Kicking off 2013 at The Hobby Center, Theatre Under the
Stars is presenting two classic musicals back to back. First TUTS is offering
a star-studded production of CAMELOT followed by MAN OF LA MANCHA. CAMELOT
features Broadway heavyweights such as Robert Petkoff,
Margaret
Loesser Robinson, Sean MacLaughlin,
and Tony Award nominee Tony Sheldon.
While many were hitting the stores for after Christmas sales, Tony Sheldon
and I talked about his career post PRISCILLA: QUEEN OF THE DESERT, how he was
preparing for Pellinore in CAMELOT, and performing in Houston.
Me: For roughly six years, you played Bernadette in the
stage musical PRISCILLA: QUEEN OF THE DESERT. The Broadway run of the show
closed on June 24, 2012. What were your feelings on that important and lauded
chapter of your life coming to a close?
Tony
Sheldon: It had been a life changing experience, considering I
went into the show thinking it was a 10-day workshop. [Laughs] That was all
it was going to be for me, and it took me around the world, enabled me to
work outside of Australia for the first time, and, of course, to be embraced
by the Broadway community. It was bittersweet. I was sad it had come to an
end, but it was the beginning of a new phase of my life-one which I was very
excited about.
Me: Hopefully, you took a good, long holiday and break
after PRICSILLA. Was it a relief to be able to kick back and relax for a
while?
Tony
Sheldon: Yes it was! Indeed, I have been on holidays ever
since PRISCILLA. It was wonderful to just enjoy New York, to be able to see
other shows, and to consolidate friendships that I made here in the States.
At the same time, I was nervous about following up on PRISCILLA. I didn't
want to go cold, as it were. And I wanted to remind people that I was still
in New York. I didn't want everybody to think that I had left and gone back
to Australia. So, it was the first time that I actually became proactive in
my career. I was actually picking up the phone, ringing people, and asking
them to put me into readings or to put me into benefits or cabarets just so
the people would see my face and see that I was around. It's been an
education for me, coming from a country where, you know, I'm pretty
established and have been for many years to a place where I'm a virtual
unknown. You have to start again.
Me: Originally, you're from Australia, having been born
in Brisbane, raised in Melbourne, and having lived in Sydney. Have you
noticed any major differences to performing and living in Australia versus
performing and living in the United States?
Tony
Sheldon: Living, of course, because it's a much bigger country
here. There is no difference in the audiences any where in the world, I have
noticed. Audience response is the same. If the show is good, they'll scream
and cheer. And there are good nights and there are bad nights in every
country. But the industry is much smaller out there [in Australia]. There is
a smaller pool of actors to choose from, and we don't have the tourism out
there that you have here that keeps shows running for years and years and
years. So, there's more of a turn over of productions as well. Also, we have
to wait longer for shows. You know, a few years can go by before we get a
Broadway or West End hit because I think producers are more wary of what's
going to work out there. It's just as expensive to put on a show in Australia
as it is here. So, producers hedge their bets and watch their pennies.
Me: Is Theatre Under the Stars production of CAMELOT
your first time to perform in Houston, Texas?
Tony
Sheldon: Yes it is.
Me: Are you looking forward to performing in Houston?
Tony
Sheldon: I am so excited. My mother lived in Los Angeles for
20 years. She's a performer. I don't know whether you know, but I come from a
whole show business family. Going back, my mother worked in a lot of regional
theaters around the country, and they were a lot of her happiest experiences.
So, yes, this is pretty much the beginning of the American phase of my career
coming to Theatre Under the Stars. I'm so looking forward to it. And CAMELOT
is a show that I have always loved, so to be involved in that particular show
is very exciting for me.
Me: How did you get involved in this production of
CAMELOT?
Me: What secrets can you reveal about this production
of CAMELOT? For example, Is TUTS doing the original Broadway version with
Morgan Le Fey or the altered Broadway version where that character was
removed?
Tony
Sheldon: I think it's the altered version, as far as I can tell. I've
just received one script, but I know that it is still sort of a work in
progress. But from what I've read, I don't think Morgan is there.
Me: How are you preparing to play the bumbling, affable
Pellinore?
Tony
Sheldon: I've played this sort of character before, and what is
interesting in reading him is...[Pauses].. there's a lot more depth
to him than just the comic side. As much as he loves Arthur, because he has
known Arthur since he was a little boy called "Wart," Pellinore is
a very conservative voice in the piece. He's very resistant to the idea of
The Round Table. In fact, he is very resistant to any sort of change. He
doesn't like any upsetting of the status quo, [Laughs] which I think is very
topical in terms of some of our politicians. He likes things the way they
were. Where the knights were out of harm's way, it was only the peasants who
got killed. Then suddenly this idea of knights fighting knights and that sort
of thing is all a bit scary and upsetting to him. He doesn't like Lancelot.
He's very resistant to anything new, so it's a fascinating side of Pellinore
that I actually hadn't noticed before.
Me: Are Bernadette and Pellinore similar in any way?
Tony
Sheldon: No. Not at all. Not remotely. Completely the opposite ends
of the spectrum. For a start, Pellinore has got more facial hair. [Laughs] I
might not have to wear any make-up at all, hopefully.
Me: You were nominated for and won several prestigious
theatre awards for your portrayal of Bernadette, so obviously that role will
always hold a special place for you, but after playing Bernadette what is
your favorite aspect or aspects of the character Pellinore?
Tony
Sheldon: What is my favorite aspect? [Pauses] One, that I don't have
to sing or dance. It's a much less energetic role. And two, I think that he
does supply some much-needed humor in the show. CAMELOT is very romantic. I
think occasionally the audience does need a few laughs and
Pellinore, hopefully, will supply some of those.
Me: Are there any unique challenges you are facing
preparing to play Pellinore?
Tony
Sheldon: Every show is a challenge. It's a new group of people.
It's a new city for me so it's a new audience. I mean, I take every single
show as a challenge. Everything is the great unknown. You don't know
what you're walking into. It's a big company, and some heavy hitters there in
terms of the performers. They're all at the top of their game. So, I'm just
going to have to keep up.
Me: In your opinion, what makes CAMELOT such an
enduring classic piece of musical theatre?
Tony
Sheldon: I think because it's a legend, and it's the King Arthur story. We all
know audiences still love that sort of thing-Game of Thrones and
even a fairy tale like Harry Potter. We love to be taken to a land far, far
away. Also, it's the positive message of a utopian society where everybody
gets along and the snow never falls until after sundown. It's such a
beautiful idea of a civilized country that we all strive for and
hope for in our hearts. It's very uplifting. And, of course, it is a great love
story that has endured for all these years. There's all of that going for it.
Me: As an artist, what inspires you?
Tony
Sheldon: Oh gosh. Everything. I mean, my entire life is art. I've grown
up around it, so I love music, I love dancing, I love the spoken work, and
the power of those things for an audience. Even with a show like PRISCILLA,
which a lot of people dismissed as a jukebox musical, I saw the effect it had
on people and how it moved them, changed them, inspired them, and took them
out of their everyday problems and brought them together as a group. The
power of theatre, live theatre, cannot be underestimated and that's what
moves and inspires me as an artist and why it is still my favorite form of
entertainment-live theatre. Long may it reign!
Me: You grew up in a family of performers, as you have
mentioned, so you must have had a lot of support and advice handed to you as
you journeyed into this career. What advice would you offer to those wanting
to make a career for themselves in the arts?
Tony
Sheldon: Never stop learning. Study, study, study. Not that I went to
a drama school, but my education was seeing everything that I could, reading
everything that I could, learning as much about who and what came before me.
Research all the performers of the past, all the shows of the past, read
every play, see every film. Don't think that you are the first to do what you
are doing; you come from a very, very long tradition that you should know
about as a performer. And, I think all that is so important to make you a
rounded performer and a person. Go to art galleries. Go to museums. Lead a
rich, full life. It all contributes to what you bring to your work.
Don't miss your opportunity to see celebrated actor Tony Sheldon in
Theatre Under the Stars' production of Lerner and Loewe's renown classical
musical CAMELOT. CAMELOT runs in Sarofim Hall of The Hobby Center for the
Performing Arts from January 22 to February 3, 2013. For more information and
tickets, please visit http://www.tuts.com/
or call (713) 558 - 8887.
|
The Adventure Continues
TT in the Blue Mountains and Sheldy in New York.
Culture Shock.
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Broadway World Interview
Interview with David E. Clarke of Broadway World (Houston)
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Lovely interview Sheldy. And that photograph has magic. xxx
ReplyDeleteGreat interview :)
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