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Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in

Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in

broadway guy
#1Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/17/13 at 11:36pm

Entrances, Exits, and Everything in Between with Patti LuPone.


Apparently Lupone met Elena do the show in London. Lupone talks about how she photo bombed her picture with Elena. At the end they both do the famous V ( well patti does the V, Elena does the elaine page pose) She starts talking about her around 9:16.

I remember when the revival was coming to Broadway and people were saying they didn't think Patti would show up because someone is playing "her" part. Complete nonsense. Patti seems to have great respect for other actresses. She is a class act all the way.

http://youtu.be/hYkyOYFrfws






Updated On: 6/18/13 at 11:36 PM

Liza's Headband
#2Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/17/13 at 11:50pm

Here we go again...

broadway guy
Liza's Headband
#3Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/17/13 at 11:56pm

Oh, forget it. Must have gone over your head. Updated On: 6/18/13 at 11:56 PM

broadway guy
#4Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/17/13 at 11:58pm

?

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somethingwicked
#5Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:13am

LuPone does not say she saw Elena Roger in the show in London. She says she met Elena Roger in London.


Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.

beautywickedlover
#6Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:25am

I didn't think she'd want anything to do with the show after saying this:

"Evita was the worst experience of my life," she told Jesse Green in the New York Times in 2007. "I was screaming my way through a part that could only have been written by a man who hates women. And I had no support from the producers, who wanted a star performance onstage but treated me as an unknown backstage. It was like Beirut, and I fought like a banshee."

http://www.edgenewyork.com/index.php?ch=entertainment&sc=theatre&sc3=&id=117951

And I am sure it's been said many times on here, but I believe she only said that because she's bitter with Lloyd Webber for firing her from 'Sunset Boulevard'. If she really hated her time in 'Evita' she would've left when her contract originally expired and she would not have reprised the role in a production in Sydney.

Updated On: 6/18/13 at 12:25 AM

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Brave Sir Robin2
#7Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:38am

^ in her book, she said that she did it because it was a show he knew and that she was filling in for an Eva who left the show before it opened.


"I saw Pavarotti play Rodolfo on stage and with his girth I thought he was about to eat the whole table at the Cafe Momus." - Dollypop

beautywickedlover
#8Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:50am

I've found texts of her book online and it seemed that doing the show was a not pleasant experience at all.

Updated On: 6/18/13 at 12:50 AM

broadway guy
#9Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 8:41am

she hated EVITA way before Sunset. She was absolutely terrified to go out every night and risk her vocals on a score she had to yell her way through. Everyone thought of her as this goddess but the reality was she had no idea how to sing the score until one of the chorus members helped her with it. She would practice the score during the day and perform it at night.

Obviously she got betterr and better at it and developed her confidence. By the end of her run she was on FIRE! There was electricity in the air during her performances every night.By the end of her broadway run she chose to leave the show instead of renewing her contract because she had lost her sense of humor.

She chose to do the Sydney show because the sydney Evita had lost her voice and they needed lupone to bring in the dough. She agreed cause she had nothing better to do and because she finally felt confident in the songs. She got to the point where she could get through the show without any fear of vocal damage because she trained her voice to adapt to the score. There are still only very few women who can sing that score in the original key. When she went to Sydney she got stellar reviews.

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givesmevoice
#10Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 8:55am

I've found almost no mention of her time in Sydney in Evita. I don't think she made the whole thing up, but I've seen two articles, and neither was a full review.


When I see the phrase "the ____ estate", I imagine a vast mansion in the country full of monocled men and high-collared women receiving letters about productions across the country and doing spit-takes at whatever they contain. -Kad

broadway guy
#11Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 9:01am

LOLZ I haven't heard or seen anything about it either but i don't think it was a long run. She mentions in the book that she was happy she didn't have to re learn the choreography on the other foot cause management "bought" her performance.

Gothampc
#12Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 10:46am

Did that person from the chorus teach her to yell the lyrics rather than sing them?

"STAR QUALITY!!!"


If anyone ever tells you that you put too much Parmesan cheese on your pasta, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.

broadway guy
#13Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 10:50am

The person taught her how to sing the show correctly without hurting herself. If you are talking about how she yelled "star quality" instead of singing them during the end of "Rainbow High" then its clear she did that for the effect. It was a character choice and the only time she "yelled" during the show. It wasn't really a yell though, there are many techniques on how to "scream" onstage without actually screaming.

MusicalBoy Profile Photo
MusicalBoy
#14Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 10:56am

"There are still only very few women who can sing that score in the original key"

This gets said so many times and it's ridiculous. LuPone had no greater voice then and has no greater voice or range now than any actress who's played Elphaba on Broadway, as well as many of the Glindas. Any of them, as well as a bunch of other actresses can sing that score in the original key, and that's just in New York.

broadway guy
#15Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 11:04am

Thats complete crap. Evita is much more challenging to sing than Elphaba. Evita is a sung through musical and Eva is hardly ever off stage. She goes throung song afer song singing in the high octave belty range.

"There are still only very few women who can sing that score in the original key"

Because its freaking true. Evita is probably the hardest score to sing for a woman on broadway. Do you not realize the vocal tole it takes on a voice? Many singers and actresses have had to quit their careers ruined by the vocal demands place on Eva.

Glinda isnt challenging if you are a true soprano. Elphaba is a challenging role vocally but not anywhere near the level of Evita.

ELphaba sings 3 big songs: Wizard and I, Defying Gravity, and no good deed. The rest are not as challenging. With EVITA: She sings 70 percent of the score. The notes in "A NEW ARGENTINA" can't even be compared to the notes in "Defying gravity".

The actress playing EVA sings songs in a very uncomfortable range for most singer. The range is usually on the break of the chest voice and the head voice and it must be belted and have great support to get the effect. Eva has to sing:

Eva has to hit very strenuous high notes in the first few minutes of the show during " eva and Malgadi/ eva beware of the city" then she goes STRAIGHT INTO ( no break) BUENOS AIRES where she has to dance her ass off while being expected to hit those very high and low notes while still belting her face off. Does she get a break after that? nope she then goes right into GOODNIGHT AND THANKYOU where she is expected yet again to hit those uncomfortable notes. Then she goes into "ID BE SURPRISINGLY GOOD FOR YOU" where she has to sing belt those high lyrics "there is no one no one at all never has been..." After that for awhile its more talk singing but she is still singing in a high range until she has to blow the roof off with NEW ARGENTINA. The "HE SUPPORTS YOU FOR HE LOVES..." is murder on the voice. THEN she has to sing this big long aria DONT CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA and then she has to do the "I am only a simple woman..." speech this is very taxing on the voice ecspecially after getting done with the grand aria. After that it would be normal in a show to only have to sing one more big song BUT NO she YET again has to hit those uncomfortable notes in HIGH FLYING ADORED and still is expected to have a voice left to sing the rousing RAINBOW HIGH. she then goes directly into rainbow tour where she "shocker* has to sing again!oh and then she has to do a whole freakin waltz while singing and belting at the same time! Does elphaba have to learn how to do the tango and waltz? Yeah i didn't think so. After that she is suppose to have enough energy to sing a duet with peron (YOU MUST LOVE ME) and AGAIN has to sing THE Sonnet,The Montage,THE broadcast, AND the lament ALL one after the other! Anyone who says this role isn't THAT challenging is an idiot.


"LuPone had no greater voice then and has no greater voice or range now"

You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.







Updated On: 6/18/13 at 11:04 AM

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ABitOnTheSide
#16Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:08pm

^^^THIS

MusicalBoy Profile Photo
MusicalBoy
#17Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:19pm

I'm afraid you must have misunderstood or misread my post, I made no comment on the physical or vocal demands of the role compared to any other (e.g Elphaba), I recognise that Eva is a much harder role to perform (Ché is no picnic either) ALL I said was that any of the actresses who have played Elphaba could sing Eva, many of them have.

LuPone has a stunning and emotive voice, but Broadway is lousy with these, I'm merely saying she isn't so far above other actresses, as people seem intent on suggesting.

Rainbowhigh23
#18Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:21pm

I had heard of a critique Patti gave to a group of students when they asked her what she thought of the new revival; I thought she might have snuck into the Marquis but if that really happened, the news would have been all over Broadwayworld in an instant. She must have critiqued the Tony Awards performance and was spot on in what I noticed as well. BTW, I thought Elena's acting was great, her voice sounded shot and I admit I got a headache sitting close and was wishing it Patti up onstage.

Anyway, what I was told was that Patti thought there was no spirit to the performance; Ricky had no direction and was allowed to do whatever he wanted, in sharp contrast to the direction that Mandy was given; she wasn't happy how it was starcast. She didn't think anything bad of Elena's performance.

broadway guy
#19Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:27pm

"ALL I said was that any of the actresses who have played Elphaba could sing Eva, many of them have."

Since when? I would like to see actual proof regarding your statemnt cause the only Elphabas i have ever heard sing a FEW songs from EVITA are Idina and Mandy. But THOSE WERE ONE OR 2 songs. You have no idea if they could sing the show 6-8 times a week on a daily schedule. No, "many of them have" NOT because none of the elphabas ( that i am aware of) Have never been a replacement and/or undestudy for Patti Lupone or Elena roger.

"I'm merely saying she isn't so far above other actresses, as people seem intent on suggesting."

I disagree but thats your opinion i guess.

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all that jazz
#20Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:46pm

Here's an interview where she talks about Sydney. You may have seen it already though.

http://youtu.be/1asS7GdEO5I


I agree that no other actress could sing the role as well as Patti. While many other actresses working today have the range for it, none have the vocal stamina that Lupone has. She has belted the hell out of Broadway for close to four decades now, elevating songs to where they had never been before, (anything goes, anyone?) and unlike Streisand and other legendary performers, she is still able to actually hit her signature notes.



Updated On: 6/18/13 at 12:46 PM

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StageManager2
#21Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:50pm

THEN she has to sing this big long aria DONT CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA and then at this point it would be normal in a show to only have to sing one more big song BUT NO she YET again has to hit those uncomfortable notes in HIGH FLYING ADORED and still is expected to have a voice left to sing the rousing RAINBOW HIGH.

broadway guy, you forgot the "I am only a simple woman..." speech she give immediately following "Don't Cry for Me..." Unlike the movie, in which Madonna simply recites it, the stage Evas have to deliver it via recitative, and it gets really high toward the end. I would imagine that puts a lot of strain on the voice, too.




Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia
Updated On: 6/18/13 at 12:50 PM

broadway guy
#22Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 12:56pm

Completely agree with everything you just said all that jazz. Very well said.

broadway guy
#23Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 1:02pm

You are right Stagemanager. I will add that in.

MusicalBoy Profile Photo
MusicalBoy
#24Patti Lupone talks about Elena Roger in
Posted: 6/18/13 at 1:07pm

Lisa Brescia and Julia Murney have both played Eva regionally, so yes, they can sing the score. 6-8 times a week. On a daily schedule.

"You know, once somebody knows you can sing Elphaba, it's like being able to sing Evita" - Ana Gasteyer