|
Last Chance: Ends Sweetheart Stint in Hollywood Nov. 20
19 Nov 1999
TV and Broadway star Megan Mullally will be Los Angeles' Sweetheart
no longer. The full-scale production of her one woman show at the Coast
Playhouse in West Hollywood will close Nov. 20. The piece began
performances Oct. 14 with an opening night Oct. 23.
Sweetheart played a few fewer performances than originally
scheduled. Instead of starting the solo show Oct. 7, Mullally had to alter
the run to Oct. 14 due to a scheduling conflict, according to a
spokesperson.
Sweetheart is Mullally's exploration of relationships, from both
male and female perspectives. Using 12 well-known and obscure story songs,
she covers the idea of a "sweetheart" in moods that range from dark to
tongue-in-cheek.
"I have to call it performance art," Mullally said (at the time of the
workshop), as opposed to calling Sweetheart a cabaret or a club
act. The three men in the band and herself as performers "discover" the
theatre space and the audience around them. Mullally sometimes even serves
as sound technician, playing music for her piece on a boom box or by
giving sound cues herself.
For Mullally, who directed and wrote the piece, Sweetheart is a
chance to sing songs she has always loved in a way that she finds
challenging. "I thought, 'How could I perform these songs'? I don't want
to just stand up in a club and sing them. They deserve better than that,"
she said.
In fact, she looks more at the singing of the songs as performing them
than actually making them sound pretty. She explains that "it's more like
acting in pitch."
Part of her "pitch acting" involves taking traditional song
interpretations and twisting them on their ear. One such song, the
near-lullaby "Scarlet Ribbons" starts out like a children's nursery rhyme
as a mother describes hearing her child pray for scarlet ribbons which
miraculously appear on the child's bed the next morning. Mullally, on the
other hand, reduces the mother to a frightened lunatic losing control of
her mind as she suspects the forces of evil have come with the scarlet
ribbons.
Several of Mullally's songs are taken from theatre sources including
Richard Rogers and Lorenzo Hart's "10 Cents a Dance" (Simple Simon,
1930), Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson's "It Never Was You" (Knickerbocker
Holiday, 1938), Stephen Sondheim's "Johanna" (Sweeney Todd) and
"I Remember" ("Evening Primrose") and Weill and Bertolt Brecht's "Surubaya
Johnny" (Happy End). Other songs in the evening range from
anonymous ("She is My Slender" and "In the Gloaming") and traditional
American (Stephen Foster's "Beautiful Dreamer") to pop with Randy Newman
("Marie," "Guilty") and Tom Waits ("Ruby's Arms").
Currently seen on NBC as Karen Walker in "Will And Grace," Mullally
made her Broadway debut as Marty opposite Rosie O'Donnell in the 1994
revival of Grease. She returned again as Rosemary Pilkington with
the 1995 revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying
starring Matthew Broderick. Other television and film credits include
"Seinfeld," "Mad About You," "Frasier," "About Last Night" and "Queen's
Logic."
Also on board are Greg Kuehn (musical director), George Barker
(lighting designer) and John Clemens (sound designer). Kuehn, Mathis and
Berardi serve as the band as well.
Mullaly did a workshop mounting of Sweetheart at the Coast this
past spring.
Tickets are $15-$25 and available by calling Tickets L.A. at (323) 655
TKTS. The Coast Playhouse is located at 8325 Santa Monica Boulevard.
-- By Christine Ehren and
David Lefkowitz
ehren, christine. "Last Chance: Ends Sweetheart Stint in
Hollywood". www.PlayBill.com November 19, 1999: |