Archived entries for Segerstrom Center

Kristin Hits the OC! (LAArtsOnline.com)

KristinChenoweth1

Photo 1: Kristin Chenoweth hits Segerstrom Center for Performing Arts March 12, Photo 2: Kristin Chenoweth, Photo 3: Kristin Chenoweth, Photo 4: Segerstrom Center for the Arts – campus – Segerstrom Hall and Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall – RMA Photography

Kristin Hits The OC!

By Ken Werther

On the night of June 6, 1999, Kristin Chenoweth was beamed into homes all across America and around the world on the annual Tony Awards telecast. She treated us to “My New Philosophy,” a song she had been performing eight times a week on Broadway in You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown. Approximately two minutes after finishing the number, Chenoweth won that year’s Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. I remember sitting in front of the television that night and being truly thrilled and excited. A star had been born.

In the years since, Chenoweth has conquered every performance discipline — theatre, feature films, television, radio, recordings, and concerts. Born Kristi Dawn Chenoweth on July 24, 1968 and adopted when she was five days old, she grew up in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma (a suburb of Tulsa). As a child, she performed gospel songs at local churches, and initially decided to train for a career in opera. She received a bachelor’s degree in musical theatre and then a master’s degree in opera performance at Oklahoma City University. While working toward her masters, Chenoweth performed at the Lyric Theatre in Oklahoma City, among other regional theatres, in productions of Gypsy, The Sound of Music, Promises, Promises, and The King and I, to name only a few.

After completing her masters degree, she participated in a number of vocal competitions and was named “most promising up-and-coming singer” in the Metropolitan Opera National Council auditions, which came with a full scholarship to Philadelphia’s Academy of Vocal Arts. Two weeks before school started she went to New York City to help a friend move. While there, she auditioned for the 1993 Paper Mill Playhouse production of the musical Animal Crackers and was cast in the show. She turned down the scholarship and moved to New York to appear in the production and pursue a career in musical theatre. The rest, as they say, is history.

Chenoweth’s list of credits is truly astounding. She has appeared in seven Broadway shows. Her first, Kander & Ebb’s Steel Pier, was in 1997, and then came Charlie Brown. In 2003 she received wide critical and popular acclaim for originating the role of Glinda in Wicked, a now legendary musical that 13 years later is still playing to packed houses on Broadway. Her list of television and film credits is also extraordinary … literally too long (and ever-growing) to start enumerating here! It is definitely worth noting, however, that she won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her work on Pushing Daisies.

And then … there’s that voice. She is a classically trained coloratura soprano able to sing the note “F6” (also known as “F above high C”). Her upcoming concert at Segerstrom Hall will include selections from her CDs, a few American standards, other Broadway fare, and fan favorites (“Popular” and “For Good” from Wicked). Chenoweth is always traveling and performing — she has dates booked through mid-2018! She has been quoted as saying that no two shows are exactly alike. Several years back I had the good fortune to see (and hear!) Ms. Chenoweth in concert. Her performance was delicious and unforgettable and there was also something unexpected … this woman has a ‘wicked’ sense of humor that she loves to share. Even when she’s not singing, Kristin Chenoweth is all personality. Oh, and one more thing. Her memoir, “A Little Bit Wicked,” was released in 2009.

Other events at Segerstrom this month include David Crosby in concert (March 5), a conversation with Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen (March 11), an afternoon with Mel Brooks (March 13), Yanni in concert (March 20), and a return engagement of the runaway hit The Book of Mormon (beginning March 22). The Segerstrom Center for the Arts is clearly the place to be!

Kristin Chenoweth performs March 12th. To purchase tickets and more details on shows at Segerstrom, click here.

KristinChenoweth2 Kristin  Chenoweth

Segerstrom Hall

Once Again! (LAArtsOnline.com)

Once - PantagesOnce is playing at the Pantages Theatre and then
at Segerstrom Center in Costa Mesa

ONCE AGAIN!

By KEN WERTHER
Photo By Joan Marcus

Once, the Broadway musical based on the 2006 film received 11 Tony Award nominations in 2012 and won eight, including Best Musical. In the show, the cast also serves as the orchestra, and the set includes a bar at center stage that is used before performances and at intermission as a working bar for audience members. Sound unique? It is!
Once premiered at the American Repertory Theatre in Boston before transferring to New York Theatre Workshop Off-Broadway in 2011, and then moved to Broadway in March 2012. Met with critical and popular acclaim alike, the show is still running after 784 performances. It is playing in London and is on a U.S. national tour.

Set in Dublin, Once is the story of a Guy who gave up on his music—and his love—and the Girl who inspired him to dream again. Beautiful and uplifting, this show is not to be missed. Several actor friends of mine (the toughest critics I know!) have told me that Once is absolutely one of the best things they’ve ever seen. Fun fact: Cristin Miloti, co-star of the original Broadway production, was discovered while doing the show and tapped to play the Mother in the final season of How I Met Your Mother. How’s that for a success story?

Once is playing at the Pantages in Hollywood through August 10, and begins at Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Orange County on August 19.