You may know David Alford by way of his six-season role as Bucky Dawes, manager to Connie Britton’s Rayna Jaymes on the hugely popular CMT/ABC drama series Nashville, multiple tv and film roles including The Good Fight, The Blacklist and The Last Castle, his recent appearance alongside Laura Linney, Cynthia Nixon, Richard Thomas and Michael McKean in the 2017 revival of Lillian Hellman’s The Little Foxes on Broadway, or for having created Spirit: The Authentic Story of the Bell Witch, which recently celebrated its twentieth year in nearby Adams, TN. Either way, or even if you don’t know David, you’ll definitely want to check out A Holiday to Remember, Alford’s presentation of two of Truman Capote’s most-cherished stories, The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory, being presented in the Grand Salon of Nashville’s beautiful and historic Belmont Mansion with select performances November 23-December 17.
Having known David for years, not only by his aforementioned accolades, but through a mutual friend, as well as his tenure as Executive Artistic Director of Nashville Repertory Theatre a few years ago, when it was known as Tennessee Repertory Theatre, as soon as I learned he was returning to the Nashville theatre scene to perform this latest iteration of not one, but two Capote treasures, I knew I had to chat with him for my latest RAPID FIRE Q&A.
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RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH ‘A HOLIDAY TO REMEMBER’ STAR, DAVID ALFORD
JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparing to chat with you, I rewatched the mid-60s television presentations of both The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory starring Geraldine Page as Sook. I remember seeing them on TV about a decade later when I was a kid. These stories were my introduction to Truman Capote. What was yours?
DAVID ALFORD: My first introduction to Capote, like many other people, was seeing him on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. I was young. He struck me as a strange fellow with a funny voice that the adults seemed to find terribly amusing. I knew he had a reputation as being a bit of a provocateur, someone who liked pushing boundaries. It was many years later, shortly after graduating drama school and being cast in a stage adaptation of his holiday stories, that I learned that he was much more than his public persona. He was a true literary genius, with extraordinary range. The stories from his childhood featuring his eccentric cousin Miss Sook Faulk are beautifully written and deeply moving.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of introductions, ABC’s recent drama series, Nashville may have served as an introduction to you for millions of TV viewers, but those of us in the actual town of Nashville have known you through your theatrical works for years. In fact, just last month you celebrated the 20th anniversary of your play, Spirit: The Authentic Story of the Bell Witch of Tennessee. Before we get into A Holiday to Remember, What was it like to revisit Spirit as director again this year?
DAVID ALFORD: Rewarding and humbling. I wrote and directed the first production in 2002, and then directed a revision I did in 2008. Other than that, I have been involved only as an unofficial advisor from time to time until this year. The group behind the production, CSI (Community Spirit, Inc.) has not only kept the show going every year, but they’ve grown the play into a month-long festival. The show’s success is really a testament to their commitment and hard work. Every performance this year was sold out. I’d look into the audience and see men in John Deere caps seated next to women in business attire with a few occultists thrown into the mix. It’s hard to describe the sense of gratitude I feel looking at an audience of people from wildly different backgrounds seated next to each other and experiencing the same story. It’s become its own unique phenomenon.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Now on to A Holiday to Remember. Over the years you’ve presented a variation of this show from time to time. If memory serves, I believe it’s been 30-some years since you performed A Southern Christmas Sampler and about a decade since the former iteration, Christmas Down Home was presented here in Music City. What prompted you to revisit and revise it this year at Belmont and to include not only A Christmas Memory, but also Capote’s other holiday offering, The Thanksgiving Visitor?
DAVID ALFORD: I stopped doing A Christmas Memory mainly because of my commitments to the TV show. Then I moved away for a while. I’m back home now and it felt like the time was right. I’m a little older and can bring a little more life-experience to it. Plus, I’ve missed doing the piece. I still feel very connected to it. As far as pairing it with The Thanksgiving Visitor, we actually did it before in 2004 when I was Artistic Director at Tennessee Rep (now Nashville Rep) in the Polk Theatre at TPAC. It went well, though I thought the show might have worked better in a more intimate space. This is a chance to try that. Plus, it’s an opportunity to work my memorization muscles a bit. With both pieces, it’s me doing Capote’s words for about an hour-and-a-half. I like the challenge.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As you have done in previous incarnations, you’ve once again enlisted the talents of your friend, Paul Carrol Binkley whose original music is featured. How did you and Paul first connect?
DAVID ALFORD: I met Paul in 1985 at Austin Peay Statue University in Clarksville, where we were both students. He became the guitarist and band leader for a group I’d earlier formed with some high school friends called The Red River Boys. We gigged a lot together, and of course Paul was already composing and playing his own music at the time. Right before I went to Juilliard, he was the music director for a production of The Robber Bridegroom I was in at APSU, and he really knocked it out of the park. So I knew he had theatre chops. When I came back to Nashville in 1994 to start Mockingbird Theatre, Paul was one of the first people I called. He did the music for our second production, Tennessee Williams‘ The Glass Menagerie, and that started a long and successful working relationship. When I had the idea to do A Christmas Memory as the centerpiece for a potential Mockingbird holiday show (which became our Southern Christmas Sampler) I asked Paul to create some underscoring for it. He did, and it was perfect. Those original musical ideas have become an irreplaceable part of the performance for me. I can’t imagine doing the piece without Paul. I still get choked up every time I hear him play the opening phrase.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: This isn’t the first time you’ve performed at Belmont Mansion in the Grand Salon. What makes it such an ideal venue for these stories?
DAVID ALFORD: Well, it’s an incredibly evocative space, and the acoustics are excellent. Both pieces are about Truman’s childhood and set in the early 1930s, and though Belmont Mansion was around long before that, there are still echoes of the past that help underscore the context. And while I love working in traditional theaters, sometimes matching content with an appropriate nontraditional performance space can really resonate with an audience. I think this show in the mansion does that pretty well.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those who may not have seen your previous presentations, what can the audience expect?
DAVID ALFORD: The show is me doing Capote’s text uncut from memory with Paul’s original underscoring. The Thanksgiving Visitor is first. It has a four-piece combo and is a little more energetic in feel with me mostly on my feet. For A Christmas Memory, we’re performing it the same way we have since the beginning: I’m seated on a stool, with Paul in a chair just behind. It’s me, Capote’s words, and Paul’s guitar.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Aside from Buddy, the young boy at the center of both The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory, both stories feature his Cousin, Sook, an eccentric relative, and Buddy’s best friend. Research also revealed that you once cited your grandmother as your voice inspiration for your Sook. What can you tell me about finding the voice for each of the characters?
DAVID ALFORD: Good question! Thankfully the stories are mostly Capote’s narrative prose, so I don’t have to do a huge amount of vocal characterization. It’s mostly Sook and Buddy (her nickname for young Truman) with a handful of other characters sprinkled in. The challenge is to honor the text and what Capote’s trying to accomplish from a narrative perspective, while finding voices that stay true to the setting (a small town in the depression-era Deep South). And then within that framework, to find enough variation so the audience doesn’t get confused. Mostly it’s a lot of experimentation and trying to use as much of my vocal range as I can!
JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the subject of voices and characters, Capote, himself was quite a character and he possessed a very distinctive voice. I mentioned earlier the mid-60s teleplays. Capote served as narrator for those, so I gotta know…do you narrate in a Capote-esque voice?
DAVID ALFORD: I do not, for a couple of reasons. First, I think trying to replicate Truman’s voice calls too much attention to the performer and not enough to the words on the page. Instead, what I try to do in the narration is present Truman’s literary voice, his written voice, which is substantially more expressive and has greater range than his speaking voice ever did. His writing in these stories is masterful: funny, lyrical, and at times breathtakingly beautiful. I wouldn’t want any impression I did to get in the way of that. There’s definitely a specific southern flavor of course: accent, playfulness, and wit, but less affectation. But also, from a practical perspective, I think the more important voice is Sook’s and the other characters, and it’s hard to imagine someone with Truman’s voice being able to alter their tonality enough to make those voices convincing. So you’re either doing Truman all the way through (including the other character’s voices) or you’re finding the voices of the other characters and making the narration more neutral. I don’t think you can do both. So I do the latter.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Oh, I knew we should have gone ahead and done a full Rapid Fire 20Q, but I didn’t want to take up too much of your time…so….Can you share a little about cherished holiday memories of your own?
DAVID ALFORD: Well, of course, I have many, most of them from my childhood and from people that are gone now. My dad rarely provided the things on our Christmas lists, but he always made it special. He was a pastor, and this was his favorite time of year. One of the things that brings people back to A Christmas Memory is that Capote acknowledges the full range of memories of the people we love who are no longer with us. Those memories can be funny, touching, sweet, warm, awkward, joyful: but they can also make us feel a keen sense of loss. Leave it to his genius to be able to encapsulate all that in a short story. But to answer your question directly, and at the risk of sounding schmaltzy, the truth is that many of my most treasured holiday experiences have been sharing this story with a roomful of fellow human beings.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I usually end these chats with basically the same question…What do you hope audiences take away from seeing A Holiday to Remember?
DAVID ALFORD: That Truman Capote is an under-appreciated genius and one of the greatest writers of the 20th century. That all people, no matter how odd, eccentric, or marginalized, have value and can teach us something. That love always makes a difference.
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David Alford’s A Holiday to Remember begins Wednesday, November 23 with subsequent performances November 25 & 26 and December 1,3,15 and 16. All Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. and will take place in the Grand Salon on Belmont Mansion (On the campus of Belmont University at the corner of Acklen Avenue and Belmont Blvd- behind Freeman Hall, 1901 15th Ave S., Nashville, TN 37212) Tickets to each performance are $45 and include lite refreshments and a peek at the holiday decorations of the Mansion’s first floor. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. For more about David Alford, CLICK HERE. If you’re interested in learning more about Belmont Mansion or perhaps scheduling a full tour during the holiday, CLICK HERE.
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