| Wicked Wednesdays in Universal Studios LA |
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Universal Studios Hollywood will launch "Wicked Wednesday" June 27, a new summer series offering fans of the smash blockbuster, Wicked, an opportunity to enjoy special performances, meet the stars and collect autographs from the cast of the Los Angeles production. First up this Wednesday is a special appearance by Carol Kane (Madame Morrible) who will introduce a performance by Julie Reiber (Elphaba) and Melissa Fahn (Glinda) as they perform "The Wizard and I," "Popular" and "For Good." Then, on July 11 cast member Kristoffer Cusick (Fiyero) will perform followed by an "Ozians" ensemble performance on July 25. The June 27 performance is set to begin promptly at 12:30 p.m. at Universal's "Jurassic Park-The-Ride" attraction, located at 100 Universal City Plaza in Universal City. Based on the novel by Gregory Maguire, Wicked has music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz and a book by Winnie Holzman. The musical is directed by Joe Mantello, with musical staging by Wayne Cilento. The Grammy Award-winning original cast recording of Wicked, produced by Stephen Schwartz for Decca Broadway, has been one of the fastest selling Broadway recordings of recent years and has been certified ‘Platinum’ by the Recording Industry Association of America. Winner of 15 major awards including the Grammy Award and three Tony Awards, Wicked is the untold story of the witches of Oz. Long before Dorothy drops in, two other girls meet in the land of Oz. One, born with emerald-green skin, is smart, fiery and misunderstood. The other is beautiful, ambitious and very popular. Wicked tells the story of their remarkable odyssey, how these two unlikely friends grow to become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch. Source: Broadway World [dot] com |
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26 Jun 2007 by Christy |
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| Wicked's 2nd Anniversary in Chicago |
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On June 21st - 2007’s longest day of the year - the Chicago company of Wicked, now the longest running Broadway show in Chicago theater history, extended its special day just a little longer as company members toasted the show’s second anniversary with a late-night lake and river cruise aboard Chicago’s First Lady. After two years of sold-out shows and performing to an audience of over 2,000,000 (representing all 50 states and countries as far away as Japan and Australia), the record-breaking Chicago company of Wicked celebrated its second anniversary in the Windy City. In honor of the occasion, the Chicago company and Broadway In Chicago again hosted a public celebration at Water Tower Square Park (corner of Michigan & Pearson) on June 21st. The event marked the second annual public celebration for the blockbuster musical in Chicago. The Chicago company is now playing in an open-run at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre, 24 West Randolph Street. Breaking multiple box office records since opening in June, 2005 and playing to packed audiences from across the world night after night, the production is the top grossing show in Chicago theatre history. Based on the novel by Gregory Maguire, Wicked has music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz and a book by Winnie Holzman. Directed by Joe Mantello, with musical staging by Wayne Cilento, the show is currently presented in Chicago, on Broadway at the Gershwin Theatre, on a national tour, in Los Angeles at the Pantages Theatre, and in London at the Apollo Victoria Theatre. "Long before Dorothy drops in, two other girls meet in the land of Oz. One, born with emerald-green skin, is smart, fiery and misunderstood. The other is beautiful, ambitious and very popular. Wicked tells the story of their remarkable odyssey, how these two unlikely friends grow to become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch." Pictures can be viewed here: Broadway World For more information, visit www.wickedthemusical.com/chicago. Source: Broadway World [dot] com |
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25 Jun 2007 by Christy |
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| Chicago to Offer 'BTEC' Tour |
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Due to strong public response, the Chicago company of Wicked will soon add yet another opportunity to take a rare glimpse "into the wings" of the blockbuster Broadway musical. "Behind the Emerald Curtain," an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at Wicked, hosted by cast members in Chicago, will be offered to the public, starting July 11, on Wednesday mornings at 10:30 a.m. as well as Tuesday evenings at 5:00 p.m. at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre. Press notes state: "Participants visit the exclusive 'Behind the Emerald Curtain' Museum, which includes the set model by Tony Award-winner Eugene Lee and an up-close look at some of Tony Award-winner Susan Hilferty's costumes (with beautiful details not always visible from the audience), as well as a few of the actual props and wigs from the show, plus film footage about the making of the global hit production. The tour, which lasts about an hour, concludes with a question-and-answer portion with current cast members, and an opportunity to find out what's in store for the musical phenomenon in Chicago as well as around the world. Participants are also able to purchase exclusive merchandise available only on the tour as a memento of the experience." The Chicago company of Wicked is now playing in an open-run at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre, 24 West Randolph Street. Breaking multiple box office records since opening in June, 2005 and playing to packed audiences from across the world night after night, the production is the top grossing show in Chicago theatre history. Based on the novel by Gregory Maguire, Wicked has music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz and a book by Winnie Holzman. Directed by Joe Mantello, with musical staging by Wayne Cilento, Wicked is currently presented in Chicago, on Broadway at the Gershwin Theatre, on a national tour, in Los Angeles at the Pantages Theatre and in London at the Apollo Victoria Theatre. "Long before Dorothy drops in, two other girls meet in the land of Oz. One, born with emerald-green skin, is smart, fiery and misunderstood. The other is beautiful, ambitious and very popular. Wicked tells the story of their remarkable odyssey, how these two unlikely friends grow to become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch." The musical is produced by Marc Platt, Universal Pictures, The Araca Group, Jon B. Platt and David Stone. "Behind the Emerald Curtain" is offered on Tuesdays at 5:00 p.m. and, starting July 11, on Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theatre (24 W. Randolph St, Chicago). Tickets for "Behind the Emerald Curtain" are $25 and available for purchase at Broadway In Chicago Box Offices (24 W. Randolph St., 151 W. Randolph St. and 18 W. Monroe St.), through the Broadway In Chicago Ticket Line at (312) 902-1400, or online at ticketmaster.com. Tickets for "Behind the Emerald Curtain" do not include admission to Wicked, the Musical. Corporate clients and groups of 20 or more may call (312) 977-1710. For more information, visit www.wickedthemusical.com/chicago Source: Broadway World [dot] Com |
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15 Jun 2007 by Christy |
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| Australian Production Announced |
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John Frost said "WICKED is a phenomenon, quite unlike any other musical. It comes with all the blockbuster bells and whistles, certainly but three things set this show apart. Music theatre lovers adore WICKED. It’s a classic musical entertainment with wit and spectacle and a wonderful score, but it also spans the demographic. People of all ages and backgrounds. It brings in people who’ve never been to the theatre, and never thought they would go and they come out of the theatre spellbound. They all spread the WICKED word. WICKED grows by word of mouth in a way and to a degree unlike any show I know. WICKED is unique. A juggernaut. Week by week it just gets bigger and bigger. By the time we open in Melbourne the word will be out: the hottest show in the nation is... WICKED." Premier Steve Bracks Premier welcomed the number one smash hit musical to Australia saying "WICKED has received worldwide critical acclaim and it is a real testament to the strength of Melbourne's reputation as the theatre capital of Australia that the producers have chosen to premiere the show in Victoria." Producers Marc Platt and David Stone said in a joint statement from New York: "We're delighted that Melbourne is now set to follow WICKED productions in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, the North American tour and London's West End. Melbourne will join new productions springing up around the world over the next 16 months, and we're absolutely sure that Aussies – and international visitors to Melbourne – will be just as enchanted by WICKED as the audiences are in America and England." Source : www [dot] wickedthemusical [dot] co [dot] uk |
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05 Jun 2007 by Sara |
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| Wicked's "Ozdust Variety Show" to Benefit BC/EFA |
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Entitled "The Ozdust Variety Hour," the concert will be held in the Garner Galleria Theatre in the Denver Performing Arts Complex. Show time is 7:30 PM. The benefit, according to press notes, is a "planned homage — with a twist — to the great variety shows of the 1950s." Performers will include members of the Wicked tour: Victoria Matlock (Elphaba), Christina DeCicco (Glinda), P.J. Benjamin (The Wizard), Cliffton Hall (Fiyero), Deedee Magno Hall (Nessarose), Tom Flynn (Dr. Dillamond) and Josh Lamon (Boq) as well as the Wicked ensemble. One-of-a-kind Wicked items — including a walk-on role — will be auctioned during the evening, and attendees can also enter a raffle to win gift certificates, hotel stays and tickets to Wicked. Tickets, priced $75-$150, are available by calling (303) 893-4100. Source: Playbill [dot] com |
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13 May 2007 by Jane |
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| Idina Menzel's New Single: DG Remix |
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Click Here To Here The New Song |
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11 May 2007 by Christy |
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| Sebastian Arcelus featured on Playbill.com |
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It Might As Well Be Spring . . . If April showers bring what they are supposed to, it should be a beautiful May on Broadway, because it was a rather rain-soaked fourth month here in NYC. While you wait for those May flowers to bloom, check out a couple tête-à-têtes with Sebastian Arcelus of Wicked, and Matthew Morrison of the upcoming 10 Million Miles. THE MAN IN THE WHITE PANTS Pressed for a tale of embarrassing backstage hijinks at Wicked, Sebastian Arcelus says, "We're not that dramatic. The only thing embarrassing for me is [wearing] those white pants every night." Everyone knows white is okay until after Labor Day, so nothing to be ashamed of (for now). Arcelus can be equally unashamed of having played bewitched love-interest Fiyero in Wicked's first national tour and currently on the Broadway stage. The one-time Williams College political science major (with a concentration on U.S. involvement in Latin America) is now wowing audiences of the Broadway blockbuster. He's not sure if he'll ever make it back to politics, but he claims watching "Meet the Press" is still a big part of his Sunday morning regimen. Time to turn the media spotlight on him. Question:You've been Fiyero on tour and now on Broadway. Is there a difference in your Fiyeros? Sebastian Arcelus: My approach is similar. What's different is the audiences. Because Wicked has become so popular, when you are bringing that show to people's hometowns, there is this sort of excitement in the air, like we've come to them, so they are very grateful. It is a really exciting energy on the road. Here in New York, it's a different sort of crowd, equally excited about the show — as you know the show is always sold out, which is a great way to go to work — but people are also checking out other shows while they are in town, so they are like, "Alright, show us what you got," which keeps you fresh and on your game. Q:What is it like to be the romantic male lead in a show built around its ladies? Arcelus: I do appreciate the fact that you're considering me a "Leading Man" in the column. It is definitely the ladies' show. First of all, it is exciting to be a part of a show that celebrates female power and strength and soul. That's the politically correct answer! [Laughs.] I can't complain — to be in the middle of these two loves is a great position to be in. It's a really rewarding role because I get to experience the show from two different perspectives through these two women, not to mention it is an absolute joy to work with Julia Murney [Elphaba] and Kendra Kassebaum [Glinda], who I've had the chance to work with on tour. We've brought our rapport into the show here. It's been fun to experience it from taking what we had on the road and adjusting it to here. But you know, David Garrison [The Wizard], Logan Lipton [Boq], Steve Skybell [Dr. Dillamond], and I, we represent! We have some male power in there, but it is certainly the ladies' show. Q: How did you come to acting? Was it something always burning in you? Arcelus: It really was. My big break was back in the third grade playing the third monkey in Horton Hears a Who. I was always singing in high school and college, doing plays and musicals. It was one of those things where I never let myself think I could have that as a career, and I did have this real interest in politics, so I was kind of torn between two worlds. It's kind of one of those cheesy, coming-of-age stories. The summer before my senior year in college I went with two of my buddies to Europe, and we spent our savings on a ten-week, ten-country backpacking trip, which, of course, was totally enlightening on so many different levels and cemented that creative and artistic pulse that was beating pretty hard in me. I came out of that thinking, "Let me just give it a shot." The first professional show I did out of college sealed the deal for me. Even though it was a tiny regional theatre, it was amazing to know I could do this as a career. Q: Did your poli-sci background come in handy? Arcelus: From a business perspective, I had to develop a book and learn a monologue. I wasn't coming to New York with a sort of reservoir of material, audition material. I had to go to the library and basically listen to every musical there ever was and sort of build up my knowledge of what was out there so I could then go forward. My business and political science training sort of helped in that regard because I was my own little business manager. Q: I understand you have a very large family… Arcelus: Large and far-reaching. All over the globe! My dad is from Uruguay, and my mom's Italian. Despite the fact that there were a few marriages here and there — my dad actually is on his third marriage and my mom her second — my mom actually happened to marry two Uruguayan men, which is hilarious because I don't know anybody that even knows two Uruguayan men. So there are a lot of half brothers and sisters and stepbrothers as it goes around, but I grew up in New York with my two brothers from my mom's marriage to my father, and my stepfather. We have family in New York; Miami; Montevideo, Uruguay; and all over Europe. Q: Does that make it tough satisfying ticket demands? Arcelus: [Laughs.] You know, my stepdad, who is just now learning e-mail, is definitely taking the lead on that. He sends me an e-mail a day looking for tickets both for family and for business clients and such. It is a real treat when the family is all over the world as they are, when they do come to town and check out the show. Q: Wicked is an incredible machine of success. Is it nice to follow a show that had, maybe, not as much… Arcelus: Ahh. You're going there! [Laughs.] Q: Good Vibrations. What do you take from that experience? Arcelus: Good Vibrations was very positive in a lot of ways. On the surface, it's great to be able to follow up Good Vibrations with a massive blockbuster hit like Wicked, and job security is always wonderful for actors, but you know, I actually really enjoyed my experience with Good Vibrations. The thing with Vibrations is we, as a cast, always felt it was a little better than it was being given credit for, but at the same time, we knew what the problems were; we knew that the little time we were going to get to work on it we should really appreciate. It was something new and original. I'd been doing Rent for a couple years, and Good Vibrations afforded me the opportunity to spread my wings and try something new. Q: Tell us about some of the work you do on cartoons. Arcelus: It comes in waves. I do some bilingual cartoon work for "Dora the Explorer" and "Go Diego, Go!" which is great fun. They don't roll out new episodes all that much, so the work is here and there, but it's great to be able to work bilingually. I play Diego's father in "Go Diego, Go!" which is basically a rip-off of my stepdad. And, I play every animal you can imagine. I've sung birds; I've been underwater animals, whales, penguins, marching ants, bees. It's pretty fun to go in there and just sing some tunes. And you're reaching 2.5 million kids across the country. I do "Winx Club," which is an Italian-based cartoon that we're dubbing in English. It's a cross between Wicked and "Harry Potter" because it is a magic school for girls, so once again, I'm playing a token guy amidst this massive girl power. Q: Any other side projects going on? Arcelus: If you consider buying an apartment and getting married a side project. That's definitely on the docket for the next six months. Stephanie Block [currently starring in The Pirate Queen], is my fiancé. We are very happy, and life is good. Also, a fun thing that my two best friends from college and I have created and worked on is an interactive internet series that I am currently acting on with them. It's called "I," and it's located at youtube.com/ichannel. It's a show about a guy who wakes up and is magically and ironically part of a video blog against his own will, and it tracks his life as he is being watched. We've rolled out 15 episodes. Q: Congratulations. Sounds like you have an amazing year ahead. Anything else to relate? Arcelus: Just this story that ties together my family and Wicked. My dad: Uruguayan Latin American man, shirt open to his belly button, thick accent, no hair, the greatest guy ever. Thick Spanish accent. He lives in Miami, comes to see the show in Tampa with my stepmom. He'd never seen it. I don't think he'd ever seen "The Wizard of Oz" to be honest with you. After the show, we're at dinner and we're talking in English and Spanish, mostly Spanish. And 20 minutes into the conversation, we've been talking about the show and saying la verde and la rubia, which is "the green one" and "the blonde one." And my dad says, "Excuse me. Why do you keep talking about la verde?" And we're like, "It's the green one. Like the green witch." And he's like, "What? I do not understand." And I said, "The green one. She's green." And he kind of shrugs his shoulders and says, "I did not notice." And I said, "What do you mean you didn't notice? The whole show is about her being green!" And he's like, "I am colorblind." [Laughs.] I think he is probably the only person ever to watch Wicked and not realize that the green witch is actually green! Q: Why did he think Elphaba was so ostracized? Arcelus: You know what? He probably wasn't paying attention to anything except the fact that, "Why is my boy wearing those white pants for crying out loud?" [Wicked plays the Gershwin Theatre, 222 West 51st Street. For tickets call (212) 307-4100.] Source: www [dot] playbill [dot] com |
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01 May 2007 by Sara |
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| Wicked Raises $227,768 for BC/EFA! |
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The year's fundraising award-winner was the National Tour of Jersey Boys, with $236,844, with the Broadway production of Wicked being 1st runner up! Other productions of Wicked were members of the "over $100,000 club!" Congrats to the Shiz Company in Chicago for raising $158,000, the LA Company for raising $155,334, and the Emerald City Company (the tour) for raising $128,464! Congratulations to everyone who participated! To see photos from the event, click here or here. Sources: broadwaycares [dot] org, broadwayworld [dot] com, & broadway [dot] com |
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27 Apr 2007 by Jane |
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| London Wicked Announces New Cast Members |
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From July 16, the cast will be joined by Dianne Pilkington as Glinda, Oliver Tompsett as Fiyero, and Andy Mace as Doctor Dillamond. Cassidy Janson will be the Elphaba Standby and Sarah Earnshaw will be the Glinda Standby. Tompsett, Mace, Janson, and Earnshaw are all members of the original London cast. The full ensemble features Gary Amers, Nicola Brazil, Nadine Cox, Aileen Donohoe, Ashleigh Gray, Aimee Hall, Kady Jo Jackson, Caroline Keiff, Mark Henry-Evans, John Hicks, Dougal Irvine, Latoya Laijan, Mitchell Mahony, Christopher Mitchell, Adam Murray, Haydn Oakley, Sean Parkins, Michael Pickering, David Stoller, Lindsay Taylor, Hannah Toye, Kerry Washington, Lucy Waugh and Gary Wood. Based on Gregory Maguire’s best-selling, Wizard of Oz-inspired novel, Wicked has been seen by over half a million theatregoers since its first public performance at London's Apollo Victoria Theatre on September 7, 2006. The show has grossed over £18 million at the Box Office and twice set new West End Box Office records for the highest ever weekly gross. Wicked has grossed over $500,000,000 (half a billion dollars) worldwide. Wicked is now booking until March 29, 2008, at the Apollo Victoria Theatre, Wilton Road, London, SW1V 1LG For Box Office and 24 Hour Credit Card Bookings, call Ticketmaster, 0870 4000 751. Group sales of 12 or more should call 0870 594 9494. The is a £2.00 fee per ticket service charge and £2.25 processing fee per transaction through Ticketmaster, but no booking fee or processing charge for tickets booked in person at the Box Office. For online booking, visit www.WickedTheMusical.co.uk. Performances are Monday-Saturday at 7:30pm, with matinees Wednesday & Saturday 2:30pm. Ticket prices range from £15-£60, and Day Seats are £25 – twenty-four front row Stalls released daily at 10:00am at the Box Office. There are sign language interpreted performances by Wendy Ebsworth, April 28 at 2:30pm and 7:30pm. For students, best available seats are £25 from 10:00am at Monday-Thursday performances at the Box Office with student ID. Subject to availability. One ticket per ID. Best available seats are £25 from 6pm at Monday-Thursday performances and from 12 noon for Wednesday matinee performances at the Box Office for Senior Citizens, Jobseekers, Equity, BECTU and Musicians' Union members and registered disabled. Subject to availability. One ticket per ID. For more information, visit www.WickedTheMusical.co.uk/access Source: BroadwayWorld [dot] com |
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27 Apr 2007 by Jane |
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| The Unexamined Life Files - Shoshana Bean |
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The members of Unexamined-Life would like to thank Shoshana for taking the time to answer all questions. |
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23 Apr 2007 by Christy |
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| Susie Blake in London |
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"SUSIE BLAKE IS SENSATIONAL!" Caroline Feraday, BBC Entertainment News Susie Blake triumphed as 'Madame Morrible' at a special performance on Thursday 12 April to celebrate her arrival in the hit musical. The star-studded audience included Victoria Wood, with whom Susie famously worked as the 'Continuity Announcer' who introduced Acorn Antiques; her cousin Hayley Mills; actor Julian Rhind-Tutt and former colleagues from Coronation Street including John Savident (Fred Elliott), Bill Ward (Charlie Stubbs) and Wendi Peters (Cilla Battersby-Brown). Also in the audience and at the after show party at the Park Plaza Victoria: GMTV's Andrea McLean; Will Atkinson, Esther Barton, Nick Barrett, Annika Gabbitas, Cleo Humphrey, Midas, Chris Royle, Abi Ryan, Fe Salomon, and Darren Smith - from T4's Musicool; Caroline Feraday; Michelle Heaton and Andy Scott Lee and actresses Georgina Bouzova, Charlie Brooks, Leanne Wilson and Sarah Barrand. Brenda Emmanus interviewed Susie Blake for BBC London News and called WICKED "a major hit" and "an amazing success". Steve Scruton of BBC Radio raved: "Susie Blake is wonderful and Wicked is a real West End treat" and Paul Phear on Magic 105.4 recently called WICKED "the West End musical with the WOW factor. The cast and production will blow your socks off." Source: www [dot] wickedthemusical [dot] co [dot] uk |
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20 Apr 2007 by Sara |
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| Eden Espinosa & Megan Hilty lead LA Cast on Jay Leno Last Night |
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What Is This Feeling? (Video credit: Bob) |
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19 Apr 2007 by Christy |
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| Stephanie J. Block: Q & A |
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Stephanie J. Block — star of the new Broadway musical The Pirate Queen — fills out Playbill.com's questionnaire with random facts, backstage trivia and pop culture tidbits. Full given name: Stephanie Janette Block Hometown: Brea, CA Zodiac sign: Virgo Audition song: Please don't judge..."Don't Rain on My Parade"...I know...it's time for a new song...really, I know. First Broadway show ever saw: Crazy for You If you could go back in time and catch any Broadway show, what would it be? The original Sunday in the Park... and Jennifer Holiday in Dreamgirls. Current show you have been recommending to friends: Grey Gardens Favorite showtune: The entire recording of Once On This Island. MAC or PC? MAC Most played song on your iPod: Missy Elliott's "Get Your Freak On." I am so not kidding...this tune gets me going...I dance around like a crazy person. Last book you read: "Paula" by Isabel Allende. Must-see TV show: Ok...never saw "Lost." I just began watching the DVDs and now...ADDICTED!!! Sebastian and I will stay up until 3 AM watching 3-4 episodes at a time. I have no idea how people can wait a week to see the conclusions. This show is genius! Last good movie you saw: I really dug "Factory Girl" Favorite reality show: "Project Runway"...but I do tune into "American Idol" just to see how long Sanjaya will last. Pop culture guilty pleasure: Was Missy Elliott not enough for you? Ok...I also indulge in the "trash" magazines. I believe nothing, but enjoy all of it! First stage kiss: Local, community production...12 years old...dry and pinched...his mouth always seem to tasted like deli meats. Favorite post-show meal: Cereal and/or toast and peanut butter. Pre-show rituals: 6:30 PM ... start humidifier, start tea, throw out dead flowers (nothing worse then old flower water smell), say hi to the folks around the theatre, start warming up the voice, sword-fight call, more vocal warm up and make up, some stretching and...there you have it, I'm a pirate! Worst onstage mishap: Boy From Oz...I wore many different tights and panty hose throughout the play. One quick change, my tights decided to get stuck to the pants of my next change. During the scene they kept creeping out. I did not feel them until they were hanging out my pant leg and dragging across the stage. Hugh and I were tripping all over them. Finally, I had to tug these long tights out from my pants. There was no way of hiding it from the audience. Hugh and I were crying we were laughing so hard. I love moments like that! Special skills: learning sign language, can play the glockenspiel (...google it), have the longest second toe in the world...it's freakish (I guess that's not a skill as much as a deformity) Cats or dogs? Dogs! Favorite pizza topping: Extra cheese and garlic. Who would play you in the movie? Well, according to recent reviewers...I'm going to have to say Celine Dion (What?) But if all goes well, I'm holding out for Sanjaya. Source : www [dot] playbill [dot] com |
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17 Apr 2007 by Sara |
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| Stephanie J. Block: Ask A Star |
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When a musical's title character is expected to sing more than 20 songs—written by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schoenberg, kings of the sung-through musical, no less—the actress playing the role had better be ready for an enormous challenge. The producers of The Pirate Queen entrusted this mammoth task to Stephanie J. Block, who had previously exercised her vocal chops playing Liza Minnelli in The Boy From Oz and Elphaba in the first national touring company of Wicked. Block has become a fan favorite for her big-voiced performances, and now's your chance to ask her everything you've wanted to know about her star turns as Grace O'Malley and Elphaba (and maybe even her commercials as the voice of Barbie). Come on, everybody—ask a star! Questions due by April 20. Answers will be posted by May 1. Source: broadway [dot] com |
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15 Apr 2007 by Sara |
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| Wicked Tour Announces Several 2008 Destinations |
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The production, which co-stars Victoria Matlock as Elphaba and Christina Decicco as Glinda, will kick off the new year with a return engagement at Cincinnati's Aronoff Center for the Arts Jan. 9-Feb. 3, 2008. Also scheduled are stops in Ft. Lauderdale (a return to the Broward Center for the Performing Arts, March 12-April 6), Rochester (Auditorium Theatre, May 28-June 15) and Buffalo (Shea's Performing Arts Center, June 18-July 13). Additional venues will be announced at a later date. Remaining Wicked tour dates for 2007 follow. April 18-May 6 at the Music Hall at Fair Park in Dallas May 9-June 3 at the Buell Theatre in Denver June 6-17 at the Civic Center Music Hall in Oklahoma City June 20-July 8 at the Ohio Theatre in Columbus July 11-22 at the Wharton Center for the Performing Arts in East Lansing July 25-Aug. 19 at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia Sept. 12-Oct. 14 at the Opera House in Boston Nov. 14-Dec. 9 at the Bushnell in Hartford Based on Gregory Maguire's novel, which turned every Oz myth inside out, Wicked explores the early life of the witches of Oz: Glinda and Elphaba. The two main characters meet at Shiz, a school where both hope to take up sorcery. Glinda is madly popular and Elphaba is, well, green. By a misunderstanding, they wind up roommates and, after an initial period of mutual loathing, begin to learn something about each other. Their life paths continue to intersect through a shared love, entry into the Emerald City and interaction with the Wizard himself. Eventually, their choices and convictions take them on widely different paths. The Broadway company, directed by Joe Mantello, plays the Gershwin Theatre. Wicked also plays open-ended engagements in Chicago, London and Los Angeles. For more information visit www.wickedthemusical.com. Source: Playbill [dot] com |
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11 Apr 2007 by Jane |
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| Susie Blake in London's Wicked |
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07 Apr 2007 by Christy |
comments (3152) |