This summer Patti
LuPone won her second Best Actress Tony Award for her
work as Rose, the ultimate stage mother, in the latest
revival of Gypsy. That evening she brought the
audience to its feet with her electrifying performance
of "Everything's Coming Up Roses."
Gypsy is often described as the greatest
musical of all time -- the perfect marriage of book and
score. Revived on Broadway in 2003, critics agreed
Bernadette Peters was an odd choice for the role, and
most went out of their way to dismiss her and the show
itself. But Peters's superior acting made the
performance a thrill a minute, and the actress scored
a Tony nomination.
But Patti
LuPone's stepped it up a notch. Vocally she is perfect for
the role. Where Peters struggled with the
Styne-Sondheim score, LuPone plants her feet a little
wider and steamrolls through each song with a brassy
belt you just don't hear on Broadway these days -- and the
standing ovations from audiences and critics were
among the loudest they've ever been on the Great White
Way.
For Patti LuPone,
the standing ovations began almost 30 years ago and
have not stopped. The excitement of seeing Patti LuPone live
has been thrillingly captured in Patti LuPone at
Les Mouches, the never-before-released
recordings from her legendary 1980 nightclub act.
The album is an
eclectic, often inspired combination of songs recorded
throughout her 27-week run at Les Mouches. The music ranges
from '30s standards to iconic moments from her
own musical theater triumphs in Evita and the
lesser-known work The Baker's Wife. For extra
measure she throws in some pop, disco, and even a
little punk -- a reach the show's musical director,
David Lewis, wasn't originally certain LuPone could handle.
Lewis had already
created nightclub acts for actresses including
Butterfly McQueen and Diane Keaton when he began working
with LuPone. He had met the Broadway star playing for
her at auditions and decided to fashion a show after
her Eva Peron persona, a portrayal he describes as
"fierce." He refers to her as a diva of the people, and the
album proves if you can sing...you can sing.
And Patti LuPone
can indeed sing it all.
The Advocate:Not that you ever went away, but please describe for
our readers what your enormous success with Gypsy
means to you now, both personally and
professionally, almost 30 years after Evita
made you a star. Patti LuPone: It feels 30 years later, and it
feels great.
Rose is such an iconic role...how much freedom did
Arthur Laurents give you as an actress to make Rose your own? Total freedom. He even let me deconstruct
"Rose's Turn" so that it is my own
interpretation, not one handed down through the decades.
In developing your character, what parts of Rose
did you find yourself identifying with? I started with the humanness of Rose, and I
never abandoned that quality in her.
Which parts of Rose make you cringe? None of it makes me cringe. I'm an actor and I'm
playing a part, and I have to love the character.
What do you think about the current trend of using
movies or song catalogs as source material for new musicals? Good material is good material, and if it
translates into another medium, that's great.
Does it depress you when there are so many talented
writers and composers out there struggling for their break? Yes, it depresses me. That new voices, the
future of the American musical, are not being heard.
You were in the first graduating class at
Juilliard's drama school. What is the biggest difference
you see in the kids who come to New York
City now to pursue acting versus when you
were starting out? The lack of training...the lack of
technique.
Was stardom your goal, or was it a happy accident? What do you think? [Laughs]
In the '60s Barbra did the Bon Soir; in the '70s
Bette did the Continental Baths; and in the '80s you did
Les Mouches. Can you tell us a little bit about
that experience? It was just a wild Saturday night for 27 weeks.
I left Evita, put on different makeup, and let down
my hair.
Looking at your set list, you had quite an eclectic
repertoire. What is "offstage" Patti's favorite style of
music to sing? I don't sing offstage, but if I did it would be
rock and roll.
Describe the challenge of putting together a
nightclub act while you were also in the middle of your
Evita run. David Lewis put the whole thing together. I just
learned the music. The challenge was getting people to
see who Patti LuPone was.
Was there anything specific you and David were
looking to say? We did not set out to say anything.
David put a nightclub act together for me, we got a
booking, and it turned into "this thing."
Were there any acts you saw as an aspiring actress
that inspired you when it was time to put together this show? I went to all the clubs and I was inspired by a
lot of people; most notably Ellen Greene at Reno
Sweeney, and Barbara Cook wherever she sang.
Finally, I have to ask your take on the upcoming
election, and if you don't mind sharing with our
readers, who you are supporting and why? I'm supporting Obama and his wife because he is
uplifting and inspirational.
Patti LuPone at
Les Mouches is in stores November 11. LuPone is
currently starring in Gypsy on Broadway at
the St. James Theatre.