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Really Doing It – Kelli O’Hara on Living the Theater Life

(This article was published in Long Island Pulse, Dec. 2016: http://lipulse.com/2016/11/23/kelli-ohara-broadway/)

by david lefkowitz

 

Well, it sure took `em long enough.  In 2015, after five previous nominations for exceptional work in the Broadway musicals The Light in the Piazza, The Pajama Game, Nice Work if You Can Get It, South Pacific, and The Bridges of Madison County, Kelli O’Hara finally won her first Tony Award.  Choking back tears during her acceptance speech for playing Anna in The King and I, the actress, who had already left the production, promised, “I’ll be back!  Maybe not up here but on a theater stage.  I love what I do!”

As one of only a handful of true modern theater stars, O’Hara is bound to make good on that promise, even as the responsibility of raising two children with her husband, actor-musician Greg Naughton, holds first priority on her time and attention.  “We do the best we can,” the actress told Pulse.  “Some days it feels like we’re really doing it, and some days it feels really imperfect, but I think everybody feels that way no matter what business we’re in.”

Broadway, therefore, may not see O’Hara for another season or two, but the diminutive beauty can still make time in her schedule for some TV work (“Masters of Sex,” “The Accidental Wolf”) and concert engagements.  In fact, Long Island fans can see her Saturday, Dec. 10, at the Staller Center of Stony Brook University.  Similar to her October evening at Carnegie Hall, the program will mix originals and showtunes but in a way, the songstress explained, “that you might not expect.  There will be songs from the shows that I’ve done, but I’d do `This Nearly was Mine’ from South Pacific, as opposed to `Wonderful Guy,’ and `I Have Dreamed’ from The King and I as opposed to `Hello Young Lovers.’    Songs that represent the shows I’ve done but in ways that allow me to share other sides of myself.”

That self, O’Hara explained, was raised not on Broadway, but on movie musicals.  “I didn’t think of myself as wanting to be a movie star because the reality of my generation is that those movies weren’t being made anymore,” she explained.  “A movie star when I was a kid was Molly Ringwald.  But for me, it was Shirley Jones, Julie Andrews—my idol.  It was every movie I could get my hands on where someone was singing.  And when I started to dig into voices, I found myself wanting to know who Marni Nixon was.  Or learn about actresses like Marsha Mason in `The Goodbye Girl.’  Carol Burnett was a huge influence.  I’m not a comedian, but she was alive and full of everything that I loved.”

The actress even confided that when she auditioned for The Pajama Game, she offered a blatant imitation of Doris Day.  “I think I made the part my own later on, but just to get the part, I thought, `Well, I can do her, so here it comes.’”  And O’Hara’s Eliza in a 2007 New York City Philharmonic My Fair Lady?  “A complete homage to Julie Andrews.  And in other shows, there are personal people in my life that I channel, like both of my grandmothers and even my mother.  When you truly know someone other than yourself, it’s very useful to play a person you’re not.”

The kind of person O’Hara is could not be more grateful for her rare position among such top-tier Broadway divas as Laura Benanti, Audra McDonald, and fellow Oklahoma City University graduate Kristin Chenoweth (who helped O’Hara get her first agent).  However, she’s also realistic about her place in the showbiz hierarchy. “My goal will always be theater,” she said.  “But we have to be honest with ourselves.  Maybe a lot of people in New York know me on the Broadway stage, but when you’re talking about Americans coming here and buying tickets to see Broadway shows, they’d much sooner recognize a bigger star’s name.  I’m not silly; I understand how it works.  You’ll notice that I work a lot in the not-for-profit world.  It’s because commercial producers need to have that name.  And I’m not that name.  I’ve worked alongside Harry Connick Jr. and Matthew Morrison, and Matthew Broderick.  I’ve been lucky to have co-stars alongside me who are names.  So whether the theater community likes it or not, there’s pressure on all of us to go get TV and film credits in order to come back to theater and sell tickets.”

Asked if she ever considered packing it in during the lean times, O’Hara replied, “It’s hard for me to even admit this.  There were lots of times in my career when I paid dues and pounded that pavement.  I auditioned a lot of times, and there were a lot of things I didn’t get.  But I did win my first audition.  I came to New York on Thursday and auditioned for my first musical on Monday, and that was my first job.

“Times are different now,” she continued.  “I was a non-Equity actor and a blonde soprano, and I was going in for an ingénue role in a non-union production up in Sugar Loaf, New York, of Something’s Afoot—and I got it!  But it’s not like I came here and got a Broadway show right out of the gate.  I had a lot of heartbreaks.  But I had a lot of people helping me, and there was never a time I thought I’d give up because I had light at the end of every tunnel.  In fact, when I came to New York, I gave myself two years to get a Broadway show, and then I would go home.  Literally two years to the month, I made my Broadway debut, and I’ve never looked back.”

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David Lefkowitz hosts Dave’s Gone By (davesgoneby.com) on UNC Radio, co-publishes Performing Arts Insider, and founded TotalTheater.com. His award-winning solo comedy, The Miracle of Long Johns (miracleoflongjohns.com), has played engagements in Colorado and New York City.

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SEE OR SKIP: THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY

((c)2014 David Lefkowitz. This review was first published in Stagebuddy.com, April 7, 2014: https://stagebuddy.com/theater/theater-review/see-skip-bridges-madison-county)

NOTE (April 2023): This review was part of a brief series of reviews I inaugurated for Stagebuddy.com called “See or Skip,” which followed a particular format (as noted by the title).

In this arts column, rather than provide a lengthy critique, we hit the bullet points and share our thoughts on whether a show is worth seeing or skipping. Of course, your own reasons for picking or ignoring a show might be based on price, time, discounts, availability, subject interest, word of mouth, and personal taste. Feel free to add our voice to the chorus.

SHOW: The Bridges of Madison County
VENUE: Gerald Schoenfeld Theater
VENUE TYPE: Broadway

SEE because:

Kelli O’Hara is one of the reigning goddesses of Broadway. She sings with great range and beauty and is touching as a housewife who blossoms from a brief love affair.

O’Hara’s physical transformation from nondescript housewife to alluring beauty (complete with all-too-brief and vaguely gratuitous nude scene) is something to see – especially for all the husbands in the audience dragged to the show by their “Shades of Grey”-toting wives.

For the women: co-lead Steven Pasquale is an appealing hippie-hunk who does take his shirt off at one point.

Some of the music is lovely. It has a folky lilt, and the lyrics are intelligent without trying to be clever.

The story is told quietly, with a lot of time for the relationship between housewife and photographer to build naturally.

Next-door neighbors Cass Morgan and Michael X. Martin have a good scene that lends much-needed comic relief to the second act.

The last song, “Always Better,” is damn good.

SKIP because:

Oh my God, this thing runs two hours and 40 minutes with an intermission and you feel pretty much every minute of it.

Considering all the time we spend with Francesca and Robert, their great love isn’t nearly as touching or captivating as it ought to be.

Throughout the piece, friends and neighbors constantly watch, pry, spy, and loom ominously – and yet, not a thing is made of that plotwise.

The romance between Robert and Francesca is simply not enough to fill a two-act Broadway musical without subplots and minor characters who connect the themes. After all, composer-lyricist Jason Robert Brown previously covered five years in 80 minutes. Now it’s taking him 160 minutes just to get through half a week.

Nice as much of the music is, there’s a sameness to it, and when it finally does become rousing, it’s in the way of typical modern Broadway ballads: louder, more intensely sung, but still earwashy.

There’s just something flat and a mite tedious about the whole enterprise. In trying to steer clear of clichés and outsized Broadway-musical tropes, Brown and librettist Marsha Norman go too far in the other direction and swamp us with the ordinary.

FINAL CALL: SKIP, because:

It’s a tasteful slog but a slog nonetheless.


(Staged by Bartlett Sher, The Bridges of Madison County ran Feb. 20-May 18, 2014 at Broadway’s Gerald Schoenfeld Theater.)

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BROADWAY CRITICS SEND VALENTINES TO MADISON COUNTY

((c)2014 David Lefkowitz. This article was published in Stagebuddy.com, Feb. 21, 2014: https://stagebuddy.com/theater/theater-review/bway-critics-send-valentines-madison-county

More than 50 million people have bought copies of Robert James Waller’s 1992 novel, “The Bridges of Madison County.” How many people will come to see a musical version of the material? Broadway is about to find out with the arrival of composer Jason Robert Brown and librettist Marsha Norman’s Broadway musical of the same name.

Two-time Tony winner Kelli O’Hara plays Francesca, a bored housewife married to Hunter Foster (a Little Shop of Horrors Tony nominee) but pining for a visiting nature photographer (Steven Pasquale). Staged by Bartlett Sher, The Bridges of Madison County began previews Jan. 17 and opened last night, Feb. 20, at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theater.

So did Broadway’s critics cross the Bridge when they came to it or did they burn this Bridges behind them?

For his part, TheaterMania’s David Gordon decks the Bridges with garlands. Calling the tuner “terrific” and the song “Another Life” “extraordinarily beautiful,” Gordon raves that Jason Robert Brown’s score provides O’Hara and Pasquale “with an embarrassment of riches, and Tony winner Brown manages to top himself with each successive song.” And talk about a “wow” closer for a review: “One can only imagine,” writes Gordon, “that the feeling onlookers have as Francesca and Robert fall in love is akin to that of 1945 audiences when Billy Bigelow and Julie Jordan first sat on a bench and changed the face of musical theater.”

On the opposite side of the spectrum, Variety’s Marilyn Stasio gripes that “although Kelli O’Hara and Steven Pasquale are in glorious voice as this passionate pair, the bombastic orchestrations and Bartlett Sher’s overstated helming inflate the production into some quasi-operatic beast that thinks it’s Aida.” Ouch. Stasio loves O’Hara’s soprano but hates her “atrocious” Iowa accent and feels she’s miscast. Like Gordon, Stasio loves the song, “Another Life.”

Entertainment Weekly’s Thom Geier praises a different song, “One Second & A Million Miles,” which he says is “destined to become a cabaret staple.” Geier likes much of JRB’s “lush and deeply romantic score” but grumbles that “the story has no real villains, or even antagonists, to work up a plot worth sustaining for 2 hours and 45 minutes.” Still, he grants Bridges an overall B+ and lauds director Sher for helping “a chamber musical…fill the space in the Gerald Schoenfeld Theater.”

Writing for the Chicago Tribune, Chris Jones also has issues with the “overly earnest” tone of the show. “Despite some beautiful music…and exquisite singing from Kelli O’Hara and Steven Pasquale,” Jones writes, “Marsha Norman’s book…misses the movie’s smoldering passions,” especially because the two leads are playing the sad ending “right from the start.” That said, Jones finds the final scenes “very rushed” and Foster’s character “underwritten.”

New York Times chief critic Ben Brantley basically writes a love letter to Kelli O’Hara, who “confirms her position as one of the most exquisitely expressive stars in musical theater.” Alas, “most of what surrounds her has the depth of a shiny picture postcard, one that bears a disproportionately long and repetitive message.” Brantley also admits that he wasn’t exactly a fan of Waller’s novel: “though it’s short, and I have I fairly high tolerance for romantic swill, I had to stop halfway through.” He does praise Jason Robert Brown’s music, which offers “plenty of rich fare to feast on.”

The Associated Press’s Mark Kennedy agrees, lauding Brown’s “superb, thrilling score.” He continues, “A sometimes bloated and meandering book by Marsha Norman and some odd choices by director Bartlett Sher can’t take anything away from a score that brilliantly goes from torch song to blues and honky-tonk to virtual opera, led by two actors with genuine feeling and a seemingly endless reservoir of notes.”

In his 4 (out of 5) star review for the Daily News, Joe Dziemianowicz is kinder to Norman’s book, though he, like several other critics, finds her more at home in the central love story than “the family and neighbor subplots.” No such reservations for the tunes, though: “The beating heart of the show is Brown’s score. It’s richly melodic and rhythmic — and one of Broadway’s best in the last decade. Brown’s stirring orchestrations — strings, piano and percussion — provide perfect settings for his musical gems.” Dziemianowicz also praises O’Hara’s “rare and radiant grace” and Pasquale’s “rugged good looks…and virile vocals.”

In her 3 (out of 4) star review for the New York Post, Elisabeth Vincentelli finds the show more of a “mixed bag, one in which cringe-inducing bits alternate with moments of musical-theater nirvana.” She continues, “O’Hara sings like a dream and is unexpectedly funny… If there is an affair to remember here, it’s the enduring one between O’Hara and the audience.” And just to prove that everyone has different taste, Vincentelli disses “Another Life” as “what sounds like a Joni Mitchell B-side.”

In his 2 (out of 4) star review for AM New York, ever the outlier, Matt Windman calls the “slow, static and quiet” show “a snooze and a misfire.” Bartlett Sher’s “self-conscious” directing doesn’t help, nor does Norman opening the story up to include a lot of distracting family and neighbors. Like other critics, Windman questions Michael Yeargan’s “skeletal” set, which lacks the rustic richness of the film version of the material. Windman concludes, “At least [O’Hara] and her co-star Steven Pasquale show off their exquisite singing voices,” though “Hunter Foster, as Francesca’s rundown husband, gets lost in the background.”

Alexis Soloski, writing for The Guardian, is kinder in her *** (out of 5) review, noting that O’Hara is as sumptuously voiced as ever and dazzles in the biographical number, `Almost Real,’ while Pascal “is implausibly hunky and an able, emotive singer himself.” Soloski has issues with some of the show’s “maudlin gestures,” but “the tear-streaked audience leapt to their feet. They loved it anyway.”

—> https://wp.me/pzvIo-2HH

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