to 'won't dish the dirt with the rest of the girls...that's why the lady is...' and decided to point the mike to the crowd indicating that they should finish the line. They did so right on cue, but I forgot that they talk funny over there, so what my American ears heard was a thousand voices singing, 'a tromp!'"
Pedi, who will perform a solo concert Sept. 28 at the Laurie Beechman Theatre — part of the "Voices of the Great White Way" series — will also return to that West 42nd Street venue in December with her acclaimed Holly Jolly Christmas Folly show. And, for now, she adds, "I'm totally enjoying the fact that I have no travel plans on the horizon for a change."
photo by Meredith Zinner |
With the recent announcement that Avenue Q will end its Tony-winning run at the Golden Theatre in September, I thought it a good time to check in with Stephanie D'Abruzzo, the singing actress who was Tony-nominated for creating the roles of Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut. "It's staggering to think that the show opened an entire first-grader's life ago," D'Abruzzo says. "The show has had a great run — about six years longer than most people thought it would have had — and certainly this closing is hardly the end. I am sure that we'll soon be seeing regional and college productions, and it's an honor to know we got that ball rolling so very many years ago." About whether she had thought about returning to the show for its closing weeks, the actress and puppeteer said, "There were rumors of reuniting the original cast to close the show, but apparently they turned out to be just that, rumors. I never heard anything directly. It would have been great to bookend the run, but I'm really happy to be back at 59E59 this August doing the 'Summer Shorts' again. I had an absolute blast last year, and this year I actually get to do something where I don't have to sing! John [McCormack] and J.J. [Kandel] are great at gathering exceptional artists and quality people by creating these two rotating evenings. The piece I am in is incredibly short, perhaps ten minutes, and while I haven't met the playwright or the director, and I don't even know who my acting partner is yet, I trust the team and know it will be another fun summer."
As for future plans, D'Abruzzo said that "in September it looks like I'll be part of a developmental reading for a new children's musical at the Kennedy Center based on Mo Willems' 'Knuffle Bunny' book."
Well, that's all for now. "Diva Talk" will be on vacation next week and will return Aug. 7. E-mail questions or comments to [email protected].