Tom Wopat Performs at SOPAC, 5/12

By: Apr. 25, 2012
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Best known for his role on "The Dukes of Hazzard," Tom Wopat has also appeared on Broadway in Sondheim on SondheimI Love My WifeGuys and Dolls, Chicago, 42nd Street, Glengarry Glen Ross, and Catch Me If You Can. He received Tony nominations for his roles in A Catered Affair and the revival of Annie Get Your Gun. Wopat’s latest CD Consider it Swung is a swinging collection of standards.

Wopat first came to public attention in the late seventies as the freewheeling Luke Duke on the comedy-adventure TV series The Dukes Of Hazard. But it wasn’t long before his classically trained vocals took him away from car smashes and corny humor and landed him a role on Cy Coleman’s I love My Wife for his Broadway debut. He followed that by starring as Curly in an off-Broadway production of Oklahoma. But Broadway was calling him back and Wopat performed in the Tony Award-Winning Musicals City of Angels and Guys and Dolls. Tom then went on to creating the role of Frank Butler to Bernadette Peters’ Annie in the Broadway revival of Annie Get Your Gun, which earned him a Tony nomination. After finishing his second run of Guys and Dolls in 1994, he began to explore the possibilities of a change of pace. Though Wopat had never done a sitcom before, he seized the opportunity when Chuck Lorre, creator of the hit Grace Under Fire presented him with a leading role in his new sitcom Cybill.  With the success of the show, called a “smart, bawdy adult comedy”, Wopat once again reasserted his versatility and enormous popularity. Other credits include a recurring role on Home Improvement, reuniting with fellow Duke, John Schneider, for a CBS Movie-Of-The Week, Christmas Comes To Willow CreekBlue SkiesPeaceable Kingdom, the critically-acclaimed  NBC movie Just My Imagination and most recently on HBO’s Taking Chance along side Kevin Bacon. Last year he returned to Broadway performing the role of Tom Hurley to rave reviews, opposite Faith Prince and Harvey Feirstein in Catered Affair.

Born on a small dairy farm in Lodi, Wisconsin, Wopat began singing and dancing in school musicals when he was 12 years old. Upon graduating high school, he enrolled at the University of Wisconsin in Madison to study music, at one point leaving to be the lead singer and trombone player in a rock band. It is no surprise he went on to becoming a successful recording artist with the albums A little bit closer, Don’t look back, Learning To Love. Not to mention Top 20 country hits such as The Rock And Roll Of Love and Susannah. With the 2000 release of his album Still Of The Night, Tom Wopat introduced a new dimension of his talent. The star of TV and Broadway effortlessly reinvents a set of beautiful standards in a smooth, intimate and sexy style reminiscent of the crooners of the 40’s and 50’s. “We found things in my voice that we knew were there, but had never really been highlighted before,” explains Wopat. A little bit Broadway, a little bit country, is a great way of describing Tom Wopat’s latest album Consider it Swung. With his honky-tonk country-blues delivery of Delbert McClinton’s Maybe Someday Baby or his rural Mississippian folksy rendition of Ode To Billie Joe, Tom’s flexibility doesn’t seem to be a matter of self-conscious role playing but an expression of his far-reaching musical tastes and personal experience.

Tickets: $30, $40, $50.  To purchase, contact SOPAC at 973.313.ARTS or visitwww.SOPACnow.org

Where: South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC), 1 SOPAC Way, South Orange, NJ, 07079



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