Showing posts with label musical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musical. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Rachel York: Dolly Levi, Hello, Dolly, The Regal Players 2009



Rachel York as Dolly Levi

Broadway's Drama desk Award Winner Rachel York starred in Hello, Dolly! as Reagle Players' entire summer season saluted composer-lyricist, Jerry Herman in 2009.

Rachel has great respect for Robert Eagle who has dedicated his life to keeping the Reagle Players alive when so many theaters are losing financing and closing.
Bob continues to produce great shows when times are tough in The Arts.

The Regal Players in Waltham, Massachusetts, decided to devote their entire season to the musicals of Jerry Herman. The fates came together and Rachel York became THEIR own Dolly Levi.
Rachel considers herself a “chameleon” actress and her resume proves it. 
Jamie Ross with Rachel on opening night of Hello, Dolly!
She has gone from comedy to drama to musical and back again. 
She has played a variety of characters throughout her career. That’s what keeps her ticking. Rachel earned a scholarship to the American Center for Music Theatre at The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, which prompted a move to Los Angeles. 
She began studying with acting coach Aaron Speiser. Mr. Speiser encouraged her to move to New York. He felt it was the best place for her to develop her skills and make her mark. 
She made her Broadway debut as Mallory/Avril in City of Angels in 1989. Her performance won critical acclaim. Since then Rachel has gone on to Broadway performances as Fantine in Les MisĂ©rables; Norma Cassidy in Victor/Victoria (Drama Desk Award) with Julie Andrews; Marguerite in The Scarlet Pimpernel; Miss Fancy in Sly Fox with Richard Dreyfuss; and Christine Colgate in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels with Jonathan Pryce. Off-Broadway, Rachel earned recognition, and a Drama Desk Award nomination, opposite Julie Andrews in Stephen Sondheim’s Putting It Together.

She later earned another Drama Desk nomination for her deft portrayal of Ruth Sutton in the Lincoln Center Theatre production of Dessa Rose. Recently Rachel received rave reviews as Dorothy Shaw in the New York City Center Encores! production of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. She also recently starred in The Best Is Yet to Come: The Music of Cy Coleman, conceived and directed by David Zippel, librettist for Cy Coleman’s City of Angels. Rachel has also made a name for herself on tour in the US and on the West End. She starred as Lilli/Kate in the national and London tours of the Tony Award-winning revival of Kiss Me, Kate and earned both IRNE and Helen Hayes nominations for her sparkling performance. She also earned a Carbonell Award for her critically acclaimed portrayal of Guenevere in the national tour of Camelot opposite Michael York. Most recently she created the role of the deliciously evil Cruella de Vil in The 101 Dalmatians Musical directed by Jerry Zaks. That performance earned her a People’s Choice Award from BroadwayWorld.com.
Favorite regional roles include Anna Leonowens in The King and I (Philadelphia); Dixie Wilson in the Goodman Theatre’s world premiere of the Brickman-Elice musical Turn of the Century co-starring Jeff Daniels and directed by Tommy Tune; Reno Sweeney in Anything Goes (Ovation nomination); Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly! (IRNE Award); The Witch in Into the Woods (IRNE Award); the Marquise de Merteuil in The Game, a musical adaptation of Les Liaisons Dangereuses; Mother in Ragtime; Dorothy in Summer of ’42; Edith Herbert in My One and Only; Irene St. Claire in Crucifer of Blood with Billy Crudup; Eva Peron in Evita; and Cecily Pigeon in The Odd Couple with Jason Alexander and Martin Short.

In concert, Rachel’s numerous appearances include The New York Pops at Carnegie Hall; The Sound of Music at the Hollywood Bowl with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under the direction of John Mauceri; the National Symphony and the Pittsburgh Pops under the direction of conductor Marvin Hamlisch; Broadway Showstoppers with Peter Nero and the Philly Pops; the San Francisco Symphony; the Detroit Symphony; the Minnesota Orchestra; the Utah Symphony; the St. Louis Symphony; the San Diego Symphony; the Colorado Symphony Orchestra; the Israeli Opera; and the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra. She has also performed her celebrated cabaret show, For the Love of It,  to rave reviews nationwide, including appearances at Feinstein’s at Loews Regency and the Metropolitan Room in New York, the Carpenter Center in Long Beach, and The Magic Castle in Hollywood.
BroadwayWorld.com
Rachel has also been a featured guest soloist in numerous tribute programs performing the works of Sondheim, Porter, Coleman, Gershwin, Wildhorn, Kander and Ebb, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Ahrens and Flaherty, Boublil and Schönberg, Andrew Lloyd Webber and many others.
Rachel's film credits include One Fine Day, Billy Bathgate, Killer Instinct, Second Honeymoon, Au Pair II, and the CBS made for television movie, Lucy (available online at Netflix). Her performances in Kiss Me, Kate (filmed for PBS’s Great Performances series) and Victor/Victoria are available on video/DVD. Rachel has also appeared on several popular TV series including Hannah Montana, Frasier, Reba, Numb3rs, Close to Home, Arli$$, Spin City, The Naked Truth and Diagnosis Murder. In addition, she is the voice of Bitty in Higglytown Heroes and Circe on The Justice League.

Rachel’s debut solo album, Let’s Fall in Love, has been an enormous success since its release and was named one of the Top Ten Vocal CDs of the year by Talkin' Broadway. She can also be heard on the soundtrack of Billy Bathgate, the live in concert recording of Broadway Showstoppers: Best of the Tonys with Peter Nero and the Philly Pops, and the original cast recordings of
City of Angels, Putting It Together, Victor/Victoria, The Scarlet Pimpernel Encore, Dessa Rose, Summer of ’42, and Opal, Honky Highway and Other Theatre Songs. A cast recording of the New York City Center Encores! production of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes will be released by Sony Masterworks Broadway in early 2013. At the time of this interview, she is currently starring as Reno Sweeney in the National tour of Anything Goes.
Those are just a few highlights!
Whatever show Rachel is doing at the time happens to be her favorite show! 
Rachel was born in Orlando, Florida, the youngest of four children.

Her passion for music and acting was ignited at an early age as she listened to her mother sing and play the piano.
At 17, Rachel enjoyed her professional debut. She was cast in the singing chorus of a dinner theater production of Kiss Me, Kate.
In true Peggy Sawyer fashion, Rachel was asked to go on for the lead with very short notice and gave a wonderfully received performance.
Later that year, Rachel earned a scholarship to the American Center for Music Theatre at The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, which prompted a move to Los Angeles. She began studying with acting coach Aaron Speiser.

Impressed with Rachel's talent and dedication, Mr. Speiser encouraged her to move to New York. He felt it was the best place for her to develop her skills and make her mark. The actress who was scheduled to play Dolly with The Regal Players had to pull out. Rachel had never seen a stage production of Hello, Dolly before and had no idea how big the role was until she received the script five days before the start of rehearsal.
When Rachel was contacted to play Dolly, at first she thought she was too young to take on this character and then she found out that Carol Channing was in her early forties the first time she did the role.
Rachel thought she wasn’t too far off from that! It WAS a role that she was hoping to play at some point in her career. When the opportunity came her way, she thought, “Hey! Why not?” When it came to her, she believes it came to her for a reason.
She attracts the perfect role for her at the right time depending upon what she is going through at the time.
She was sort of at the place where Dolly is when the play begins, where Dolly is living within the confines of the show.
She was dealing with the loss of a close family member. It was hard for Rachel to get back in the game again.
Dolly Levi is a role that most actresses in musical theater desire to play.
That outside reason also attracted Rachel. Her only frame of reference, really, was that she had seen the Barbra Streisand film when she was a kid. When she read the script, she realized that Dolly was going through what she was going through at the time and it was a role that she could bring a lot of depth to because she had empathy for Dolly. It spoke to Rachel’s heart.
She was living and breathing Dolly’s grief at the time.
When she sang Before the Parade Passes By, it had a lot of meaning for Rachel because she had lost her passion for living. This was before she brought her beautiful girl into the world. Sometimes it is really hard when someone close to one leaves to get back into the swing of things. When Rachel “attracts” a role, she feels that it is not only an education; it is very cathartic for her, as well.
Rachel’s journey as Dolly was no exception to that rule.  
Luckily, she was working with a wonderful and supportive group of people, and the experience and show turned out to be a great success.  She says she can only wonder what she could do with the role with more than 10 days of rehearsal and eight performances. Rachel was surprised that people thought she was perfect for the role! She won an IRNE Award (The Independent Reviewers of New England Awards). It is a role that Rachel never would have thought on her own was a perfect role for her. It turned out to be a good fit for her.
When it comes to an age limit on Dolly, Rachel doesn’t feel that an actress in her twenties would bring as much depth to her. Dolly Levi is a woman who has lived a full extravagant life, and then, for a time, became a kind of a recluse.
She has been up and down and all around. There has to be depth and life experience to play that.
 Jamie Ross played Horace and was a great co-star; Sarah Pfisterer played Mrs. Molly; Rick Hilsabeck, and Sarah’s real life mate, of Broadway’s Billy Elliot, played Cornelius; Danielle Naugler played Minnie Fay.
Rachel and Patrick Dillon Curry as Ambrose Kemper,BroadwayWorld.com
The rest of the company was incredible, as well.
Rachel says it was a joy working with director Worth Howe, and she owes a good deal of her performance to her good, Paul Reynolds, for helping her memorize her lines.
Hello, Dolly is a great number!

So much of Rachel’s time was creating and becoming Dolly and living in those moments on stage.
The first time she stood at the top of the stairs of the Harmonia Gardens for her descent, it was surreal. Everyone in the chorus looks forward to that number. It’s amazing how the audience loves that number so much. It is amazing how much the audience eats that number up. That was really amazing to Rachel. Talk about lifting someone up from the doldrums! Once she embraced that number, she just let it flow.
It became a beautiful thing because it was so much about Dolly’s return because she had been hiding out.
The title number is a point where she “comes out” and there is so many acceptances. It is a beautiful moment in the arc of the show. The reason why Carol Channing was so perfect for the role and why it suited her so much is that she is such a positive person. Rachel doesn’t think she has ever heard a negative thing said
George Burns and Walter Matthau with Carol Channing
about Carol. Because there is so much love coming Dolly’s way in that scene, from the audience and also from the other actors on stage. That love is for both Dolly and the actress portraying her. It is almost as if they are reaching out to Dolly saying. “Come back to us! Come back to the world of the living again. ” That acceptance and enthusiasm and love are beautiful things for one to open their heart to and to relish that. Not only did Carol portray Dolly who is deserving of all those things but it must have fed her in a way; it must have fed her spirit. That is why she rarely missed a show. Rachel doesn’t know how she did it!
When Rachel thinks of quintessential old-fashioned Broadway, she thinks of 42nd Street and Hello, Dolly, with those big production numbers. The arc of the 60s through the 80s epitomize a magical time of Broadway for Rachel. Hello, Dolly comes to that forefront.
Rachel would love to have the opportunity to play Dolly on Broadway.
Other than the movie, Rachel has not seen anyone else play Dolly. She was thirteen years old when she saw the film on TV. She really didn’t know what it was about. The funny thing is when she was a kid, Hello, Dolly was one of the first songs she sang, she used to sing it at the piano with her mom. That was the song they used to sing. It became full circle for her.
Rachel doesn’t feel that one would traditionally look at Dolly and say, “That is Rachel’s personality.” She transformed into Dolly.
Rachel York and Company
The part of Rachel that probably came out most through Dolly was the monologue preceding Before the Parade Passes By and the song.
This was a typical summer stock production. They rehearsed for two weeks and performed it for two weeks. Doing a longer run will make any closing night ridiculously emotional. For Rachel, Hello, Dolly’s closing night found her at peace. Dolly gave her a little gift. As stated before, it was a cathartic experience and it helped her through a trying time.
Immediately following, Rachel’s thoughts was that she hoped to do it again and that this would not be the end.
Most actors over the course of a career study many techniques and end up using what ultimately works for them. They bring so much experience AND Life experience to what they are doing. That affects how they approach a role and they intuitively go on a journey and find what they need to find. For Rachel, the core of her approach has to do with Dolly’s sorrow and her need to move on. She was in an in between place, a place between letting go and moving on. That’s how Rachel began and approached Dolly.
That was the underlying theme for Rachel. Dolly loves bringing joy to people although there is not a lot of joy in her own life. Dolly is a character. Somehow, the lines and the period, and who she is just fell into Rachel’s body.
BroadwayWorld.com
Dolly loves the work she does as a matchmaker and Rachel felt that. As an actress, Rachel just threw herself into Dolly’s world. She is an actress. That is what she does. That is what her mind, her body, her soul tells her to do.
That is what her spirit is trained to do. When she gets on stage, and the lights go on, her body just goes into another realm. She is very much in her element when she is on stage.  
Rachel visited Dolly Levi for a short time and had a great time. When she thinks of Dolly, she thinks of a wonderful wintery Christmassy afternoon tea. It’s a warm spiritual happy gift.   

"Rachel York could not have a more commanding stage presence." – The Boston Herald
"The role of Dolly is one of the great diva roles in musical theater and York owns the role. York is every bit as bold, brassy, funny and endearing as Dolly should be." – Edge Boston

"York plays Dolly with a big, brassy, sexy air that fills the stage. York is fabulous, show-stopping, heart-warming and poignant. Delightful." – Daily News Transcript

“The luminous Rachel York’s Dolly Levi is a stunner who takes charge and has both the ensemble and the audience eating out of her hand. She has innate comedic chops and shifts easily from silly to scheming to outrageous. By contrast, her moving version of 'Love, Look in My Window' shows us the woman’s wounded heart before she steels herself again and, with a look of wonder and conviction, boldly marches on 'Before the Parade Passes By.' From the moment she glides onto the stage, York is electrifying.” – Talkin’ Broadway

"Broadway sensation Rachel York is decidedly not your father's Dolly Levi. She's front and center from the get go. York is sassy, brassy, young, sexy and determined. She's a juggernaut." – Beverly Creasey, Theater Mirror

"Rachel York as Dolly has a fabulous belting voice similar to Barbra Streisand. Her rapid fire dialogue keeps you in stitches. She is one of the sexiest Dolly's I have ever seen and her dancing is superb. Rachel entrances from start to finish, creating a Dolly to remember." – Tony Annnicone, Theater Mirror
"Hello, Dolly! opened to thunderous ovations as Broadway favorite Rachel York reinvented the iconic role with her youthful exuberance and incandescent star quality." – BroadwayWorld.com

“Every song and every scene is pure joy, especially with Rachel York’s portrayal of Dolly Gallagher Levi. The multi-talented Rachel York glitters and glistens, like a multi-faceted gem. She wowed.” – Independent Newspaper Group

"Move over, Carol Channing. Step aside, Barbra Streisand. The new Dolly has arrived and it's so nice to have her back. Rachel York, in a magnificent production, gives an outstanding performance that ranks with the best on Broadway." – Preview TV

Thank you Rachel York for the gifts you have given to the world and continue to give!

With grateful XOXOXs ,

 

PLEASE JOIN ME NEXT MONDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29th!
National Asian Artists Project's Production of Hello, Dolly!
Contact: Richard Skipper @ 845-365-0720 / Richard@RichardSkipper.com

National Asian Artists Project's Production of Hello, Dolly!


National Asian Artists Project presents a Rediscover Series production of the Broadway classic, HELLO, DOLLY!, by Jerry Herman (music/lyrics) and Michael Stewart (book). Performances April 29th and May 6th at 7:30 PM. Two Performances ONLY- to Benefit National Asian Artists Project.



Check out my site celebrating my forthcoming book on Hello, Dolly!
I want this to be a definitive account of Hello, Dolly!  If any of you reading this have appeared in any production of Dolly, I'm interested in speaking with YOU!



If you have anything to add or share, please contact me at Richard@RichardSkipper.com.


NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED.  FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY!





When it comes to the history of Jerry Herman’s brilliant production, beyond the 5000+ performances of my own, even I turn to Richard Skipper when I have questions about the remarkable ladies who followed me in the role that the world fell in love with over 50 years ago.”-Carol Channing

               
My next blog will be...My exclusive interview with Randy Slovacek (Carol Channing's LAST tour of Hello, Dolly!)


Thank you, to all the mentioned in this blog!


  



TILL TOMORROW...HERE'S TO AN ARTS FILLED DAY
Richard Skipper, Richard@RichardSkipper.com                            
 

This Blog is dedicated to ALL THE DOLLYS and ANYONE who has EVER had a connection with ANY of them on ANY Level!










Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Song of Bernadette!

You've got to be original, because if you're like someone else, what do they need you for?
Bernadette Peters, Inside the Actors Studio

Happy Tuesday!
I hope this finds you having a marvelous day. Had trouble sleeping last night and got off to a great day. Watched The View with the delightful Bernadette Peters guesting and got the inspiration for my blog. Bernadette, of course, is currently starring in Follies on Broadway. I, for one, LOVE HER in this role! This is a limited run, Go see her if you can. Just the right combination of wanting to be there and not there. That's what makes Sally Durant lovable. She said this morning on The View that this was her 15th Broadway show. It is her sixth Sondheim musical if you count the concert version of Anyone Can Whistle.

I first became aware of Bernadette because of her frequent appearances on The Carol Burnett Show. The following is from Wikipedia, Google, and YouTube. No Copy write Infringement intended!


Bernadette Peters (born Bernadette Lazzara on February 28, 1948) is an American actress, singer and children's book author from Ozone Park, Queens, New York. Over the course of a career that has spanned five decades, she has starred in musical theatre, films and television, as well as performing in solo concerts and recordings. She is one of the most critically acclaimed Broadway performers, having received nominations for seven Tony Awards, winning two, and eight Drama Desk Awards, winning three. Four of the Broadway cast albums on which she has starred have won Grammy Awards.
I have only met Bernadette once. It was backstage after a concert she gave in Florida. She was incredibly gracious and generous with her time afterwords and very down to earth. YES, I AM A FAN!
Peters first performed on the stage as a child and then a teenage actor in the 1960s, and in film and television in the 1970s. She was praised for this early work and for appearances on The Muppet Show, The Carol Burnett Show and in other television work, and for her roles in films like Silent Movie, The Jerk, Pennies from Heaven and Annie.
In the 1980s, she returned to the theatre, where she became one of the best-known Broadway stars over the next three decades. She also has recorded six solo albums and several singles, as well as many cast albums, and performs regularly in her own solo concert act.
Peters also continues to act in films and on television, where she has been nominated for three Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards, winning once.

Peters is particularly noted for her starring roles in stage musicals, including Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, Song and Dance, Annie Get Your Gun, Gypsy, A Little Night Music and Follies, becoming closely associated with composer Stephen Sondheim. She had a four-year romantic relationship with comedian Steve Martin and was married to investment adviser Michael Wittenberg for over nine years until he was killed in a helicopter crash on September 26, 2005. Peters is known for her charitable work, including as a founder of the Broadway Barks animal charity.



Peters was born Bernadette Lazzara to an Italian-American family in Ozone Park, Queens, New York, the youngest of three children. Her siblings are casting director Donna DeSeta and Joseph Lazzara.

Her father Peter drove a bread delivery truck, and her mother, Marguerite (née Maltese),started her in show business by putting her on the television show Juvenile Jury at the age of three-and-a-half. She appeared on the television shows Name That Tune and several times on The Horn and Hardart Children's Hour at age five.

In January 1958, at age nine, she obtained her Actors Equity Card in the name of Bernadette Peters to avoid ethnic stereotyping, with the stage name taken from her father's first name.
She made her professional stage debut the same month in This is Goggle, a comedy directed by Otto Preminger that closed during out-of-town tryouts before reaching New York.
She then appeared on NBC television as Anna Stieman in A Boy Called Ciske, a Kraft Mystery Theatre production, in May 1958, and in a vignette entitled "Miracle in the Orphanage", part of "The Christmas Tree", a Hallmark Hall of Fame production, in December 1958 with fellow child actor Richard Thomas and veteran actors Jessica Tandy and Margaret Hamilton.


She first appeared on the New York stage at age 10 as Tessie in the New York City Center revival of The Most Happy Fella (1959).
In her teen years, she attended the Quintano's School for Young Professionals, a now defunct private school that several famous people, such as Steven Tyler, attended.

At age 13, Peters appeared as one of the "Hollywood Blondes" and was an understudy for "Dainty June" in the second national tour of Gypsy.

During this tour, Peters first met her long-time accompanist, conductor and arranger Marvin Laird, who was the assistant conductor for the tour. Laird recalled, "I heard her sing an odd phrase or two and thought, 'God that's a big voice out of that little girl,'"
The next summer, she played Dainty June in summer stock, and in 1962 she recorded her first single. In 1964, she played Leisl in The Sound of Music and Jenny in Riverwind in summer stock at the Mt. Gretna Playhouse (Pennsylvania), and Riverwind again at the Bucks County Playhouse in 1966.
Upon graduation from high school, she started working steadily, appearing Off-Broadway in the musicals The Penny Friend (1966) and Curly McDimple (1967)
and as a standby on Broadway in The Girl in the Freudian Slip (1967). She made her Broadway debut in Johnny No-Trump in 1967, and next appeared as George M. Cohan's sister opposite Joel Grey in George M! (1968), winning the Theatre World Award.

It was Peters' performance as "Ruby" in the 1968 Off-Broadway production of Dames at Sea, a parody of 1930s musicals, that brought her critical acclaim and her first Drama Desk Award.
She had appeared in an earlier 1966 version of Dames at Sea at the Off-Off-Broadway performance club Caffe Cino.
Peters had starring roles in her next Broadway vehicles—Gelsomina in La Strada (1969) and Hildy in On the Town (1971), for which she received her first Tony Award nomination.

She played Mabel Normand in Mack and Mabel (1974), receiving another Tony nomination. Clive Barnes wrote: "With the splashy Mack & Mabel ... diminutive and contralto Bernadette Peters found herself as a major Broadway star."
Although these had short runs, Peters was singled out for praise by the critics,
and the Mack and Mabel cast album became popular among musical theatre fans.
She moved to Los Angeles in the early 1970s to concentrate on television and film work.


Peters has appeared in 32 feature films or television movies beginning in 1973, including Mel Brooks' 1976 film Silent Movie (for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe Award), the musical Annie (1982), Pink Cadillac (1989), in which she co-starred with Clint Eastwood, and Woody Allen's Alice (1990).

Peters starred opposite Steve Martin in The Jerk (1979), in a role that he wrote for her, and Pennies From Heaven (1981), for which she won the Golden Globe Award as Best Motion Picture Actress in a Comedy or Musical.

In Pennies from Heaven, she played Eileen Everson, a schoolteacher turned prostitute. Of her performance in Pennies From Heaven, John DiLeo wrote that she "is not only poignant as you'd expect but has a surprising inner strength." Pauline Kael wrote in The New Yorker: "Peters is mysteriously right in every nuance."[18] Kael further noted that "The dance numbers are funny, amazing, and beautiful all at once; several of them are just about perfection."

A review of the DVD reissue noted, "Peters brought a cocky attitude and a sexy exuberance to the musical numbers."

Bernadette Peters was Honored at The Westport Playhouse on September 19th.

The last time Bernadette Peters was in a show at the Westport Country Playhouse, it was 1967 for a summer stock production of "Riverwind."Remember that show? Neither do I. But since then the gal has done well for herself!

Peters and Martin had begun a romantic relationship in 1977 that lasted approximately four years.
By 1981, her popularity had led to Peters appearing on the cover and in a spread in the December 1981 issue of Playboy Magazine, in which she posed in lingerie designed by Bob Mackie.

Peters appeared with three generations of the Kirk Douglas family in the 2003 film It Runs in the Family, in which she played the wife of Michael Douglas's character.
In May 2006, she appeared in the movie Come le formiche (Wine and Kisses) with F. Murray Abraham, filmed in Italy, playing a rich American who becomes involved with an Italian family that owns a vineyard.
The DVD was released in 2007 in Italy.

She starred in a film titled Coming Up Roses, playing a former musical-comedy actress with two daughters.
The movie, produced by Bullet Pictures, Inc. and directed by Lisa Albright was filmed in March 2010.

In 1982, Peters returned to the New York stage after an eight year absence in one of her few non-musical stage appearances, the off-Broadway Manhattan Theatre Club production of the comedy-drama Sally and Marsha, for which she was nominated for a Drama Desk Award. She then returned to Broadway as Dot/Marie in the Stephen Sondheim–James Lapine musical Sunday in the Park with George (1984), for which she received her third Tony Award nomination. The New York Times reviewer Frank Rich called her performance "radiant".
She recorded the role for PBS in 1986, winning a 1987 ACE Award.
Her next role was Andrew Lloyd Webber's Song and Dance (1985), winning her first Tony for Best Leading Actress in a Musical for her performance in the role of Emma. Theater critic Frank Rich wrote in an otherwise negative review of the show that Peters "has no peer in the musical theater right now."

She then created the role of the Witch in Sondheim-Lapine's Into the Woods (1987). Peters is "considered by many to be the premier interpreter of [Sondheim's] work," according to writer Alex Witchel.

Raymond Knapp wrote that Peters "achieved her definitive stardom" in Sunday in the Park With George and Into the Woods.

Sondheim has said of Peters, "Like very few others, she sings and acts at the same time," he says. "Most performers act and then sing, act and then sing ... Bernadette is flawless as far as I'm concerned. I can't think of anything negative."
Peters continued her association with Sondheim with a 1995 benefit concert of Anyone Can Whistle. Additionally, she appeared in several concerts featuring Sondheim's work, and performed for him at his 1993 Kennedy Center Honors ceremony.

She next starred in the musical adaptation of Neil Simon's The Goodbye Girl with music by Marvin Hamlisch (1993).

Peters won her second Tony for her performance as Annie Oakley in the 1999 revival of Annie Get Your Gun opposite Tom Wopat.
Among many glowing notices for this role, critic Lloyd Rose of the Washington Post commented: "[Peters] banishes all thoughts of Ethel Merman about two bars into her first number, 'Doin' What Comes Natur'lly.'
Partly this is because Merman's Annie was a hearty, boisterous gal, while Peters plays an adorable, slightly goofy gamine... For anyone who cares about the American musical theater, the chance to see Peters in this role is reason enough to see the show."
Playbill went even further: "Arguably the most talented comedienne in the musical theatre today, Peters manages to extract a laugh from most every line she delivers."


In 2003, Peters took on the role of Mama Rose in the Broadway revival of Gypsy, earning another Tony nomination.
Ben Brantley in his New York Times review wrote, "Working against type and expectation under the direction of Sam Mendes, Ms. Peters has created the most complex and compelling portrait of her long career, and she has done this in ways that deviate radically from the Merman blueprint."
Arthur Laurents said: "But in 2003 there was a new Rose on Broadway: Bernadette Peters!
Brilliant, original, totally unlike any of the others."
In February 2006, she participated in a reading of the Sondheim-Weidman musical Bounce.



On September 24, 2007, Peters participated in a one-time only charity reading of the play Love Letters with her former Gypsy co-star, John Dossett.

After an absence from the Broadway stage of six years (Gypsy closed in 2004), she starred in the Broadway revival of Sondheim's A Little Night Music, as Desiree Armfeldt from July 13, 2010 to January 9, 2011.
She replaced Catherine Zeta-Jones in the role.
The New York Times reviewer wrote of her performance, "for theater lovers there can be no greater current pleasure than to witness Bernadette Peters perform the show’s signature number, "Send In the Clowns," with an emotional transparency and musical delicacy that turns this celebrated song into an occasion of transporting artistry.
I’m not sure I’ve ever experienced with such palpable force – or such prominent goose bumps – the sense of being present at an indelible moment in the history of musical theater."

Peters appeared in the role of Sally Durant Plummer in the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts production of the Sondheim musical, Follies in May and June 2011.
Of her performance, one critic wrote: "Peters may not be the most traditional casting for Sally, now an ultraneurotic housewife in Phoenix, but she exquisitely captures the character's unfathomable sadness and longing.
It's a star turn, for sure, but one that brings attention to itself because of its truthfulness.

Not surprisingly, her rendition of 'Losing My Mind' is simply shattering."
She is reprising her role of Sally in the Broadway limited engagement of Follies, which started in previews on August 7, 2011 at the Marquis Theatre.



Peters has been nominated for the Tony Award seven times, and won twice.
She has also been nominated for the Drama Desk Award eight times and won three times (Annie Get Your Gun, Song and Dance, and Dames at Sea).

Peters was nominated for Emmy Awards for her guest-starring roles on The Muppet Show (1977) and Ally McBeal (2001).
On The Muppet Show, Peters sang the song "Just One Person" to Robin the Frog.
She was one of the Muppets' guests when they hosted The Tonight Show in 1979, again singing "Just One Person" to Robin, and she appeared in other episodes with the Muppets.
Peters was also nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award, Outstanding Performer in a Children's Special, for her work in the 2002 made-for-television movie Bobbie's Girl.

She won the 1987 "CableACE Award" for her role as Dot in the television version of Sunday in the Park With George.She has appeared in many variety shows with stars such as Sonny and Cher and George Burns.

She has both performed and presented on the Academy Awards broadcasts in 1976, 1981, 1983, 1987 and 1994.
Peters has been a presenter at the annual Tony Awards ceremony and co-hosted the ceremony with Gregory Hines in June 2002.
She also hosted Saturday Night Live in November 1981.

She made 12 guest appearances on The Carol Burnett Show as well as appearing with Burnett in the made-for-television version of Once Upon a Mattress and the 1982 film Annie. She also performed at the Kennedy Center Honors ceremony for Burnett in 2003.
Peters often appeared on the Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and on the day-time talk show Live with Regis and Kelly, both as a co-host and a guest.

Peters voiced Rita the stray cat in the "Rita and Runt" segments of the animated series Animaniacs. Peters, as Rita, sang both original songs written for the show and parodies of Broadway musical numbers.
She appeared on Inside the Actor's Studio in November 2000, discussing her career and craft.

Peters has co-starred in a number of television movies, including The Last Best Year (1990) with Mary Tyler Moore, Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella (1997) with Brandy (receiving a nomination for the "Golden Satellite Award" for her role), and Prince Charming (2003) with Martin Short.
She co-starred in her own television series, All's Fair, with Richard Crenna in 1976–77, for which Peters was nominated for a Golden Globe award as Best TV Actress — Musical/Comedy.
In March 2005, she made a pilot for an ABC situation comedy series titled Adopted, co-starring with Christine Baranski, but it was not picked up. Peters appeared in the Lifetime television movie Living Proof, which was first broadcast on October 18, 2008.
She played the role of Barbara, an art teacher with breast cancer, who is initially reluctant to participate in the study for the cancer drug Herceptin.

(Pictured here with Glen Charlow)
Andrew Gans of Playbill wrote, "Peters is able to choose from an expansive emotional palette to color the character, and her performance... is moving, humorous and ultimately spirit-raising".

Peters' television work in recent years also includes guest appearances on several television series.
She appeared as the sharp-tongued sister of Karen Walker (Megan Mullally) on the penultimate episode of the NBC series Will & Grace, "Whatever Happened to Baby Gin?" (May 2006); as a defense attorney on the NBC series, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (November 2006); as a judge on the ABC series Boston Legal (May 2007); and as an accident victim in Grey's Anatomy (September 2008). Of her role in Grey's Anatomy, TV Guide wrote: "Peters is especially fine as she confronts a life spinning out of control. I'd make her an early contender for a guest-actor Emmy nomination."[63] In January, February and May 2009, she appeared in the ABC series Ugly Betty in five episodes as Jodie Papadakis, a magazine mogul running the YETI (Young Editors Training Initiative) program that Betty and Marc are in.

Peters' appearance at the Adelaide Cabaret Festival in June 2009 was filmed and broadcast in Australia later that month.

Peters has recorded six solo albums and several singles.

Three of her albums have been nominated for the Grammy Award.
Peters' 1980 single "Gee Whiz" reached the top forty on the U.S. pop singles charts.
She has recorded most of the Broadway and off-Broadway musicals she has appeared in, and four of these cast albums have won Grammy Awards.
Peters' debut album in 1980 (an LP), entitled Bernadette Peters contained 10 songs, including "If You Were The Only Boy", "Gee Whiz", "Heartquake", "Should've Never Let Him Go", "Chico's Girl", "Pearl's a Singer", "Other Lady", "Only Wounded", "I Never Thought I'd Break" and "You'll Never Know".
The original cover painting by Alberto Vargas, pictured here, was one of his last works, created at the age of 84.


According to The New York Daily News, Peters "persuaded him to do one last 'Vargas Girls' portrait... She just went to his California retreat, asked him to do one more, he looked at her and said, 'You ARE a Vargas girl!'" She kept the original painting.
The original title planned for the album was Decades.

Rolling Stone wrote of her debut album:
“ Peters debuts on record as a first-rate pop torch singer: Melissa Manchester with soul, Bette Midler on pitch.


Her album has already spawned the hit single "Gee Whiz," a laid-back, doo-wop version... that makes Peters' piping, little-girl voice seem almost like a cutesy novelty. There are also a couple of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil rock tunes in which she sounds slightly trashy and out of her depth.
The Peter Allen songs on side two are really more her style.

In fact, the whole second half of Bernadette Peters is just about perfect, from the star's semi-C&W rendition of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller's "Pearl's a Singer" to a wistful recap of Harry Warren and Mark Gordon's romantic "You'll Never Know."
But the best cuts are in between. "Other Lady," written by Lesley Gore with Ellen Weston, tackles an age-old problem with... devastating eloquence... and Peters delivers it with the proper brooding introspection. Allen's compositions, "Only Wounded" (co-written with Carole Bayer Sager) and the torchy "I Never Thought I'd Break" (co-written with Dean Pitchford), feature the finest singing on the LP...the unusual absence of airbrushing echo places heavy demands on the chanteuse's sultry soprano. That Bernadette Peters rises to the occasion makes her performance that much more impressive.

Please do what YOU can to be more aware that words and actions DO HURT...but they can also heal and help!

Thank you, Bernadette! I love you!!


Here's to an INCREDIBLE tomorrow for ALL...with NO challenges!

Now, GO OUT AND DO SOMETHING FOR SOMEONE ELSE TONIGHT!

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