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Hairspray

Rapid Fire 20Q with ‘Hairspray’ National Tour Cast: Coming to Nashville’s TPAC June 11 thru 16

June 11, 2024 by Jonathan

Based on John Waters’ 1988 cult classic film, Hairspray made its way to the musical stage in 2002 with music by Marc Shaiman and lyrics by Shaiman and Scott Wittman, book by Mark O’Donnell and Thomas Meehan. The original Broadway production was directed by Jack O’Brien with choreography by Jerry Mitchell. Hairspray set out on its first national tour in 2003, playing Nashville’s TPAC near the end of that initial tour back in 2006. In 2021, O’Brien and Mitchell came together once again to helm the show’s second-ever US tour. Now it its third year, Hairspray once again returns to TPAC’s Jackson Hall with shows Tuesday, June 11 through Sunday, June 16.

WIth just days before the show returns to Music City, I recently had the opportunity to chat with members of the company for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q. What follows are those conversations.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF HAIRSPRAY NATIONAL TOUR

RAPID FIRE WITH HAIRSPRAY’s LINK LARKIN, SKYLER SHIELDS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Link Larkin to you?

SKYLER SHIELDS: Link Larkin is a golden retriever. To me, Link is the perfect balance of boy next door meets Danny Zuko. I think he’s the shiny “It” boy, but he’s a bit aloof which is what makes him so endearing when he meets Tracy. He’s never met someone quite like her and she pushes the boundaries and norms that he’s never had the courage to question.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A quick perusal of your socials seems to indicate that you and your Hairspray costar, Caroline Eiseman, who plays Tracy Turnblad, get along off-stage as well as on. What’s your favorite thing about your work wife’s performance as Tracy?

SKYLER SHIELDS: Working with Caroline has been the biggest gift and blessing. It’s so empowering to be able to go on stage and know that someone truly has your back. We have laughed, cried, and accomplished so many goals this year, it’s been incredible having a partner like Caroline by my side. One of my favorite things we do is when, during Without Love while Seaweed is breaking Penny out of her house, we are supposed to be frozen at the jail cell, and we just talk and talk and pretend like the audience can’t see or hear us. It’s just a great reminder to me how lucky I am to be able to share this whole experience, let alone one of the best songs in musical theater, with one of my best friends.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A couple months ago you celebrated your one-year anniversary with the show, having joined the company near the end of the latest tour’s second season. In that time, have you discovered aspects of Link that you didn’t really explore in your performance early on?

SKYLER SHIELDS: It’s been fun to play into different aspects of the role depending on how I’m feeling that day. Link has qualities of aloofness and being perhaps a little dull but also could be played as entitled, cocky, and overly confident. I’ve enjoyed stepping into these different sides of him all while trying to maintain a sense of likability and tenderness. I think one thing I learned from this experience over the year is truly to make Link a successful character, he has to be in service to Tracy’s story. Dramatically all the characters are in service of Tracy’s story and how they affect her life. If I approached every scene thinking about how funny I’m gonna be or how great my songs are the role would fall very flat. “The material is funny, you are not” is something our wonderful director Matt Lenz would often say. Trusting the incredible score and script we are given and being a vessel for the material has made embodying this character truly pivotal.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Prior to being cast as Link, you spent some time at sea…as a cast member of Saturday Night Fever aboard Royal Caribbean cruise lines. What was the best part of your time with that show and life afloat?

SKYLER SHIELDS: Working with Royal Caribbean has been one of the craziest experiences of my life. I met some of the most amazing people from all over the world and performing such a fun show for over a year was wonderful. It was definitely tough being on the ship for so long but absolutely worth it. The best part by far was meeting some of my dearest friends from the UK and New Zealand.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: OK, I gotta ask…why is #gaylink not trending? But seriously, what does being a part of a show that shines light on equality and acceptance mean to you as an out gay actor?

SKYLER SHIELDS: I think at times I take for granted how lucky I am to have such an accepting family and a wonderful community around me. Being a part of a show that inspires its audiences to think deeper and embrace acceptance and love is why we do theater. Shows like Hairspray meant the world to me growing up and it’s been amazing being able to be a part of something that can bring that same joy to so many others while also spreading the narrative of acceptance, especially in the political climate we are in today.

RAPID FIRE WITH HAIRSPRAY’s LITTLE INEZ, KAILA SYMONE CROWDER 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Can you describe Little Inez in FIVE words?

KAILA SYMONE CROWDER: I would describe a Little Inez as bold, optimistic, light, courageous, and resilient.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand Hairspray is your first National Tour. How much fun are you having, not only being in the show, but bringing its message to audiences across the country?

KAILA SYMONE CROWDER: Every day is a new experience! I have found that Little Inez truly brings out something within me that is so powerful. It’s truly been a blessing to share with the world, the gift that God has given me.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re from Monroe, North Carolina, right? For whatever reason, one of the only things I know about Monroe is that one of its most famous…or infamous…natives was ultra-conservative politician Jesse Helms. How excited are you to change that statistic as your career flourishes and YOU become Monroe’s most famous citizen?

KAILA SYMONE CROWDER: I come from a family of history. My grandfather, Roy Lee Crowder, was a civil rights activist leader, along with the amazing Robert F. Williams, who was also known for his courageous stance on Black people and their freedom (Negros with Guns). It does me great joy to implement the things that my grandfather and the women in my family (Rhonda Crowder, my mother and Revonda Crowder, my grandmother) have gone through. Now I can take it to another level to truly bring a light into how we can move forward as nation through the theatrical aspect.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of your home state, Hairspray’s costume designer, William Ivy Long hails from Raleigh, North Caroline. He’s designed costumes for more than 60 Broadway show, having won the Tony for Hairspray in 2003. Do you have a favorite costume in the show, whether it be your’s or that of one of your co-stars?

KAILA SYMONE CROWDER: Absolutely, I actually have two favorite costumes. The first one is the multicolored polka-dotted dress that is shown during Run and Tell That, and the other is the gold and off-white finale dress that is shown during You Can’t Stop the Beat. Although these are my favorite outfits, each outfit reminds me of when I was a little girl and how my mom would dress me in colorful dresses with white lace socks and Keds, which is exactly what I wear in the beginning of the show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In Hairspray, you share scenes—and a storyline familial bond—with Deidre Lang and Josiah Rogers who play Little Inez’s Mother and Brother, Motormouth Maybelle and Seeweed J. Stubbs, respectively. Do you have a favorite moment that involves one or both of them?

KAILA SYMONE CROWDER: During Run and Tell That, when Seaweed, played by the amazing Josiah Rogers, does the handshake, that moment signifies our close brother and sister relationship throughout the show and how he’s rooting for his sister Little Inez because he understand the talent has continued to pass down through another generation. Alongside my mother Motormouth Maybelle, who is played by the amazing Deidre Lang – during the song I Know Where I’ve Been, there’s a particular moment where she grabs my hand and then eventually let’s go of it, so that I can walk my own path and continue to be the light through darkness. It’s as if she’s passing on the torch to another generation to change the world in a positive way. This also supports how powerful the bond of a mother and daughter can be.

RAPID FIRE WITH HAIRSPRAY’s VELMA VON TUSSLE, SARAH HAYES

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Velma Von Tussle, the character you play in Hairspray’s current National Tour?

SARAH HAYES: There are some people who, as the world changes, walk forward with arms open wide, ready to embrace any and all changes the future holds. Then there are some people who struggle with change and have a hard time adjusting. Velma Von Tussle is someone who needs to be dragged kicking and screaming into the future! She is a woman who has worked very hard to get herself into a position of power as producer of The Corny Collins Show, which is especially impressive in 1960s Baltimore. And to top it all off, she’s made her daughter, Amber, the star of the show. So Velma is having a great day when the show starts! Then Tracy shows up ready to “eat some breakfast and change the world,” and it all goes wrong for Velma.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I must admit I’m a Hairspray fan since the OG 1988 John Waters film, so I gotta ask…How excited are you to be playing a role that was first brought to life by Blondie lead singer, Debbie Harry and has since been played by everyone from Susan Anton and Belinda Carlisle to Michelle Pfeiffer and Kristin Chenoweth.

SARAH HAYES: It’s a little intimidating because those are some big yellow heels to fill, but excitement still wins out, because that’s a pretty cool list to be on! I feel like my entire Hairspray adventure has been a series of “pinch me” moments, and one of those moments happened in Tulsa, when I got to perform for and meet Linda Hart, the OG Broadway Velma! Absolutely surreal. I also love that I get to say I share a resume credit with Catwoman. Haha!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparing to chat with you, I did a little internet sleuthing and discovered your theatre background is highlighted by several performances at Myers Dinner Theatre in Hillsboro, Indiana. I do love a sweet little dinner theatre! How has your background working with such a small, intimate company helped you adjust to your first-ever National Tour?

SARAH HAYES: I know I wouldn’t be on this tour without the opportunities I had at Myers. Jeremy Littlejohn was the Artistic Director during my time there, and he created this little artistic oasis in the middle of rural Indiana. He gave me roles that challenged me and helped me overcome insecurities and nerves I’d battled for years, which then helped me be more successful in future auditions, including my Hairspray callback in New York.

The audiences at Myers were pretty small but they were mighty…in fact, right before the Covid shutdowns, we were doing Run For Your Wife which was a cast of 8. There were 7 people in the audience the night before the theatre closed. We asked if they still wanted us to do the show. They enthusiastically told us yes and those 7 people made thunder that night! That was such a beautiful night for everyone involved and a reminder of how important theatre is, and how lucky I am to get to do it for a living right now.

I’m really grateful for the twists and turns my career has taken, including several years in my late 20s and early 30s when I wasn’t getting much acting work. It’s easier to take something for granted if you’ve never gone without it. I’ve been hungry for work, and will probably be hungry for work again. That makes me appreciate the work I do get so much more.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Again, while doing my homework prior to our chat, I fell down the proverbial Velma Von Tussle internet rabbit hole where I saw that fabulous Velma has an entry on Villains Wiki!!! So, a two-part question…1) How much fun are you having playing Velma and 2) Why is she NOT a villain?

SARAH HAYES: 1) That’s hilarious! I didn’t even know that she was on Villains Wiki! I understand why though…she’s so brilliantly written, which makes her a blast to play. I’m a peacemaker by nature, and struggle to communicate when I’m upset. Velma has no problem saying (or screaming or cackling!) exactly what she’s thinking, so that’s part of the fun of it for me, getting to play someone so completely opposite of me. Plus, singing Miss Baltimore Crabs every night is a dream!

2) Velma is not a villain if you dig a little deeper and look at why she does and says the things she does. I don’t think her motivation is actually hate. It’s fear. Velma is a widow raising her daughter on her own, while working full time in a changing world. She’s scared of losing her power and the empire she’s built for herself and her daughter, and as we know, fear can make people say and do some pretty nasty things. One of the most beautiful messages of Hairspray is that no one is beyond redemption. If the world is truly going to change it has to mean that no one gets left behind and (spoiler alert) even Velma and Amber finally get on board and shake and shimmy it!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I love that the original Broadway director Jack O’Brien and original choreographer Jerry Mitchell are at the helm of this tour. What does it mean to you and the cast that they’re behind this tour?

SARAH HAYES: It’s incredible. I think it speaks to what a special show Hairspray is, that the original director and choreographer still want to take care of Baltimore and all of its residents. I know that gives me motivation on even the toughest days to dig deeper and give each audience the best show I’m capable of every single time I step onstage.

RAPID FIRE WITH HAIRSPRAY’s PENNY PINGLETON, SCARLETT JACQUES

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do we need to know about Penny Pingleton before seeing the current National Tour of Hairspray?

SCARLETT JACQUES: Although Penny may not be the brightest, she always has the best intentions. She loves nothing more than to follow around Tracy and encourage all her endeavours, being the most supportive best friend whilst only living in a fantasy life in terms of her own desire to feel wanted. Throughout the story, Penny starts to find herself when she meets her love interest, Seaweed J. Stubbs, and is finally being noticed in a way she never expected. Her

character arc is one that is so beautiful and admirable, as she goes from being content following her best friend, to falling in love and gaining the confidence to stand up to her strict, racist mother Prudy.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: How does the role of Penny Pingleton resonate with you personally?
SCARLETT JACQUES: Penny Pingleton is the most wonderful character, and I truly am so lucky to spend every day stepping into the shoes of such a fun-loving, goofy and caring person. I have so much love for her, and this role will always have a special place in my heart. She has so many amazing qualities that I admire, and it makes me so happy that I get to put a smile on so many faces.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Within the storyline, Edna is reticent to encourage Tracy to pursue her dreams of being a featured dancer on The Corny Collins Show, but Penny, being her loyal friend, encourages her to go after what she wants in life. In your own life, has there been someone who’s reminded you that You Can’t Stop the Beat?

SCARLETT JACQUES: Being from the small country of New Zealand, moving to the USA was a huge decision and one that I couldn’t do without my amazing support system that has continued to believe in me and my abilities. There are so many people I could talk about forever, but specifically I’d like to talk about Hamish Mouat. He is one of the top directors/choreographers in NZ. We first worked together when I was only 8 years old. He went on to provide me with many opportunities to grow as a performer. I have been involved in 14 productions with him. Earlier this year, Hairspray performed in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and as Hamish was travelling to the states to perform, he decided to stop in Tulsa just to see me perform in my first national tour and professional theatre job in the USA.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Why do you think Without Love is such an important moment in the show?

SCARLETT JACQUES: Without Love follows the blossoming of relationships between Tracy and Link and Seaweed and Penny. In both circumstances, they are found in tough situations. As both couples work together to overcome these situations, the audience gets to witness innocent, young love forming between people who were not considered appropriate or fully acceptable to be together at the time. I love how Hairspray allows audiences to see the importance of love and how it has the power to go against what is expected of us, which is something that is definitely still valid in today’s society.

With the ongoing movement of the LGBTQ+ community feeling more comfortable and safer being out and honest about who they are publicly, I think Hairspray as a whole, but specifically Without Love, definitely still holds a huge amount of power. It is showing the whole audience, but particularly the younger generations, that love is a strong force, and no one should have to feel pressured to follow what anyone else says. Unfortunately, we still have a way to go in terms of accepting and loving people unconditionally.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences take with them after having seen Hairspray?

SCARLETT JACQUES: I hope that audiences take with them the knowledge of how far we have come as a society, but how there is still more we need to change. Being based in the ’60s, Hairspray expresses the important message about the racial inequality and segregation that was present at the time, as well as size-discrimination and bullying others simply due to their appearance.

A lot of the younger characters, Penny and Tracy included, are just wanting to have fun dancing together, and don’t understand why something that is seemingly so simple and easy, could be so unacceptable and difficult to achieve. It helps the audience to understand that there is this beautiful innocence that children have, and a lot of the time it comes down to nurture over nature. Tracy is blessed with wonderful parents, Edna and Wilbur Turnblad, who teach her to lead with kindness and love, which is something truly important that she shares with the other characters in the show and the audience.

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Closing out their 2023/2024 Broadway at TPAC season, Hairspray plays Jackson Hall with shows Tuesday, June 11-Sunday, June 16. Performances time are as follows: Tuesday thru Thursday at 7:30p.m., Friday and Saturday evening performances at 8p.m., Saturday matinee at 2p.m. and Sunday matinee and early evening performances at 1p.m. and 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $50.90 to $164.50. CLICK HERE for Tickets.

Not in Nashville? Hairspray continues it’s current tour with a stop in Dallas June 18-30. CLICK HERE for tickets. You can also follow Hairspray on X, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok.

Next up at TPAC, Mark Morris Dance Group presents The Look of Love: An Evening of Dance to the music of Burt Bacharach, onstage at TPAC’s James K. Polk Theatre June 28-29 CLICK HERE for tickets. With numerous special engagements and performances filling their summer calendar, TPAC’s 2024/2025 Broadway at TPAC season kicks off September 10 thru 15 with the Music City debut performance of Broadway’s Clue: A New Musical. CLICK HERE for tickets. For further details on these and more entertainment headed to TPAC, CLICK HERE or follow TPAC on Instagram, X, YouTube and Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Broadway, Broadway at TPAC, Broadway Tour, Hairspray, Hairspray on Tour, Interview, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q

Roxy Regional Theatre’s ‘Hairspray’ a hair-hoppin’ great time; on stage thru September 29 in Clarksville

September 20, 2018 by Jonathan

Jenna Leigh Miller (center) starring in Roxy Regional Theatre’s “Hairspray”

First off, I’m not sure why it has taken me a decade since first beginning to write about the Nashville area theatre scene on a regular basis to make the relatively short trek to nearby Clarksville to see a show at the Roxy Regional Theatre. Perhaps I was just waiting on an official invite. Well, thanks to Brian Best, it finally happened when I recently attending a performance of the Roxy’s current production, Hairspray, and now I can truly say I see what the buzz about the Roxy is all about.

Not only is the Roxy a simply gorgeous classic movie house that’s been renovated into a fabulous live performance venue, it’s also situated near the charming yet bustling town square. Add to that the aforementioned Brian Best in the role of Edna Turnblad and you’re most certain to be guaranteed a great night of musical theatre.

Directed and choreographed by Roxy’s Executive Director, Ryan Bowie, this production of Hairspray, based on cult movie king, John Waters’ 1988 film, the story’s eight-Tony-winning 2002 stage musical adaptation and subsequent 2007 big budget musical movie redo is surprisingly one of the best productions of the show I’ve seen, and I’ve seen it done quite a few times over the years.

Bowie has cast an all-around enjoyable cast. Obvious stand-outs include Jenna Leigh Miller, who stars as Tracy Turnblad, Edna’s plump and plucky teenage daughter whose dream is to not only dance on The Corny Collins Show, a Baltimore-based weekly music show (think American Bandstand), but to also usher in the racial integration of the show as well. Miller is simply adorable. Oblivious to the obstacles before her, or perhaps fueled by them, Miller’s Tracy commands the stage, from the show’s opening Good Morning Baltimore all the way through to Act’s 2’s all-in You Can’t Stop the Beat.

Drew Stairs approaches Corny Collins with charm and a perfectly over-inflated ego. His scenes with Miler’s Tracy are sweet and his jabs at her Barbie-doll perfect nemesis, Amber Von Tussle (Jessica Caracciolo) are executed with perfect comedic timing. Speaking of Amber, Caracciolo bratty portrayal is so fun, especially when paired with Stacy Turner as her equally self-important mother, Velma Von Tussle.

Kelly Letourneau is such fun to watch as Tracy’s best pal, the seemingly always permanently punished Penny Pingleton. Cast as Penny’s forbidden love (translation, it’s the 1960s…she’s white, he’s not) is Treston Henderson as Seaweed Stubbs. They shine during Without Love. Their on-stage chemistry is so sweet, who can blame Penny’s mother, the aptly named Prudy Pingleton (Amy Snider) for finally acquiescing. Additional kudos are in order to Snider for also appearing as the stereotypical (read lesbian) gym teacher and the no-nonsense prison matron.

Other stand-outs in the cast come courtesy Matthew Combs as Link Larkin, Jamila Hunter as the Big Blond and Beautiful Mothermouth Maybell. Her Act 2 performance of I Know Where I’ve Been, a song that temporarily refocuses the action away from the silliness of Tracy’s TV dreams to the seriousness of racial issues that sadly still exist, is hands-down the best moment in the show.  The feisty and adorable Mikquala Skelton as Little Inez is just a joy to watch. Lastly, Mairys Joaquin, Jameka Lache Horton and Alexandra West as The Dynamites, the show’s girl group trio of backup singers provide some of the show’s most gorgeous voices.

Brian Best (center) and the cast of “Hairspray”

Then there’s the aforementioned Brian Best as Edna Turnblad. In the previously mentioned original incarnations of Hairspray, the role of Edna has been played by gender-ignoring camp comedy drag legend, Divine, Broadway icon Harvey Fierstein and John Travolta…yes, even Vinnie Barbarino/Danny Zuko donned a dress to play the role of Edna Turnblad. Edna isn’t entirely new to Best, having played her a couple of years ago in another local production of the show. I was fortunate enough to have seen Best in the production as well and found it quite interesting that under the direction of Bowie, this Edna seems a bit more real, more Waters-esque. Over the top, sure—it kind of comes with the territory—but the Roxy’s Edna seems to heart-wrenchingly wallow in self deprecation while simultaneously building up her daughter in an effort to not let her fall into her mother’s patterns. Best’s Edna also has a grittier, less polished look than his previous turn, whether a choice by the actor and director, or simply by necessity of whomever did Best’s Edna makeup. Either way, it works, especially when she gets the confidence boost she needs and realizes beauty comes in all shapes and sizes.

The Roxy’s Hairspray features a talented group of actors, singers and dancers. Gotta love the school deskograpy from the get go, as well as what I’ll dub the bellography during Tracy’s dreamlike I Can Hear the Bells.

The set, designed by Bowie and Emily Rourke seems at times a bit compact, especially the Turnblad house, but it’s effective and clever, after all, what better way to emphasize the stature of Edna and her mini-me, Tracy than to present a house that’s literally busting at the seams? If there was once drawback to the production, it would have to be the fact that the actors weren’t wearing mics. As mentioned at the top of this review, this was my first time to attend a show at the Roxy, and it was my own fault for not requesting tix earlier. Perhaps because of this, my seats were near the back of the venue and right in front of a wall-mounted speaker, which may have attributed to my inability to hear certain performers and musical numbers.

Nonetheless, thanks to my own familiarity with the show and the cast’s non-stop energy, enthusiasm and all-out apparent excitement to be performing in the show, Roxy’s Hairspray is indeed worth the drive to Clarksville.

Hairspray continues at Roxy Regional Theatre (100 Franklin Street, Clarksville, TN) with performances through Saturday, September 29. Tickets are $25 for Adults and $15 for children 13 and under. CLICK HERE for showtimes, tickets or more information. To find out more about Roxy Regional Theatre, follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Brian Best, Broadway, Clarksville TN, Hairspray, Jenna Leigh Miller, John Waters, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Roxy Regional Theatre, Theatre, Theatre Review, Tony Winner

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