
Hello. First off, my apologies to everyone who called me this weekend and got James.
What happened, you ask? Remember how I said that AT&T used their Carrie-like powers to make me lose my Blackberry because I switched to Credo Mobile? Well, James and I both got new phones. We were told we had an option of black or purple. I have never liked purple, even in the 80's when it was in vogue, so I got black and, unfortunately, so did James. I took my phone with me to Chicago, and when I texted James, the [AUDIO-LEFT]message appeared on my phone. I thought it was weird until I finally figured out that I was texting myself: It was very Chinatown -- "she's my mother/she's my sister." Yes, I had taken James' look-a-like phone. The only good part is that my mom called me on my phone, got James instead and suckered him into a half-hour conversation.
Speaking of Carrie, I'm excited it's finally being revived! I had tickets from my mom in 1988 because it opened right when I was graduating college. But by the time my plane landed in New York, it had closed. PS, we saw Chess instead (which had AMAZING singing). Regardless, I've always wanted to see Carrie, and it only took a mere 22 years for it to come back. Although, there is a half-bootleg of the original show floating around. Scott Wise (who won the Tony Award the following year for Jerome Robbins' Broadway) was in the ensemble and wanted to have some kind of documentation of the show. He literally gaffer taped his video camera to the back wall of the balcony and hit the record button at half-hour. The first weird thing is that there's 30 minutes at the beginning of the tape of the audience filing in. Also, he couldn't plug his camera up in the balcony, so his battery ran out at the end of Act One. If you've ever seen any online footage of the show from the TV reviews, you'll see the bizarre choice that the high school kids are all in white outfits. Why, you ask? Well, according to a story I heard from a reliable source, the original director (Terry Hands from the Royal Shakespeare Company) was talking to a very famous Broadway producer. The producer remarked that the story of Carrie was so terrifying because it's like any high school in U.S. The producer then took it further by saying it was like Grease. The director agreed and proceeded to put the student body in all-white, almost toga-like costumes. That's right, he made it not like Grease but like Greece! A Greek tragedy, to be precise. I know it sounds like an urban legend, but check out the original cast photos/videos online. Holy Oedipus!
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Seth with Jack Plotnick |
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Rudetsky performs Rhapsody in Seth |
Right after the show started one matinee, I saw an older looking version of him right in the front row! I was too scared to give him a second look because I didn't want to see his reaction to everything I said about him. Would he walk out? Would he say something from the audience? Would he just glower and give me the evil eye? I had to keep going with the show, but I couldn't bear to see his facial expression, so I spent the whole show avoiding looking anywhere near his direction. Finally, when I got to the bows, I got the nerve to look over at him. Of course, it wasn't him. Shockingly, I discovered there are other bald men in the world who are around 5'9". Yay. It was really fun playing an entire show while pretending my head was in a vice that prevented me from turning it anywhere to the right of center. For tickets for Rhapsody in Seth at www.TriadNYC.com or for my performance later in the week in Red Deer, Canada, go to http://ignitiontheatre.ca/rhapsodyinseth.html. Unless you're my old theatre teacher. In that case, all performances are sold-out. And, you owe me money for a chiropractor.
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Andrea Martin |
I'm on my United flight back to New York after doing two (sold-out) shows and a great master class in Chicago. Missy Greenberg produced the show and treated me like visiting royalty. I had flowers in my hotel room, a gift basket full of everything I love (Diet Snapple, Fudge Graham Zone bars, Emergen-C, Bagels, Hershey's Kisses) and another one in my dressing room (!) and a copy of Patti LuPone's autobiography! Amazing!
All right, we're preparing for landing, so I have to sign off. I was upgraded to First Class, but I have to say, I'm duly unimpressed. There aren't even private TV screens up here. I've said it before, and I'll say it again: My personal shopper is the worst! Have a great Columbus Day!!!
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Seth Rudetsky has played piano in the pits of many Broadway shows including Ragtime, Grease and The Phantom of the Opera. He was the artistic producer/conductor for the first five Actors Fund concerts including Dreamgirls and Hair, which were both recorded. As a performer, he appeared on Broadway in The Ritz and on TV in "All My Children," "Law and Order C.I." and on MTV's "Made" and "Legally Blonde: The Search for the Next Elle Woods." He has written the books "The Q Guide to Broadway" and "Broadway Nights," which was recorded as an audio book on Audible.com. He is currently the afternoon Broadway host on Sirius/XM radio and tours the country doing his comedy show, "Deconstructing Broadway." He can be contacted at his website SethRudetsky.com, where he has posted many video deconstructions.)