broadway, personal, travel, Video

Judy Journey: Deb finally goes to Minnesota (And vlogs about it)

Welcome back to Memoirs of a Theatre Kid!

Courtesy of Giphy.com

Hope y’alls spooky season is going well despite….well, everything.

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But hey…Aaron Tveit is now a Tony nominee!!!!!!!!! (Took the Tony voters long enough!)

Longtime readers/friends etc. may remember that I had planned a trip to Minnesota to visit family, Judy Garland’s home in Grand Rapids, and more. Initially scheduled June 2019, that trip was put off due to living through a tornado. I had reschduled for earlier this year, but once again I had to put of the trip to to COVID-19. (A big part of this trip was visiting my Grandma, who lives in a nursing home and for a while she was not permitted visitors due to COVID-19).

But the first week in October I finally made the journey, so via my vlogs I took along the way and a selection of pictures, we’ll bring you along on the adventures.

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“The waiting, the waiting, the waiting…” Online resources to get theatre people through quarantine

Courtesy of giphy.com

Welcome back, everyone!

I hope you’re all staying safe, wherever you are. For me I’m physically safe, but living through such a tumultuous time is taking it’s toll, but I’m managing.

Though in the grand scheme of everything in the world, I can acknowledge that Broadway being dark and the fact that very little live theatre is happening (and rightly so, for the sake of public safety) is, as the kids might say, a big sad.

Courtesy of giphy.com

I wish I had some sweeping words of wisdom, but the best I can offer are some little digital joys I’ve found to keep me going, that I can hope add a little sparkle to the rest of my theatre-loving folk.

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becoming blanche, musicals, personal

“What you call a dream…” Becoming Blanche Part III (Finally performing after living through a pandemic)

Welcome back to Memoirs of a Theatre Kid, and Part III of “Becoming Blanche”. (My series documenting my time researching, traveling and diving into history to play Blanche Barrow. If you haven’t already read/watched Part I and Part II of “Becoming Blanche” there they are). I hope you’re all staying safe.

Courtesy of Giphy.com

We finally made it to the opening of Bonnie and Clyde at Capital City Productions…an event that was supposed to occur the weekend after Easter but was pushed back to to COVID-19. I can heartily say I’ve never been more elated to open a show than I was with this one…cause around the time I posted Part II of “Becoming Blanche” COVID-19 forced lockdowns and the world went to heck.

My gif-courtesy of Giphy.com
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broadway, musicals, personal

“At the Moment We Start Weeping, That’s When We Should Smile” Full Circles and Farewells

Picture it: January 12, 2012. Jefferson City, Missouri.

It was a happy day in the life of Deb for numerous reasons. For one, it was opening day of one of my all-time favorite musicals and one of my favorite productions I’ve done to date: Man of La Mancha. It was also the very first show I would do with a group then known as Capital City Players, now called Capital City Productions at Shikles Auditorium in Jefferson City, MO.

(I’m the one in the donkey head. It was quite the time!)

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broadway, guide, list, musicals, travel

“Pack up your suitcase, check your worries at the gate” Theatrical Travels Part III (International!)

Welcome back everybody!

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Today on Memoirs of a Theatre Kid, we continue with our theatrical travels series. Up until this point I’d kept our locations of interests within the continental United States. But given how many historical events and figures from around the world have been immortalized onstage, I decided to expland our scope to other countries.

For the sake of simplicity, I kept criteria pretty minimal. All locations/historical sites featured here directly pertainin to real-life people and/or events that have been dramatized into a full-length stage show and/or movie musical. From there I tried to feature a place from every continent, sans Africa and Antarctica. (If there are, in fact, any musicals with historical connectiosn to Africa or Antarctica, please let me know!)

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broadway, guide, list, musicals, personal, travel

“The Costumes, The Scenery, The Makeup, The Props…” Theatrical Travels Part II

Welcome back to Memoirs of a Theatre Kid!

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I apologize for the month gap in posts. For those of you who know me personally (which I’m guessing is my entire readership) you can probably guess the reason behind this gap…namely an F-3 tornado that hit my apartment complex and had my roommate and myself (as well as our fur babies) displaced for a month.

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I’m happy to report all animals and humans are healthy and well, and we’re moved into a new place and are slowly but surely getting our lives back together and reestablishing a sense of normalcy. For me, part of that is getting back to writing. But since I am still in the middle of a thousand boxes that need to be unpacked and a massive to-do list, I’m keeping it simple this month by continuing with my theatrical travels series. (Should you care to hear more about us getting our lives together after the tornado, check out this video interview we did with KMIZ on the fourth of July, and this interview I did with News Tribune about being separated and reunited with my kitty Gavin in the after math of the tornado).

For this post I decided I’d focus on places where theatre enthusiasts can travel to view props, costumes, and other notable memorabilia from Broadway musicals and plays, as well as well as their film adaptations and other movie musicals.

Courtesy of giphy.com

(I should probably clarify the difference I mean between adaptations of musicals/plays verses movie movie musicals. I would classify adaptations as any works that began as a stage show that was than adapted for the screen, such as Hello Dolly, The Crucible etc. But when I refer to “movie musicals”, I mean any musical that was initially created in cinema such as La La Land, Singin’ in the Rain, etc.)

This didn’t leave me quite as wide a berth as my first post in the theatrical travels series, so I didn’t follow quite such a strict set of criteria this time around. While costumes, props, and filming locations were the primary focus for this post, if any of the selected locations also had items/features that tied in to a musical/play based upon historical events, I decided to include those as a historical bonus if you’re like me and can’t get enough of those real life tie-ins between the stage and real life.

Courtesy of giphy.com

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guide, personal

“My heart would still be here at the stage door with you”… Deb’s Guide to Stage Door Etiquette

(Featured image courtesy of giphy.com/Waitress the musical)

I first discovered the concept of stage dooring (that is, the act of going to the stage door after a performance and meeting the performers, getting your program signed and a picture with them, etc.) by accident after my middle school drama club group trip to see Stomp. On the way back to our car after the performance, my immediate group stumbled upon a group of the performers on their way to their tour bus, and our teachers were awesome enough to let this crazy crew of middle schoolers stop and chat. A few minutes later the prop newspaper that had been thrown into the audience that I had grabbed was signed (possible foreshadow to my Newsies obsession?), and a new era of my life began.

 

 

(And may I add that we have some peak middle school Deb on display: long unruly hair, faded Wicked hat, jean jacket, Cullen crest wrist cuff…fashionista, am I right?

As a Midwest kid who grew up having to scrape under the couch and save her allowance for months for a prayer of a nosebleed seat for a national tour or concert, the opportunity to meet the people who make the magic happen face to face was a euphoric experience. For the first time, the people I blasted on my CD player and read about on Broadway.com, were no longer the elusive, far way unicorns in the magical land of New York City, but were right in front of me in the flesh, stripped of the costumes and microphones and everything else that had made them another person for the course of their performance.

It was a bizarre phenomenon, but despite my often crippling social anxiety and feelings of isolation from my peers (crazy as it sounds, growing up in a tiny hick town with a weird Polish last name, a face full of acne, a stutter, and a love of musicals does not add up to popularity), I had little to no hesitation or shyness chatting with the big names of Broadway. Of course, I’ve made a fool of myself a few times, (looking at you, fifteen year old Deb meeting Bebe Neuwirth after the Pre-Broadway run of The Addams Family) but what can you do. I like to think it’s because despite the fact that Broadway’s brightest don’t know me from Eve, there’s still a connection in my head. These are the people I cheered for when they’re nominated for Tony awards, the ones whose songs pumped me up before a big audition, who had social media accounts I’d scroll through when I needed cheering up, and whose techniques I’d studied to master my own craft. (And through a bizarre set of circumstances I even befriended one of the incredible people I met at the stage door…see The Chaz Chronicles for that story).

With that in mind, I know that crazy theatre kids can be a bit intimidating in large groups simply because we are such a strange herd. Over the years people have asked me for tips and advice for hitting up the stage door, and I’ve been meaning to compile my knowledge from going to the stage door into a blog post for some time now…better late than never, right? And in honor of the upcoming Tony awards I decided I’d accompany this list with my old stage door pics, particularly those with nominees of the 2019.

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broadway, guide, list, musicals

“Insert ANOTHER Adele Dazeem Joke Here” Recommendations for New Musicals to Listen To Part 2

Welcome back, everyone!

My gif-courtesy of giphy.com

If you haven’t already, check out Part 1  of this post, review the criteria, and read on!!

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broadway, guide, list, musicals

“Insert Adele Dazeem Joke Here” Recommendations for New Musicals to Listen To Part 1

Hey everybody! Long time no read, eh? Yes, I’ve decided to revive the blog.

Courtesy of giphy

So without further ado….let’s dive in!

My gif-courtesy of giphy

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musicals, newsies, personal, the chaz chronicles, tour

What was our still will be: The Chaz Chronicles Part II

Hey, gang. It’s been almost a year since I published “Something to Believe in: Deb’s Unexpected Toursie Adventure”, in which I chronicled the friendship that had sprung up between Chaz Wolcott of Newsies on Tour through some unexpected events.

Of all the things I’ve written on here that one has received the most positive responses thus far, which I am truly grateful for.

Especially this BEAUTIFUL message from Mr. Razzle Chazzle himself:

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When last seen, I had just seen Chaz perform in Newsies in Cincinnati, and Disney Theatricals had just announced that Newsies on Tour would close in October of 2016. I thought that I would only see the show once more in Chicago, and I certainly had no idea what was going to happen as far as Chaz was concerned once that day came and went.

Hoooooo boy, buckle up, because I sure as heck would not be doing a follow up if there wasn’t more to tell.

bringiton

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