A Chorus Line (Broadway Across America Portland)
Dancers dish about life on the Line.
July 1st, 2009
Punch Brothers | Chamber Music Northwest gets patriotic.0 comments
June 24th, 2009
Risk/Reward New Performance Festival | Hand2Mouth marries art pop and pop art. 0 comments
June 17th, 2009
Inviting Desire (Dance Naked Productions) | Whips, gangbangs, fisting and Obama.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
Store For A Month | Art bargains and food for thought—now available at a “store” near you.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
The Blue Room (Portland Actors Conservatory) | Sex, drugs and rampant regret.0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Rush + Robbins (Oregon Ballet Theatre) | The insect women will devour you!0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Grey Gardens (Portland Center Stage) | Jerry may like your corn, but I do not.0 comments
May 20th, 2009
Everyone Who Looks Like You | Hand2Mouth’s family life: Food, fights and farts.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Rigoletto (Portland Opera) | Murder with a side of Hunchback.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Three Sisters (Artists Rep) | Who shot Baron Nikolai Lvovich Tusenbach?0 comments
![]() Let’s get leotarded: What they do for love. |
[July 23rd, 2008] If you think regular job hunting is stressful, try showing up at a 300-person interview each week wearing a leotard. A Chorus Line, a musical about the employment woes of Broadway dancers, began in the early ’70s with tape-recordings of real dancers describing their lives, culled by choreographer Michael Bennett and composer Marvin Hamlisch. Ironically, their finished product gave generations of dancers steady work; the show ran on Broadway from 1975 to 1990 and closed after a whopping 6,137 performances. Its 2005 revival led to a touring production, which arrives in Portland this week.
Which got us to wondering: What makes this show resonate with the non-performing public? Is it the increasingly relevant themes of job instability and living on the edge, or the infectiously funny and bittersweet songs that address said themes? We asked cast members Denis Lambert (Gregory), Hollie Howard (Maggie), John Carroll (Larry) and Colt Prattes (Alan) to take us behind the music.
THE HORROR OF AUDITIONS
Howard: “I have been on more than a thousand auditions…I have heard of situations where a musical director doesn’t want to work with you because he has a crush on you and gets nervous around you. I have also heard of the most talented person not getting the job because they reminded the director of his ex-wife.”
Lambert: “I’ve been to hundreds of auditions, more than I can count. I got very lucky early on and booked, incredibly, my first, second and third professional auditions. But later on I went for six months not booking anything (and going to approximately three auditions a week during that time). That was tough.... You don’t get jobs because you’re too tall, too short, too fat, too thin, too old, too young. But of course these are some of the same reasons that you do end up booking jobs. Your talent is only part of the equation.”
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Carroll: “I must have gone in about eight times before I got the role of Larry. I also went in for the Broadway revival company and got cut right away!”
Prattes: “At an audition for this show I saw someone do a tumbling pass into a table.”
WHAT IT’S LIKE TO LOSE YOURSELF
IN THE CROWD
Lambert: “Throughout the evening you fall in love with individuals, and then at the end we’re all the same. Everyone is dressed the same and dancing in perfect unison. It’s inspiring because it’s an incredible, spectacular, beautifully choreographed number to watch and you know from watching the show that these dancers love this more than anything, that they would give anything to do this. But you also can’t help but think, ‘They went through all that drama for this?’ Because as wonderful as being in the chorus is, it allows no room for individuality and seeing those individuals lost in that gold line is sad.”
WHY WE ALL KEEP
COMING BACK FOR MORE
Prattes: “There is so much more to this show than the audition. It’s about pushing and being pushed and how much you can take, and people, and going after what you wanted and never looking back. This is a show about people.”
Carroll: “The show has heart. Anyone can relate to passion, love, dreams, sacrifice and hard work. No matter if you’re a firefighter, nurse or dancer, the themes in this show are universal.”
Lambert: “It’s not a show about dance. It’s a show that uses dance and the world of dancers to explore universal themes—acceptance and rejection, being an individual and being in a group, putting yourself ‘on the line’ for something you want.”
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