Blackhurst Blackhurst
Transcription
Blackhurst Blackhurst
Klea Broadway Star Blackhurst Blackhurst Everything the Traffic Will Allow The Songs and Sass of Ethel Merman Saturday, May 1, 2010 Main Stage Theatre School of the Arts FRIENDS OF FRIENDS OF Presents Klea Blackhurst’s EVERYTHING THE TRAFFIC WILL ALLOW Starring KLEA BLACKHURST featuring The Pocket Change Trio Bruce Barnes, Piano and School of the Arts Students: Gary Crocker, Drums Zach Minier, Bass Music Supervision & Arrangements by MICHAEL RICE Music Direction by BRUCE BARNES Presented by Special Arrangement with Denise Cooper Everything the Traffic Will Allow Will Be Performed Without an Intermission. WHO’S WHO… KLEA BLACKHURST (Author and Performer) is best known for her acclaimed tribute to Ethel Merman, Everything the Traffic Will Allow, that has been charming audiences and critics alike nationwide since its New York debut in 2001. Among many accolades the production earned her the inaugural Special Achievement Award from “Time Out New York” magazine. The recording of Everything the Traffic Will Allow was named one of the top ten show albums of 2002 by Talkin’ Broadway.com. Klea next turned her passion for musical-theatre history toward the Broadway career of composer Vernon Duke and debuted Autumn in New York: Vernon Duke’s Broadway at New York’s Café Carlyle with a subsequent sold-out engagement at Joe’s Pub at The Public Theater. Klea’s concert appearances include Jerry Herman’s Broadway with Angela Lansbury at London’s Palladium Theatre, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Jazz at Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall with Michael Feinstein, Oklahoma! at London’s Royal Albert Hall, New York’s 92nd Street Y (Leo Robin & Cole Porter), and the Chicago Humanities Festival. Klea’s theatre credits include: In New York - Bingo, By Jupiter, Radio Gals, Oil City Symphony; Regional – Call Me Madam, Chicago, The Great American Trailer Park Musical, Red Hot and Blue, Anything Goes. Film: “Andy Across the Water”. TV and radio: “Law and Order: SVU,” “The Rosie O’Donnell Show,” “Sesame Street,” “A Prairie Home Companion.” Klea is featured on Jule Styne in Hollywood on the PS Classics label. Klea can also be heard on the original cast recordings of Bingo and Radio Gals as well as “Lost in Boston IV,” “Unsung Irving Berlin,” and “The Best of Off Broadway.” The recordings, “Autumn in New York: Vernon Duke’s Broadway,” and “Everything the Traffic Will Allow” are on the Ghostlight Records label. Klea’s most recent show, Dreaming of a Song: The Music of Hoagy Carmichael, for which she teamed up with Billy Stritch, received a 2007 Backstage Bistro Award and was recently released on Ghostlight Records. MICHAEL RICE (Music Supervisor and Arranger) is the Music Supervisor of Klea Blackhurst’s Everything the Traffic Will Allow and Autumn in New York: Vernon Duke’s Broadway. Michael first worked with Klea in the Off Broadway production of Radio Gals. He has also performed opposite her in various regional productions of Oil City Symphony. Michael was the original Music Supervisor for the Off Broadway hit Nunsense. Recent credits include The Light in the Piazza (Pioneer Theatre); Porgy and Bess (American Portrait Gallery); And the World Goes Round, directed by Marcia Milgrom Dodge. Michael’s Broadway and National Tour credits include Peter Pan starring Cathy Rigby, Me and My Girl, Grand Hotel, Camelot, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Jesus Christ Superstar. As composer-lyricist, he adapted, with Eric Bentley, Bertolt Brecht’s The Good Woman of Setzuan that premiered at New York’s Raw Space, and American Beauty written with Jack Heifner and Romulus Linney which has been produced around the country. Currently, he is musical directing 42nd Street at Pioneer Theatre and the upcoming production of Oklahoma! at Sacramento Music Circus. BRUCE BARNES (Music Director/Piano Accompianist) Musical Director, Conductor, Arranger and Pianist recently returned to NYC from a year touring as Musical Director of Happy Days. He can be seen on HBO’s Cathouse, The Musical as The Vocal Coach, attempting to teach prostitutes how to sing. In 2007, Bruce arranged and musically directed Stormy Weather starring Leslie Uggams. He made his Broadway debut conducting Peter Pan starring Cathy Rigby, and regularly substituted as Associate Conductor of the Sam Mendes production of Cabaret at Studio 54. Off-Broadway, Bruce was Musical Director for Class Mothers ‘68 starring Priscilla Lopez. Internationally, he has toured with La Scala’s production of West Side Story and as a Musical Ambassador for Lincoln Center’s “Meet the Artist” program. National tours include Kiss Me, Kate; Cats; Jesus Christ Superstar; Cabaret starring Andrea McArdle; and Peter Pan starring Cathy Rigby. As a pianist, Bruce has accompanied Patti LuPone, Penny Fuller, Ruthie Henshall, Beverly Sills, Billy Porter & Eartha Kitt. GARY CROCKER (Percussion) – Gary is a senior Instrumental Music major who musically realizes his oneness with the universe. ZACHARY MINIER (Bass) – Zachary is an eleventh grade Instrumental Music major. He has been playing bass almost 6 years. He is a self-taught. Previous musical endeavors include performing with The Kittens, Barns of the Past, Hate Fish, and the High Five Guitar Squad. Zachary lives in the city with his cat Sam. “Let Freedom Roll.” WHY MERMAN MATTERS... Until recently, whenever I was asked the proverbial “who influenced you most as a singer,” I could never arrive at an elemental response. The question always caught me by surprise, so I’d furrow my brow and start to name singers I truly enjoy and deeply respect: Ella Fitzgerald, Rosemary Clooney, Freddie Mercury, Donny Osmond. But as the opportunities for this question being asked of me became more frequent, I knew I needed to define what felt indefinable. I was ready to pinpoint who was instrumental in actually forming my view of a song; my love of certain sounds. “Why doesn’t the answer just pop into my head? Why don’t I know this,” I thought. Then it came to me. I realized I couldn’t point to the singer because it wasn’t the singer - it was the song. My mom has been an actress appearing in shows all over Salt Lake City since before I was born. As a little kid, I would tag along to rehearsals for Madame Butterfly or Bells Are Ringing, falling asleep between rows of the theatre seats. Her collection of Broadway Original Cast Albums was a sort of magical soundtrack to my childhood. My sister and I played them in every room of the house on one of those plastic portable phonographs with three speeds and one tiny speaker. That was the music I loved the most; those are the songs that influenced my tiny view of the world. By the second grade, I knew every lyric to Half A Sixpence and I Do! I Do! But my personal favorite had a gal on the cover in a buckskin dress with a squirrel rifle and really, really red lips. Her huge voice reminded me of my mom’s and I loved her long before I knew she had a name other than Annie Oakley. At ten, I was cast in a production of The King and I, starring John Cullum and Patricia Kies. At last I got my chance to step into that world where songs actually came to life. It was during that production that I began to experience the balance and beauty of musical theatre structure for the first time. I saw how music could move a story forward. I could see the differences between the starring roles, romantic leads and character roles; the ballads, up-tempos, and specialty numbers. And the BIGGEST discovery was that not all women sounded like my mom and Annie Oakley; a defining realization as I was finding my own voice on the stage. I’d never heard anything like Mrs. Anna! There were sopranos, and I was not one. The summer after seventh grade I was paid $35.00 a week to babysit Wally Nelson and his sisters. On Fridays, the money and I went straight to the mall, where I faithfully added to my own budding Broadway collection. I then spent the entire week listening to the new show, memorizing it, going to the library to dig up anything I could find about it. Sometime that summer I bought Gypsy... and the world has never been the same. Suddenly, there was Annie Oakley coming out of nowhere to knock the wind out of me as Mama Rose. Suddenly, I saw the scope of what was possible, and I knew if I was going to make theatre and singing my life, there was someone I needed to know more about - Ethel Merman. Once I was old enough to realize the full impact of Merman’s talents on the Broadway stage, I kept her close to my heart and championed everything about her. According to people who were there, it is impossible to describe the relationship she had with her audience. They say a good comparison doesn’t remotely exist. She is famous for being heard in the last row of the balcony at a time when there was no amplification. Songwriters adored writing for her and worshipped her ability to deliver their lyrics with beautiful phrasing, stunning style, and a wicked sense of comedy. Her lack of stage fright and unwavering professionalism are legendary. She was dazzling and gutsy, raising the bar to a new level for actresses and songwriters alike. Broadway became her home. She lived to perform for her audience and they would virtually crackle with excitement when she stepped onto the stage. As Merman sang in Anything Goes, times have changed. The songs, the sounds, and the stars are very different now than they were in 1930, when she burst onto the scene in Girl Crazy. But her unabashed, larger-than-life style and brassy voice are constantly memorialized in various ways, from drag parodies to cabaret themes to cocktail party quips. She’s an icon on many levels, and they are all tributes in and of themselves. Eventually, I was compelled to construct a homage of my own, working with the conviction that it is critical to remember not just what she looked like or sounded like, but what she inspired in those who were propelling theatre and music forward at the time. Her Broadway career starts with George Gershwin and ends with Jerry Herman. The roles written for her are brilliant and classic. The list of songs associated with her name is astounding – enough to fill several evenings. And believe me, it was not easy deciding on the selections for this show. It is truly a joy and an honor to sing these songs and to tell this part of her story. Given all this, how could I answer anything other than “Ethel Merman” when asked who influenced me most? She embodies the music, the legend, and the style that I was practically weaned on; and that I long to express as a performer. - Klea Blackhurst The CD recordings of Klea Blackhurst’s “Everything the Traffic Will Allow,” “Autumn in New York: Vernon Duke’s Broadway” and “Dreaming of a Song: The Music of Hoagy Carmichael” are available at www.ghostlightrecords.com. Please visit Klea’s website at www.kleablackhurst.com The photographing or sound recording of any performance or the possession of any device for such photographing or sound recording inside this theatre is strictly prohibited. SPECIAL THANKS… Friends of School of the Arts thanks the students who worked so diligently to make tonight’s event special either by performing, working as the stage crew, or assisting with the reception and parking. We applaud your hard work, talent, dedication and enthusiasm for SOTA. We also thank the administration, faculty, staff, parents and caring adults who gave of their time to make Klea Blackhurst’s Everything the Traffic Will Allow a memorable experience for all. Bravo! PRESENTING OUR STUDENTS… SOTA COMMUNITY SERVICE STUDENTS Medina Abdi Jeanette Betancourt Chandel Correa Yunoka Fair Joachim Fleischmann Kaheem Fortune Nastalsia Hall Taylor Hall Asonte Harris Michelle Houghtaling Naita Howell Willie Jones III Trenton Jones Willie Keglar Alexandria Mewborn Taaquia Morrow Connie Perez Elaine Stewart Amanda Thomas Denisha Walker Marissa Webbe Jala Wilson Trenton Weaver THE SOTA JAZZ COMBO Jose Encarnacion Music Director Louis Ressel Matthew Sieber-Ford Yusuf Abdi Justin Blake Harriett Davis Zthoeri Marshall Gary Crocker Alto Sax Tenor Sax Trumpet Trombone Piano Bass Drums SOTA SINGERS - 2009-2010 Lorie Dengler Dewey Artistic Director Daniel Lauritzson Vocal Music Director Chelse Chambers Julia Hermanson Jessica James Emma Marshall Yvana Melendez Kamaran Moss Sarah Mullen Ben Northrup Katy Rebholz Taylor Rugg Emmett Tross Cameron Tyson Whitney White Tatiana Williams SOTA STAGE CREW George Comes Technical Director Chris Dake Jr. George Verhagen FRIENDS OF Friends of School of the Arts Board of Directors Nanette Elliott Cheryl Bianchi Scott Cresswell J. Charmaine Bennett Shawanda D. Evans Adele M. Fico Elizabeth Franz LaMarr Jackson J.D. Jackson Christine Monteferrante Brenda L. Pacheco Rick Packard Alice K. Smith President Vice President and 2010 Gala Co-Chair Secretary and Treasurer Alumni Committee Chair Development Committee Chair Nominating Committee Chair Principal School of the Arts Mette Stromnes Alan A. Tirre Adrianna White Eagle Allocations Committee Chair and 2010 Gala Co-Chair Faculty Representative Vice Principal of the Arts Student Representative Jean M. Graupman Linda A. Melendez Executive Director Finance Director Friends of School of the Arts is a not-for-profit, community-based 501(c)(3) organization that raises money to support the academic, artistic and humanistic success of our students. Whether it is dance shoes, special lessons, a pair of glasses, registration fees, or emergency assistance, Friends of School of the Arts quietly offers invaluable financial support. Thank you for sharing your evening with us. Friends of School of the Arts regrets any errors or omissions from this program. Thank You! For More Information Contact: Friends of School of the Arts 45 Prince Street • Rochester, New York 14607 585-242-0290