DG: Kelly Clarkson's beautiful lyrics to her song "My Grown Up Christmas List" say it all, Santa.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
My Grown Up Christmas List
DG: Kelly Clarkson's beautiful lyrics to her song "My Grown Up Christmas List" say it all, Santa.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
2008 Interview with Ann Randolph
Q: Do you keep SqueezeBox as originally written or do you make changes when you perform it?
AR: It changes every night as far as performance, but the text stays the same. I keep discovering new layers in the characters, and it’s so much fun to play with.
Q: How many years have you been doing "Bob's..."?
AR: This will be my 13th year of doing the nasty.
Q: Will you tell us briefly how the characters from both shows developped?
AR: The characters usually develop from looking at parts of myself and exaggerating them. For example, I have both a born again and a brothel inside me. I just let them out. I like to play in the mirror and see who wants to come out. Also, working at the homeless shelter and living/volunteering at a mental institution, you see lots of characters. I watch and listen closely to their behavior, speech patterns, mannerisms and I find what part of myself shares that. We all have it in us. I like to explore what I'm afraid to look at in myself.
Q: Tell us a little about the seminars you're currently doing.
AR: Ahh, I've been leading workshops in "Sharing Your Life Story." And I love it. I love teaching as much as I love performing. These are workshops that I teach at Esalen and Kripalu and also ongoing classes in Santa Monica and San Francisco. I so believe that everybody has an incredible story to tell and I want to guide them in their creative process and help them to tell their story. I believe stories connect us to one another and we learn from one another's experience.
Q: What does Christmas mean to you?
AR: Seeing my family who make me laugh and singing. My family loves to sing and we sing lots of carols. My favorite is brightest and best, and it's an old kentucky song sung by Jean Ritchie.
Q: What in you mind constitutes the ideal Christmas gift?
AR: Homemade CDs.
Q: Who are your favorite actors and why?
AR: I am more influenced by musicians than actors. When I write, it is music that inspires me.. Music breaks down boundaries for me. When I hear Astor Piazzola, a composer of classical music and tango- I hear whorehouse, perversion, sacredness, desire, longing- it's all in his music and it helps me find those parts in myself. I feel the same about Copland and Bach, Beethoven. Each composer brings out a different element.
I also love Carol Burnett and Gilda Radner, Chris Rock and Drew Hastings and Maria Bamford. The absolute best in comedy.
Q: Any roles as an actress that you're burning to play?
AR: If they ever did a movie version of Grey Gardens, I'd like to be the daughter.
Come take my workshop and tell your story. I start up again in January.
www. annrandolph.com for more info
-and Also, Dec. 3rd, I'll be participating in a xmas burlesque comedy show at the Steve Allen Theater.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
2007 Interview with Al Coronel
Q: Is this the most challenging role you've played?
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Adam Simmons Interview - from 2005
When we sat down to chat over tea in NoHo recently, Adam Simmons told me interestingly enough that he was no stranger to Dorian. In fact, the combination Opie (young Ron Howard in The Andie Griffith Show)/Bart Conner look-alike had auditioned 3 years earlier for Dorian's incarnation in Denver, Colorado and ended up being the second choice to play Dorian. Simmons held on to one of the original songs that was eventually cut from the show "Hold Still" and performed it for his LA audition. Producers James J. Mellon and Kevin Bailey were undecidedly impressed and cast him this time around.
Simmons is a totally positive person and believes fiercely in the value encounters that lead one to the next level of success - "planting the seeds". Through a friend who saw Dorian, he learned that the musical Bark! needed understudies/replacements. He proceeded to audition for creator and musical director David Troy Francis who hired him on the spot.
During his teen years in LA, Simmons served as a veterinary technician for 5 years and entered Iowa State to study Veterinary Science. He didn't become a vet, but has never lost his love for dogs. And so, keeping at arm's length the old show biz adage "No dogs or actors allowed!" he currently gets a chance to prove that love 3 times a week as he sings out passionately "I Am the Terrier from Mars" in the guise of canine Ben onstage at the Coast Playhouse in Bark!
Simmons describes himself as bicoastal, having recently purchased his apartment in New York City. He first moved there after graduating from Iowa State with a triple major in Veterinary Science, Business and Performing Arts. It was Pirates of Penzance at Iowa State that got him hooked on the stage. "I was bit by the bug". His first job in the Big Apple was a booking in the largest Equity children's theatre tour of Young Tom Edison that he took through the midwest, northeast and on into Alaska before returning to NYC and landing a gig as a swing in the 2000 Broadway version of Jesus Christ Superstar. He calls his casting "one of those flukes". He understudied 18 roles and went on in 12 of them, including the part of Annas. After Superstar, it was a wonderful 6-month tryst in End of the World Party with Jim J Bullock and then on to LA "to give it a try".
On the day of our conversation he was off to a booking of an episode of Showtime's The Cell about a terrorist cell in which he plays a green FBI surveillance agent. This is definitely "against type" as "I get a chance to say a lot of bad words". With some roles on TV and 2 major ones on the LA stage to his credit, Simmons forges full speed ahead, believing in himself as an actor: "I am a good storyteller." As far as music is concerned, "David Troy Francis will make me a better technician/musician. He will give me the tricks, the tools to be more engaging. I practice and I value my work, but he (Francis) has made me aware of 'perfect practice': doing it right the first time by looking at every note and respecting it."
When I suggested that his young age (28) might be a factor in not having it all together, he reminded me that Orlando Bloom is a star. "I don't want the excuse to be that I am too young, but rather that I am not prepared". How does he define success? "Getting to do what you love, getting paid for it, doing it well, and getting some recognition for it, in whatever form that takes".
Simmons' business mind is clearly at work as he calculates his rise. He also wants to be a producer like the phenomenal David Merrick, "but nicer". During his early beginnings in New York he got involved in summer stock with the Northern Lights Playhouse in Wisconsin that offers a "true rotating rep". In show biz terms, that means a different show 7 days a week: set comes down and the next one goes up in a matter of hours. During that time as well as acting in the various plays, he learned marketing and advertising and on his return to NYC in 1998 went to work in marketing and promotions for such shows as Phantom of the Opera, Miss Saigon and Julie Taymor's now esoteric Green Bird. Not a bad start, kiddo! He also finds time to learn Mandarin. Why? With China's super power status imposing more and more, why let a language be the barrier? "So I can take my Broadway shows to China. It's good business; it's where the people are".
Robert Sean Leonard, Guy Pearce, Johnny Depp and Ian McKellan are role models, so Simmons definitely aims high, but still has his feet firmly planted. His ultimate goal? "To tell great stories, even if it's in a small theatre in Wisconsin, as long as I can make a small, but livable wage".
And the role he longs to play more than any other? "Fool in King Lear. He embodies the humanity that Lear progressively loses during the course of the play. It is 'love' that we want to follow us around even though life happens".
For a man his age, Simmons seems to possess enough wisdom to get him through the hard times. He will not accept just any part to get by. "I have a hard time with gratuitous, foul language and nudity in a show. Nudity needs to have a reason. There's enough shock value in the world".
At 2 or 3 points during the conversation Simmons referred to himself as a 'great' singer, then, perhaps for fear that I might interpret his as an overly audacious ego, changed his phrasing to a 'good' singer. Quite to the contrary, I am impressed with audacity, as long as you can put your money where your mouth is. Adam Simmons certainly can. I interrupted him by saying, "No, Adam, you are a great singer and, with your consistent efforts and perseverance, you are well on your way to becoming even greater".