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Bruce
Kimmel:
Hello, Doug Storm, and welcome to haineshisway.com, which will
soon be the most popular site on all the internet. Let's start
at the top: Tell us a bit about you as a tad of a lad of a sprig
of a youth. Where did you grow up, were you a strange child,
you know, a little background on your very own self.
Doug Storm: Was I EVER a strange child.
I would love to tell you a bit about it, but lucky for me our
judicial system seals records for all juveniles. But I did "make
headlines" when I was born in a very small corn town in the Midwest.
I was born on Abraham Lincoln's birthday, in Lincoln, Illinois,
in Lincoln Memorial hospital. Weird enough? J.P.Dougherty, who
was "Thenardier" on the 3rd Nat. of Les Miz when I started
out on the road, is also from Lincoln. (J.P. is now the standby
for Harvey Firestein in Hairspray) Our mothers used
to work together on the community theater board of directors or
something like that. Small world.
BK: When did you first begin to discover musical theater.
And when did it first hit you that you wanted to be part of it.
DS: Well, my mom was a piano teacher, but she also taught
school when I was little. So I got stuck in her Christmas pageants
as a toddler. I got up to sing "Jolly Old St. Nicholas" and had
never seen a microphone before (I was about 4 or 5). Needless
to say as soon as I heard the volume on that sucker it was all
over. Never give a 5 year old a feeling of power. I stuck it in
my mouth and started roaring like a lion, or some twisted pre-Rob
Zombie heavy metal kindergartner. They had to drag me off stage.
The crowd went wild. The monster was born in that instant. Children
have an uncanny ability to go limp like a protester at an anti-war
rally, and I perfected it.
BK: Did you major in theater in college? If
not, when did you start to pursue a career with earnest?
DS: I majored in opera in college, but that was a huge
mistake. I had been performing professionally since about age
10. My first pro job was at the MUNY in St.Louis in Hans Christian
Anderson with Larry Kert who was the original "Tony" in West
Side Story. (I feel I have to explain this because most kids
now don't go any further back with theater history than who originated
what role in Rent.) After that there was a whole bunch
of commercials for McDonalds, Parker Brothers, more theater, etc.
Although I probably shouldn't mention the McDonalds thing since
somebody will more than likely include me in their class action
suit saying I made them fat. But it bought me a nice cherry red
TransAm with T-tops when I was in high school, so keep on shoveling
in the Big Macs, tubbie-- Some kid out there needs a Camaro!
The opera thing came out of singing as a boy soprano with the
St.Louis Symphony. After doing a ton of solo work with them they
asked me to become a part of the adult chorus so that I could
get the best possible training. My voice hadn't changed yet so
I was in the soprano section.
Back then every kid wanted to sing like "Annie" and was developing
nodes and such before they even hit puberty. So my mom did the
right thing directing me down the classical road, even though
I would get pissed about missing out on a King & I
audition over Amahl & the Night Visitors. She was not
a stage mom. She is now.
People forget that music is a physical sensation; a vibration
of bones and frequencies. It's like a drug. You can literally
feel it shaking your insides. Standing in the middle of a world
class symphony with strings to the left, horns in front, and timpani
to the right... there's nothing like it. It was a wonderful place
to grow up, hearing music explained visually with phrases like
"let it float like gossamer wings". Poetry. Throw in a hundred
screaming vocalists behind you and the effect is complete. And
that's really all singing is anyhow: cultivated screaming at varying
volume.
I went to college on an early entry scholarship program, and most
of my instructors had been my colleagues at the Symphony, so that
was weird. (Except for my piano teacher, Jane McDaniel, who
is the mother of Rosie O'Donnell's former musical director, John
McDaniel. I put her through the ringer, poor lady. Sorry John!
Please hire me!) College held no interest. I was learning
"The Count" in Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, a part for
a grown man, when I really wanted to be doing "Jack" in Into
the Woods. I was such a punk.
So I quit college, got in some trouble, moved to New York, wrote
Johnson-Liff and Richard Jay-Alexander at the offices of Cameron
Macintosh, Inc. a letter saying I didn't have an agent, knew nothing
about the real business, but that I moved here solely to be in
Les Miz and nothing else. Could I please have an audition?
I went in two days later and got the job understudying "Enjolras".
It just doesn't happen like that, people. But it did.
BK: Tell us about your very first musical theater
job. Where was it, what was it and how was it?
DS: Wow, I guess I should have read this question before
I went ahead and rewrote "War & Peace" in response to the
last one,huh? That was my first gig in New York, other than working
for the mafia at a dinner theater in Jersey. We got paid in cash
and it was more like "lunch theater" for the nursing home set.
You'd think that would be sweet, but man those bitties were hollerin'
at the stage like it was the Rocky Horror Show: "We can't
hear you!" or "Can I get a refill on my tea?"
But if you want to go way back, my first role was playing "Michael"
in Peter Pan. I got to fly and everything. That's quite
an experience for a little kid who craves attention. And explains
a lot about my state of mind as an adult now who craves attention.
Thanks! You just saved me a buttload of bills to my shrink! I
gotta call that cracker and tell him I want my Thursday afternoons
back.
BK: Okay, so there you are, ready to take Broadway by
Storm - how did you get your first break in the big city known
as New York, New York?
DS: See question 4 which refers to question 3. But to do
the Cliff Notes version: my first New York vocal coach Steve Lutvak
pointed me in all the right directions. Without him, I wouldn't
have known where to start. And then of course there's Liz Marx,
formerly of the former Johnson-Liff casting office, and former
Associate Producer Richard Jay-Alexander. Formerly of the former.
(Fortunately form follows function.) They made my dream come true:
Les Miserables. I am forever in their debt for the career
that I have had now for the past almost 10 years. Les Miz
was really the only thing on my resume for a while, and it opened
every door in town. It may seem tired now, but back then if you
had been in Les Miz people knew you could sing your ass
off. AND that you could do it eight times a week.
I don't care if I'm ever a big star or if I never work again.
Nothing will ever top the first time I stood on top of the barricade
and wailed to the moon. People say from near death experiences
that they see a white light. I say it must be a spotlight, because
at that very moment I stood at the gates of heaven. And the show
literally ends there at that location. Go back and see it again
before it closes and remember how your breath was taken away the
first time YOU saw it. Les Miz has changed peoples lives.
It did mine. And I was privileged to be a part of it and affect
people the way I was affected the first time I saw it. Thank you
Steve Lutvak. Thank you Liz Marx. Thank you Richard Jay-Alexander.
I will die content for certain.
So much for the Cliff-Notes answer.
BK: Now, Doug Storm, you have been in quite a few of
these newfangled musicals. In fact, you are currently in a new
fangled musical with an emphasis on the fang. But we'll get to
that in a moment. At what point did you join the Broadway company
of Les Miz? How was that experience. Who puts the replacements
into the show. Did Trevor Nunn ever pay a visit while you were
doing it?
DS: Following up now on question 6! Am I psychic or do I just
talk too much? Les Miz was still over 5years old when I
joined. It was fresh. People were still seeing it for the first
time, but people were also seeing it for the fiftieth. One town
in Minnesota was so happy to have the tour there the mayor gave
the key to the city and declared it "Les Miserables week". Everywhere
we went with our cast jackets on people stopped us to talk about
the show. It was magic. I was a cast-jacket stalker once.
Replacements are blocked in by stage management and the dance
captain. There are weekly understudy rehearsals to dive into characters,
and a full company put-in for principles. When they brought our
cast in to New York while re-rehearsing for the 10th anniversary
opening, we had a lot of time with John Caird and composer Claude-Michelle
Schoenberg. I stood at the piano singing my solo in "Drink With
Me" as the composer played along. A few years before, I was soaking
my pillow with snot and tears in my hometown because I thought
my dream was unreachable and that I was gonna deliver pizza's
for the rest of my life.
I went home that night and soaked my pillow with snot and tears
again.
I'm not a preacher or a Bible-beater. I can't even remember the
last time I went to church, but I encourage everyone who reads
this: praying works. I don't care what your religion, or what
your name for the creator is. It works.
BK: You were also in The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Were you in all versions or just some versions. That show will
probably go down in musical theater history for being the show
that refused to go anywhere and also the show that went through
the most metamorphoses. Tell us a bit how that roller coaster
ride was.
DS: Pimpernel was my first real "rehearsal process",
even though it wasn't quite building a piece from the ground up.
The show had been running for not quite a year at that point.
(Bill Bowers originated the role of "Leggett" in version one)
I was in the original cast of version two, when Robert Longbottom
came in with his assistants Tom and Darlene and restructured everything.
He really turned it around, man.
Scarlet Pimpernel version one was like Dance of the Vampires
in that you could see the potential of the material but it was
just falling short of the mark. Bobby Longbottom was the tip of
the spear in turning that show around to become a success. So
much so that it moved theaters, went out on tour, has had a nonunion
tour, and is being done regionally all over the place.
The difference between Scarlet Pimpernel and Dance
of the Vampires is that the re-rehearsal of Pimpernel
was more about structure and content. To completely reconceptualize
a show in the middle of a run sounds to me like an impossible
task. But usually when you say "impossible" somebody turns around
and actually does it. I don't think that will happen with Dance
of the Vampires. But I've heard grumblings of an Off-Broadway
"prequel" called Waltz of the Werewolves. Hmm. March
of the Mummy's?
All in all, I loved Pimpernel. I didn't do much in the
show. I found myself asking at times "this is Broadway?" Or "this
is what actors cry themselves to sleep over not getting?". But
then I would stand in the wings watching the brilliant Douglas
Sills who soared as the star of the show, and I would think "yeah...
this is Broadway. And I'm happy to be third guy to the left, filling
the stage so that a talent like Doug Sills' can be recognized."
I really mean that too. If it's meant to be, my time will come.
If not, I would love to have a long career of being third guy
to the left. I'd like to not think of it as being in the background.
More like being the reinforcements so the General can go kick
some ass.
BK: You also did Mr. Frank Wildhorn's The Civil War.
How involved in everything is Mr. Frank Wildhorn? Does he pretty
much ride herd over everything, or does he give the other creative
staff their head?
DS: Ah... good military segue from the "General" comment.
I only was involved in the readings of The Civil War before
it went to the Alley Theater in Texas. Once it came to Broadway,
that show became another example of concept not matching material.
I loved the music of The Civil War. A powerful piece with
a statement. Simple concert staging, with slides of the period
split, between present day, showing how far we've come or haven't
come as a society would have sold like crazy. Let the audience
sit back and have an adventure in listening. The Vietnam images,
Desert Storm, etc, mixed in with images of the Civil Rights movement
and the Rodney King footage would have been moving & telling.
Some would say that idea is theme park-ish and commercial, but
so what? The mother of all theme parks is ruling Broadway right
now. Our society LOVES emotional manipulation. The Civil War
would probably be having a long run in Branson or Nashville right
now. The things that piece said need to be heard, especially as
the county is going to war again.
Let me tell you about Frank. A good composer or writer knows when
his baby needs to go into other hands. And Frank Wildhorn is a
good composer. All his detractors, critics, and people who say
that Wildhorn's songs are interchangeable from show to show are
ridiculous. As if a song from Carousel couldn't have been
plopped into Oklahoma. He's a different style, very commercial,
and that has a place. If the world was full of Sondheims it would
be pretty boring. Besides... in order for things like the Discovery
channel to thrive, there has to be the fluff of "Friends". There
may never be a Wildhorn festival at the Kennedy Center, but stand
outside a Wildhorn show after curtain. Most everybody comes out
remembering a tune whether they were a fan of his shows or not.
BK: Tell us a bit about Mr. Terrence Mann's Romeo
and Juliet. Was it different from Mr. William Shakespeare's Romeo
and Juliet?
DS: This piece is so kick ass. It is a crime it hasn't
gone to Broadway yet. Terry has managed to take the beauty of
Shakespeare and put it word for word to music. It's AWESOME! Now
if they could get Baz Luhrman to stage it like his film, since
he's Mr. Broadway now with La Boheme, THAT would be perfect,
Terry and Baz co-directing. Keep your ear to the ground cuz Terry
Mann's Romeo & Juliet is gonna run over everything
one of these days. I hope I'm old enough to do "Friar Lawrence"
when it does. "Tybalt" was cool, bit the role is more like, "Tyd-bit".
Terrence Mann was my hero for so long. I would sit in front of
my CD player and listen to him sing "Stars" and just dream and
wish and then dream and wish some more. Working with him is great.
But being pals with him is even better. We got cush treatment
from this world-renowned chef at a 5 star restaurant in Vegas
when the chef found out Terry was there. Duck, special appetizers,
killer wine tailored to every course, sorbet to cleanse the palate
between each plate, and soup so good you realize your tongue is
a sexual organ. Man, it was a kings meal.
I've done more readings of that show than anything else. I'm gonna
bookend this rambling response with my favorite adjective: Terrence
Mann's Romeo & Juliet is KICK ASS.
BK: All right, you, Doug Storm, have been an
actual backup singer for the actual Linda Eder in many venues.
What does that entail - obviously you are singing backup, but
how much work is it, who directs her act, how active are the backup
singers and is Miss Linda Eder nice to sing backup for?
DS: As much work as I have done for Frank on several projects,
the only time I got to sing backup for Linda was for her PBS special
about 6 years ago, and that is STILL airing. Very little rehearsal.
My buddy Dave Clemmons, a former "Jean Valjean" who is now a casting
director, was in charge of vocal directing the backup singers.
We were all Wildhorn World regulars so it was more like
"here's the set, here's where you stand, we'll run through it
once and then you can go to the green room and drink wine for
2 hours till we start taping".
Linda is so fantastic. I was at their wedding a few years ago.
Here it was her special day, and my little interaction with her
then made me feel so special. Entertainment Tonight cameras and
people way more important than me were all over the place. But
Linda, I'm pretty sure, spoke to every single guest at that wedding.
It sure seemed like it. And when she is talking to you her focus
is on you. Not like most people who also scan the room at the
same time to see who they may be missing. She's the genuine article.
If you've never heard her sing live, you've never had an aural
orgasm.
BK: Doug Storm, you went to Las Vegas and originated
the role of Quasimodo in the US premiere of Notre Dame de Paris.
I have the DVD of it, and I must say I watched only the first
few minutes and then got tired and went to bed. The next morning,
I got up to go to the bathroom and passed out on my way - my head
actually went through the wall in my hallway. I was fine (got
up too fast was the theory) but forever thereafter I blamed the
incident on Notre Dame de Paris. Tell us about the show - did
you do it in English? It's a huge production, I gather - will
it come to Broadway? Did you gamble away your entire salary?
DS: I'm not a gambler. But I came back from Vegas with
no money at all. Let's leave it at that. That place will eat you.
Notre Dame de Paris. Musically beautiful. Fun to look at for
a little while. Not enough book to pull off the storytelling.
Here's the delicate balance again. Dance of the Vampires
was changed too much from its European incarnation while Notre
Dame de Paris wasn't changed enough. I pulled teeth
with the French director to get them to let me actually ride the
bell as "Quasimodo'. If it wasn't done in Paris, they didn't want
it. Our American producers' hands were tied. The French felt that
it was such an enormous hit in Paris that it shouldn't have to
be changed for American audiences. I respect their feelings of
artistic integrity, and I adore eccentric personalities, but things
always have to be tweaked and fixed. It's hard to differentiate
between ego and integrity sometimes. The Frenchies were rightfully
proud of their success in Paris. However, Vegas could have been
the place to try new things with Notre Dame before bringing
it to New York. It was like Cirque du Soleil performing
Les Miz. It was so powerful at points, and so musically
beautiful, but there's no room for crying and dying in Vegas.
All they want there is tits and feathers. I loved it. Our dancers
were the most amazing ensemble I've EVER worked with, and that
says a lot because every single cast I've ever been in has almost
had an entire ensemble of principle quality players.
If Bat Boy's rehearsal process was the most rewarding creative
process, then performing in Notre Dame was the most rewarding
process of not creating - but being. I learned how to let my gifts
go unbridled with that show and to just simply take the ride.
Total method acting. I was so into that piece there were nights
I don't even remember doing the show. It was also a period of
great sadness in my personal life, so to play such a tortured
character every night was cathartic and therapeutic. I hope it
will have a life again. With the right changes it could be beautiful.
I'd like to tackle it again with my own personal changes intact.
It'd be one hell of a ride now.
BK: We then get to the cult favorite Bat Boy:
The Musical. Were you in it in Los Angeles or did you join the
company in New York? You worked with one of our favorite people,
Miss Kerry Butler who, by the way, was the very first haineshisway.com
Unseemly Interview victim. Tell us about Bat Boy.
DS: Ah, Kerry. I had to fight her off with a stick every
night, the little vixen! Hardly. She is quite possibly the nicest
actress on Broadway. I have NEVER heard her say a bad word about
anyone, and you know how caddy we actors can get.
BK: How did you like working with Mr. Scott Schwartz?
Hold nothing back. I sat in his house seats when I saw the show
- just an fyi.
DS: It was really awesome. I first met Scott socially the
summer of '99 right before the first NY Bat Boy workshop.
We never talked work, and I actually didn't know who his dad was
until right before I auditioned for him for the workshop. So I
sang one of his dad's songs. ("Proud Lady" from The Baker's
Wife - which, incidentally, I hear all Equity cards are now
being revoked from anyone who uses this song in an audition anymore.
Not because it's not good, but the opposite: it's OVERDONE.)
The workshop of Bat Boy was a sort of free-for-all. Nobody
really knew yet what the piece was supposed to be, really. It
was this great organic swirl of creativity that emanated from
everyone. And Scott is the perfect kind of director in that he
allowed that individuality to thrive while still maintaining a
hold on the reigns and a destination on the distant horizon. Much
of Bat Boy's structure and character layering came from
that first process. It was probably the most artistically rewarding
experience of my life.
Poor Scott had his work cut out for him then once it went into
full production. Most of us who had been there from the beginning
(wild man, here, being the chief offender) took a little getting
used to now being in a real work environment instead of "hey everybody!
We've got a tabloid, a theater space, a prop bong, and a little
bit of cash to toss around... let's do a play!"
You would have thought people were told to sacrifice their first-born
to Caesar when the cast was told "no more ad-libbing". But that
sort of control was welcome in Scott's hands. He has a wonderful
way of dealing with actors and coddling their spoiled egos, but
still getting his point across with everyone coming out feeling
great. If I could work with Scott Schwartz on every show I would.
BK: Bat Boy, like other shows, seems to have
been a victim of Sept. 11th. Do you think the show would have
run had that horrid event not happened, or do you think its demise
was inevitable given the off-Broadway climate these days?
DS: Having the inside scoop, I know that there was some
serious effort to move Bat Boy uptown. It almost happened.
I think it would have given Urinetown a good run for it's
money, and that my roommate, and best buddy, Deven May would have
a Tony Award sitting on top of the fireplace now.
The failure of any show, or success for that matter, is hinged
on a great many things. There are many great pieces of art that
never have a life, while there is some real crap that runs for
years and years. September 11th, had a great bearing on all theater
in the city. It was certainly the nail in the coffin for Bat
Boy right as the momentum was on an upswing. A Broadway show
has to bolt right out of the gate as soon as it opens. Off-Broadway
needs time to cultivate word of mouth and a following. 9/11 happened
right as all that was falling into place.
It's hard to feel sorry for losing your silly job playing make-believe
though, when somewhere right now over a year later, at this very
instant, you know that a little girl or boy is missing their daddy.
BK: All right, Doug Storm, we now must talk about your
current show, Dance of the Vampires. There is quite a bit of
controversy surrounding this production and we will not shy away
from asking strong probing questions which will also be probing
strong questions. I gather this production is quite different
to the one in Vienna and I understand Mr. Jim Steinman is not
so happy about it.
DS: Current show? Wow I did take a while to send these
questions back answered, didn't I? I can't comment on the Vienna/Stuttgart
productions, as I have only seen video of them. And it is no secret
that Jim was disappointed. We all were. Feel free to probe. Everyone
got probed in the worst way with this one.
BK: Whose idea was it for the change in tone? How was
the creative team to work with. I know John Rando was caring
for his mother who ultimately passed away during previews. Was
that whole thing difficult?
DS: When theater gets to the level of Broadway, the amount
of input from all directions is staggering. Remember there are
millions of dollars involved. It's all corporate.
I think Michael got a lot of bad press and was called a "temperamental
star" by some asshole newspaper writer at some point. That is
so not the case. Sure he had input. He's a big star. His name
is above the title. His name alone is a commodity. And he's worked
in this industry and paid his dues far before non-theater people
across America were listening to him do Phantom of the Opera.
He should have input in his projects.
And Rando's mother passing and the time of illness prior to the
passing were of course devastating. But as I said answering about
Bat Boy, a show's success or failure depends on many things.
The change in tone came from many places. Vampires needed
more time to settle and figure out what it was, really.
Picture Emeril, the Iron Chef, Martha Stewart, and Julia Childs
all trying to cook Thanksgiving dinner on an Easy-Bake Oven. So
many talents, so many ideas, so little time. Vamps should have
played out of town first to iron out the kinks. Same thing happened
with Pimpernel. Shows like Billy Joel's Movin' Out
get slaughtered out of town and then end up with lines around
the block once they get here.
On paper it was the perfect team. Huge star. Fresh Tony-winning
director. Legendary rock composer. All the elements were there.
But diving right into such an undertaking with no room for experimentation
was wrong. It was trying to put together a 1000 piece jigsaw
puzzle while using a Yatzee timer.
Big lessons are often expensive in all aspects of life, take my
ex-wife for example...
BK: Let's talk about the Internet for a moment.
I'm of the opinion that the Internet has become a very unhealthy
thing for musical theater. You've got all these know-it-alls
(most of them barely out of high school) offering their "reviews"
of shows and people are taking them seriously! I mean, it's madness
really. That, and people from the production sending people online
to say good things, and it's just out of control and ridiculous.
What do you think about all that, how does it affect company morale?
DS: Your website doesn't seem unhealthy for musical theater.
The people online who were gloating over the failure of Dance
of the Vampires, even before it opened, are pitiful
losers, and inconsiderate of the fact that there are people needing
that job to support their families. Nobody in any company I've
ever worked for cares what those people say.Why somebody would
think it's normal to be bitchy and bitter and overly critical
of shows and personal performances is beyond me. Anonymity online
should not negate kindness and acceptance. It's like a contest
to see who can have the wittiest slam. I see regular journalists
playing that one-up game too.
In an industry where alternative lifestyles prevail, you would
think that most people discussing theater wouId be more accepting
of shows outside their taste. I want every show to succeed. I
want every theater on Broadway to be full of shows, whether they
are my taste or not. I want there to be a job for every single
one of my friends. I've even got a few enemies I'd pay full price
to see perform.
But the internet as a whole is a cesspool of rumor and negativity,
so lets concentrate on the positive.
I was half-joking in my opening statement of the first question.
I was a crappy teenager. Always in trouble, couldn't find my way.
The kids at school that didn't like theater all called me a "fag"
and the kids who did like it really treated me like crap sometimes
because I worked professionally. (Although I was a little loudmouth.)
THEREFORE - if there had been the internet that we have today,
I think I would have found my direction much sooner in life. I
would have known there were other kids out there into the same
things I was into. Giving reviews online is great, to a point.
The sense of community can be fantastic.
But the mob mentality of a feeding frenzy can be crazy. I saw
people posting on Broadway.com with such venom and vengeance,
determined to do their part to drive a stake through the heart
of Dance of the Vampires. And as soon as one person said
a good thing opposite the group, they were labeled a shill, or
as being "sent from the company to say nice things". There are
jerks everywhere.
So if the internet gets the word out to middle America about theater,
and sells tickets for the tours, or even for the community production
of The Fantastics in my blessed Corntown, Illinois, GREAT.
Sixteen years ago I thought I was the only kid in the world obsessing
over Les Miz. How wonderful that these kids have a forum
now. And thank God for the fans. They helped Bat Boy, kept
Pimpernel and Jekyll & Hyde alive despite the
bitchy reviewers, and affect our industry enormously.
I've been name-dropping like a fiend through this interview but
I'll do it again with purpose.
I was lucky, in Las Vegas, to hang out with some of my other childhood
heroes: KISS.
Lead singer Paul Stanley came to see Notre Dame de Paris.
(Bat Boy's Kaitlyn Hopkins was a bridesmaid at his wedding.)
The next night we sat in his personal house seats for the very
last Vegas KISS concert with the original four members in full
classic KISS make-up. I lost it. My first rock & roll album
ever was KISS:DESTROYER. At seven-years-old I'd alternate between
that and John Williams' score for Star Wars. French horns and
electric guitars, what a marriage. Anyway, we talked at dinner,
after the concert, about how they really brought theatrics to
the stage (characters, the make-up, choreography). We talked about
Paul's experience playing "The Phantom" in Toronto, and many other
subjects.
The one thing he said that will stick with me forever is this:
"Without the fans, we wouldn't have our life. None of this would
have happened, no matter how good we were".
Now, I'm just some unknown actor trying to squeak it out, and
I've somehow gotten a little fan club online. I love it when
they're waiting outside the stage door. I love every single one
of them, and their opinions. The public has a voice.
Free speech used to come from the media. Now even that is a tool
for social manipulation, by political writers, columnists, savvy
advertisers, even theatrical reviewers, all with their own personal
agenda trying to herd the masses like sheep. The internet is the
great equalizer. Now that it is being incorporated into everyday
life more and more, Andy Warhol may have been right. We all may
very well have 15 minutes of fame after all. I just hope mine
isn't singing "Like a Virgin" with bad lighting in a hotel ballroom
during first-round audition cuts for season #16 of American Idol:The
Golden Years.
BK: You're working with Mr. Michael
Crawford. Mr. Crawford's fan club are legion, and they regularly
send people to websites to combat and castigate anybody who says
an unkind word. What do you think about that whole crazy fan thing.
How does Mr. Crawford deal with it - it must be crazy at the theater
on certain nights.
DS: WOW! I've never been in a show that needed police barricades.
REALLY needed them! The guy could have gotten crushed. A friend
of mine, Joanna, almost did one night. I had to pull her out of
the crush since security didn't believe she was there to say hi
to me. Another night I couldn't even get out of the stage door
area to go home. The fans wouldn't make any space for the cast
to exit because Michael was right there, less than 10 feet away!
I got really irritated when this woman who said "I just have
to get this autograph" actually moved more INTO my way instead
of letting us exit. I felt like such a pile of crap later for
being irritable and judgmental about her. The look in her eyes
at being so close to someone she idolized reminded me of how I
was whenever I thought of Les Miz as a kid. Hell, as I felt about
it as an adult! She would have died to have had dinner with Michael
Crawford like I got to have, treated as a peer, with Paul Stanley
and Terrence Mann.
Next time that happens I'll go back inside and sit for a few minutes
remembering that there are some things more important than my
selfish ass getting home after a show to watch Shipmates or play
Playstation. I hope she got her autograph. I wish I would have
gotten it for her.
BK:
Here is a guest question for Mr. Michael Crawford. Tell him it's
from me - Hello, Mr. Michael Crawford - how are you enjoying Dance
of the Vampires? Everyone at haineshisway.com sends their best
to you. I'll be seeing the show in a couple of weeks and am looking
forward to it.
DS: Michael says hi and wants to borrow 5 bucks.
BK: What's next for you Doug Storm?
DS: I'M GOIN' TO DISNEYLAND! (I hear they're hiring.)
BK: Here's a question we like to ask everyone:
If you could have any musical revived, what would it be and what
part would you want to play and why?
DS: I would like to play "Effie" in Dreamgirls.
When I saw Jennifer Holliday do that I was 10. Man, the audience
gave her a standing ovation when she STARTED the song! People
were on their feet in the isles, in tears, cheering, you name
it. I've never seen anyone affect an audience that way, and I
have been lucky to work with some huge stars. "Effie"
might be a stretch for me being skinny, white, and male, but I
love a good challenge. Non-traditional casting is so PC these
days, why not? EQUAL OPPORTUNITY!!! If not, I'd like to revisit
Oliver, or Sound of Music with all the kids played by adults like
in Blood Brothers. Now THAT'S cutting edge theater.
BK: What do you think of these big huge Euro
musicals? Do you think they are healthy for Broadway? Would you
like to see more traditional American book musicals done?
DS: Dude, I want to see it ALL done. Revive the classics.
Bring out the avant-garde. Bring on the Eurotrash! Anything that
gets asses in the seats and perpetuates our industry. We're seeing
society get more enthralled with it every day with shows like
"The It Factor" and "American Idol" showing
the audition process, and then even more with movies like Moulin
Rouge and Chicago hitting the screens. Wait until you see The
Pussycat Dolls! If you haven't heard of them you will. It's Cabaret
and Chicago in real life! Theater ain't nerdy any more, and it's
not all Julie Andrews spinning on a mountaintop, but man I love
it when it is.
I do think that redoing movie musicals with present day stars
is dumb though. Matthew Broderick is great in his element, and
we all worship at the alter of Ferris Bueller, but who could top
Robert Preston's "Harold Hill"? Hollywood needs to knock
it off. Unless of course they come banging down my door for work.
BK: What are your favorite classic musicals?
DS: Carousel, by far. I love a good story of a badass
with his heart in his hand. Then of course there's Sweeny Todd,
a badass with someone else's heart in his hand... I like that
too.
BK: Well,
Doug Storm, you have been delightful, and we offer you a toast
of the official haineshisway.com beverage, Diet Coke, and also
the official food of haineshisway.com, cheese slices and ham chunks,
and we also dance the official dance of haineshisway.com, the
Hora, in your honor. Any last words?
DS: YUM! Cheese slices and ham chunks with Diet Coke...
you add a little Bacardi and an ashtray to the menu and I'll join
the staff. I'll bring my Tivo stuffed with every South Park episode
to the office. And we can count how many times I used the word
"ass" in this interview while we watch! Thanks for paying
attention to me.
For
more information about Doug Storm, visit him online at www.dougstorm.com.
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