| Judy Kaye |
 |
| Born |
October 11, 1948 (1948-10-11) (age 61)
Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. |
Judy Kaye (born October 11, 1948) is an American singer and actress. She has appeared in stage musicals, plays, and operas, including a two-year run in the musical Ragtime and the original cast of Mamma Mia!. She has appeared with opera companies and orchestras such as the Santa Fe Opera (1985 and 1990), the New York City Opera (1989), the New York Philharmonic (1990), the Boston Pops Orchestra (1990), and the London Symphony Orchestra (1990).
Biography
Her Broadway debut, as a replacement Rizzo in the original company of Grease, could barely have suggested the range of her singing voice (from low "belt" to high soprano). Her next show, On the Twentieth Century, changed that. While opening night found her playing only the small role of the maid Agnes, she was also the understudy for leading lady Madeline Kahn, whose erratic behavior and frequent absences led to her being fired by producer/director Harold Prince, who gave the part to Kaye.[1] Kaye had no trouble sustaining the part for the rest of the Broadway run and in at least two touring companies.
Her next two Broadway ventures flopped. The Moony Shapiro Songbook, a campy spoof of songwriter-based revues like Side by Side by Sondheim and Ain't Misbehavin', closed after fifteen previews and one official performance (May 3, 1981), despite the presence of Kaye and co-stars Jeff Goldblum and future Tony-winner Gary Beach. Later that year, Oh, Brother!, which transplanted William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors to the Middle East, similarly folded after thirteen previews and three official performances.
Seven years later, however, Kaye returned to Broadway in as Carlotta Giudicelli in The Phantom of the Opera, singing coloratura Ds and Es eight shows a week. She won the 1988 Tony Award, Best Featured Actress in a Musical for this role.
It was nearly a decade before her next Broadway appearance, as Emma Goldman in Ragtime. (She was the only principal to remain with that show for its entire two-year run.) Next, her 2002 performance as "Rosie" in Mamma Mia! won her a Tony Award nomination as Best Featured Actress in a Musical.
Kaye has performed extensively in various theatrical venues, in roles as widely varied as both Julie Jordan and Nettie Fowler in Carousel, Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun, Nellie Forbush in South Pacific, Meg in Brigadoon, Hildy in On the Town, Lalume in Kismet, Lili Vanessi in Kiss Me, Kate, Pistache in Can-Can, Babe Williams in The Pajama Game, the Old Lady in Candide, Maria in The Sound of Music, Rose in Gypsy, Anna in The Anastasia Game, Aldonza in Man of La Mancha, Lucy in You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Sally in Follies, Mary Magdelene in Jesus Christ Superstar, Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd.[2]
She has performed frequently in opera and operetta, including leading roles in: The Beggar's Opera, Orpheus in the Underworld, La Bohème, The Merry Widow, Eileen, Leave It to Jane, Sweet Adeline, Oh, Lady! Lady!!, The Cat and the Fiddle,Trouble in Tahiti. [1] She debuted the role of Abbie in the New York City premiere of Edward Thomas' musical version of Desire Under the Elms.
Kaye's stage performances have included several "straight" (i.e., non-singing) roles, among them the comedies The Man Who Came to Dinner, You Can't Take It with You, and The Royal Family.
Kaye appeared in Stephen Temperley's Souvenir, and "drew raves for her humorous, yet touching work" [3] with her impersonation of the legendarily frightful singer Florence Foster Jenkins. The play originally ran Off-Broadway in December 2004-January 2005, with great success; after a summer run in the Berkshires, it ran on Broadway October 2005 - January 2006, and she has since performed it in several venues in the United States.[4] Ben Brantley, in his New York Times review, wrote: "Ms. Kaye strikes that single note of personality with a happy mixture of ardor, unblinking obliviousness and ...pitch-perfect period detail."[5]
In 2006, Kaye assumed the role of Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd on Broadway for one week during Patti LuPone's vacation. She was brought back again later that summer, when LuPone left for a week to play "Mama Rose" in Gypsy. She went on to play Mrs. Lovett in the 2007-2008 Canada and U.S. National Tour of Sweeney Todd.[6][7] The Curtain Up review of that tour in Los Angeles praised Kaye, stating: "There's humor in this production...Much of that is due to Kaye's impeccable timing, the delicacy of her yearning and her way with a tuba."[8]
She has made many recordings, including Where, Oh, Where? and Diva to Diva, which focus on musical theater. Two other CDs partner her with the baritone William Sharp, one an all-George Gershwin program, the other all-Leonard Bernstein; the latter includes the world-premiere recording of his Arias and Barcarolles.
She is also featured on six tracks of John McGlinn's EMI disc Broadway Showstoppers, four of them numbers from Jerome Kern's Sweet Adeline (including the classic ballad "Why Was I Born?") and one a first-ever recording of the "Duet for One (The First Lady of the Land)" the showstopping tour-de-force from Leonard Bernstein and Alan Jay Lerner's legendary failure 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. She also was featured on the 1997 Varese Sarabande studio recording of the flop 1965 musical Drat! The Cat!.
References
- ^ a b Gromberg, Alan."Spotlight on Judy Kaye",talkinbroadway.com, accessed March 10, 2009
- ^ Judy Kaye biographyfilmreference.com, accessed March 10, 2009
- ^ Gans, Andrew."DIVA TALK: Catching Up with Souvenir's Judy Kaye Plus News of Streisand and Stritch",playbill.com, November 2005
- ^ Gans, Andrew."Tony Winner Kaye Reprises Role of Off-Key Singer in A.C.T.'s Souvenir Starting Feb. 13",playbill.com, February 13, 2009
- ^ Brantley, Ben."A Mighty Squeal From a Big Heart",The New York Times, November 11, 2005.
- ^ Lipton, Brian."Judy Kaye and David Hess to Star in Sweeney Todd Tour",theatermania.com, May 7, 2007
- ^ Hernandez, Ernio."Slice of Life: Judy Kaye and Company Begin Sweeney Todd Pre-Tour SF Stint, Aug. 30",playbill.com, August 30, 2007
- ^ Hitchcock, Laura."Review"Sweeney Todd Goes West",curtainup.com, March 12, 2008
External links