~ Since we last updated you on Broadway.com's Legally Blonde coverage, the website has posted two new videos regarding the Laura Bell Bundy show.
The most recent is a meeting between Laura and Stephen Saint-Onge (photo, left), the While You Were Out designer who is going to be redoing Laura's NYC apartment while she is out in San Francisco for Blonde's out-of-town preview (Anyone want count the outs in that sentence?). The video gets you almost as excited to see what he does for Laura's place as she is. But not quite. Laura really wants an apartment makeover.
The other video was shot three days before Christmas and gives a glimpse into Blonde director Jerry Mitchell's creative process. Having seen him in action, I'll testify that this video really captures Mitchell's style.
~ Ever since I got back from vacation, EVERYBODY has been telling me about Gregory Turay's (photo, right) performance at the Kennedy Center Honors, which CBS broadcast Dec. 26, and I managed to miss. A
friend is going to loan me a tape of the show, but I decided to go looking for it on the site that has everything, YouTube, and dang if it wasn't there. Even through the slight distortion of the video lifted from the broadcast, you can tell it was a tremendous performance that moved honoree Stephen Spielberg to tears. Turay sang Make Our Garden Grow from Leonard Bernstein's Candide in Spielberg's honor, with soprano Harolyn Blackwell, the U.S. Army Chorus and the Choral Arts Society, all under the baton of John Williams. Click here to see the performance. Like I said, it's a tad distorted (Doug, I still want to borrow the tape) but very watchable and worth watching.
UPDATE: ArtsJournal.com recently had a makeover, and one of the little gems in the new edition is You Tube video. There have been things like Jackson Pollock painting, Leonard Bernstein teaching and today's video is Rubinstein, Heifetz and Piatigorsky playing a trio by Felix Mendelssohn. Check it out, as well as all of the other good stuff on AJ. I'd been directing a number of people to a blog item by Wall Street Journal theater critic Terry Teachout called, "So you want to get reviewed." It's a tad snotty, but makes some really good points about how critics approach their jobs and how arts administrators should approach theirs.
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