Shrek

Dec. 19th, 2008 01:29 pm
ceebeegee: (Snow on the river)
Aw. DeBaun cancelled tonight's A Christmas Carol. But the snow looks beautiful!

So, Michael and I saw Shrek last night. I thought it was great! A very tight, colorful (LOVED the scenes with all the fairy tale characters in them--just dazzling), funny show. I thought especial standouts were the Donkey and Lord Faquaad--he KILLED me. (And he's hot too...) But everyone was great. My favorite numbers were "I Got You Beat," the number that the exiled fairy tale characters sang when they first arrived at the swamp, and the number about "Let Your Freak Flag Fly." "I'm wood/It's good/Get used to it!"

I was so, so thrilled to see Ryan--my Ryan, my little brother, roommate, castmate, dear friend and partner in crime for the past 18 years--up there on stage living our dream! It was unbelievable, just incredible. My Ryan, my Henry. Oh, I'm all verklempt. I screamed his name during the curtain call (we were sitting pretty close, I2 & 4 right on the aisle). Michael and I went around to the stage door where I called Ryan who texted and called me back to come in but for some reason my phone didn't ring. Annoying. Anyway he came out and greeted us--we chatted for a bit, then he said he and a couple of his castmates, and one of their husbands, would be going out to a wine bar in Hell's Kitchen. I decided to join them and Michael recused himself as a reviewer. We went to the wine bar and the husband joined us--it was Hunter Foster. I had drinks last night with Hunter Foster! God, I love New York!

The wine bar was this adorable new place on 51st St. called Xai Xai. It's beautiful, decorated in a South African theme--I loved it, so atmospheric. Ryan and I ordered a chocolate fondue dish with sparkling wine "shooters," served in the thinnest, smallest flutes I've ever seen! Naturally that wasn't enough for me so I ordered a glass of pink champagne. We kept grabbing each other's hands and squealing. I just can't believe he's on Broadway! We were joking about the first show we did together, Oklahoma! at the Lazy Susan, and how when he'd been cast, he called his mother from the payphone in the lobby and said "I, uh, won't be studying in the dorms as much this semester...you'll be able to find me at...the Lazy Susan!" It was so adorably dorky (the Susan was a dump but he didn't know that, he was still innocent!) and I love to tease him about it. His castmates were very nice--for the most part they talked among themselves but every now and then they'd turn to me and ask me something, or direct a remark to us. I can get very shy with people I don't know sometimes especially when they're, you know, BROADWAY STARS, so I appreciated their initiating conversation.
ceebeegee: (Me)
Has anyone gotten one of these CDs? I got one in the mail a few weeks ago--I will admit, I love the cover art, with all those surreal lemons and those two people embracing with the absolute whitest skin ever seen--but the music is completely unmemorable, I mean I do not remember one song from it.* And the tag line makes me cringe: "When was the last time you fell in love with a musical?" Oh, BARF. That is so unoriginal. The website is somewhat unintentionally funny--so much of their promotional copy can be interpreted rather differently than they intended. "The most anticipated original musical to hit Broadway this fall!" Yeah, in that vultures-awaiting-the-feast way, if you check out the chat boards. "A project that is completely original!" Carrie was original too.

*Which is not the case with the CD sampler I received for The Color Purple--there was at least one good song on that. And I was only half-listening to it. I've heard good things about that project--I've never read the book or seen the movie; I guess if I'm going to see it, I should. I wonder if Their Eyes Were Watching God would make a good opera--you could do it in the vernacular, like Porgie and Bess.

Very sad news--McHale's is closing. My favorite cheap-ass place in Midtown, where I hung out with many cast members from Annie Get Your Gun and saw several celebrities (most recently Eric Stoltz last summer--TWICE in a week, I guess he loved the place too). Great cheap-ass food there, really good nachos and burgers. I hung out there with Chuck Elliott, went there with Jason and Paula and Duncan and Alex and Maurice. A very memorable scene from the movie Sleepers was filmed there, which was great location casting, as the movie is purported to be a Hell's Kitchen fable. Not only is the food great (and cheap), the architecture is KICK ASS--those Art Deco rounded corners and glass bricks, with lettering etched into the glass advertising "the Gaeties." Man, I love that place. What a bummer.
ceebeegee: (Default)
Quick update: I picked up my mom this afternoon and we ended up going out to eat at Rachel's, a place on 9th Ave. We had a couple of drinks and ordered dinner and after awhile I looked up and saw Mark Hollman walking in--Mark Hollman with whom I worked in spring 2001 (I played George in the show he wrote for the Abigail Adams Museum, Fare for All--Mark Hollman who won the freakin' Tony Award for composing Urinetown). Yes, I know a Tony Award Winner. Me!

We chatted, blah blah blah what are you working on these days, blah blah blah. Thank God I spent time on my makeup before I went out (and looked skinny).

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