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Friday, January 11, 2008

Meeting "The Little Mermaid"


A recent story from the Associated Press introduces us to the star of the newest Disney show on Broadway, The Little Mermaid. That one has to be a major challenge to recreate, and should be a lot of fun (count me as one of those who loved the animated film).

Here's the story:
Broadway Debut for 'Little Mermaid' Star

By Mark Kennedy
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - Long before Sierra Boggess became a mermaid, she was a rather less adorable sea creature.

It was back when she was just a teen, performing dozens of short educational skits a day during a summer job in Denver. Where exactly was that gig? An aquarium.

"I was dressed as a shark," Boggess says, laughing at the memory. "Sometimes I was hammerhead. Sometimes I was a regular shark. I just wanted to sing and dance."

Boggess, 25, is getting plenty of opportunity to do that now as she completes her graduation from shark to the title role of Broadway's The Little Mermaid.

"This is what I've dreamed of my whole life," she says. "Not my wedding—I was never that girl. It was, 'What will my opening night on Broadway be like?'"

The role of Ariel is one of the best-loved in the Disney canon, a mermaid who falls deeply in love with a human prince and must choose between surf or turf.

Boggess, a huge fan of the 1989 film, says she shares many of her character's traits: independence, fun-loving and stubborn. It also doesn't hurt that she looks the part—a 5-foot-5 athletic beauty with wide-set eyes, a ready smile and a siren's voice.

"There is a lot of anxiety that comes with it, a lot of pressure, but you have to deal with it," she says. "Not only am I dealing with a cartoon, but I'm dealing with a mermaid—two things that aren't real."

Thomas Schumacher, the president of Disney Theatrical Group, isn't worried. "I think she's off to become a real star," he says.

During an interview in her dressing room before a recent preview, Boggess wore jeans and huge, fuzzy slippers as she sat cross-legged on a sofa. Though she's barely moved in, she has lovingly arrayed dozens of photos of her all-time inspiration: Barbra Streisand.

Boggess won the role following a five-hour audition in New York during a break from playing Christine in a souped-up version of The Phantom of the Opera in Las Vegas.

At the audition, she sang the hit "Part of Your World" and one of the new songs, "Beyond My Wildest Dreams." She danced, she performed with potential princes and sidekicks, and sang some more.

As the hours dragged on, Boggess began to notice a lot less wannabe Ariels hanging around. "I was like, 'That'll do,'" she recalls with a smile. "As soon as I was done, I met my sister and had a margarita."

The call from producers that led to her Broadway debut came three days later—while she was at the dentist's office. When she got to her house, it was Streisand she chose to celebrate with.

"When I got home, then I played this song from Yentl called 'This is One of Those Moments,'" she says, and softly sings part of the song's lyrics: "There are moments you wait for and dream of all your life/This is one of those moments."

"I just sat there and said 'Oh my God!' I play that song wherever something amazing happens. It calms me and it helps me live in the moment," she says.

"That's my major challenge with this: Everything is so amazing and there are so many fantastic things happening to me and things that I've just dreamed about my whole life. And I have to live in each moment because I don't want to forget it."

With the job in hand, Boggess wanted to get into character immediately. Director Francesca Zambello suggested she go to an aquarium, not an easy task in Las Vegas. But Boggess found one—in the middle of a casino, naturally.

She started going to the Mermaid Lounge at the Silverton hotel-casino, where customers sip cocktails beside a 117,000-gallon tank containing thousands of fish and tons of coral.

Boggess would show up when an on-staff marine biologist dove into the tank to feed the fish. "I watched her for a long time and took notes on what she was doing because I had to see a human underwater," she says. "She probably thought I was a like creepiest thing."

Another thing she did was learn how to glide. Actors in the show use shoes with embedded heels to simulate being under water, and Boggess used her skating background to practice in her garage.

The first time she put them on, though, she fell. "I always have to learn the hard way," she admits. "It's second nature now and it's weird not having them on actually."

Boggess is the middle child of three musical sisters—the youngest, 23-year-old Allegra is a pianist who won a Young Musicians Foundation competition in Denver, and the oldest, 27-year-old Summer, is a professional cellist and Sierra's roommate in New York.

Sierra recalls all three sisters belting out The Little Mermaid songs—and acting them out—during family vacations in their VW van. The fact that the stage show had its out-of-town tryout in her hometown of Denver was icing on the cake.

One funny twist in her road to fame involved Jodi Benson, the voice of the original Ariel in the Little Mermaid film. Boggess was a huge fan and remembers begging her mom to take her to a Benson concert long before she landed her latest role.

She and Benson also attended the same school—Millikin University in Decatur, Ill. Boggess, who graduated in 2004 with a degree in musical theater, got an e-mail from Benson the day before she started rehearsals in New York.

"It was so sweet. She was talking about how blessed she is to have Ariel in her life and she's so happy for me," says Boggess.

Boggess is a little stunned by the speed of her rise—stunned, but grateful. Before Las Vegas, she was on the national tour of Les Miserables and was part of last year's Lincoln Center's American Songbook Series performing songs by lyricist David Zippel.

Even the fallow periods in her career have been brief. When her show Princesses closed before its expected Broadway run, Boggess became a hostess at an Italian restaurant.

It lasted only a few weeks: "I got sent home a couple of times because my clothes weren't sophisticated enough," she says. And soon, she landed her Les Miserables role.

"It feels fast. All of a sudden, I'm like 'Here I am!' It's really amazing. It feels very right. It feels very much like this is how I should be making my Broadway debut."

On the Net:

http://www.sierraboggess.com

http://disney.go.com/theatre


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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