Life in fast forward
Young Chang
Audra McDonald brands herself a “slightly hyper person,” which makes
it easier to understand why critics resort to hyphenated hyperbole to
describe the performer’s explosive style on stage.
McDonald erupts emotionally and vocally. In lead roles in everything
from “Carousel” to “Master Class” to “Ragtime,” each of which won her a
Tony, the Broadway performer has dug deep into her characters and stayed
that way sometimes for two years in a row.
“I did ‘Ragtime’ for two years,” said the 31-year-old, who became a
Broadway record breaker with three Tonys before the age of 30. “So there
are nights that it’s very difficult to get out there and try and rev it
up, but you have to remind yourself that it’s the audience’s first time.”
McDonald said her energy comes from her hyperness. Her empathy comes
from delving into her characters until she understands them.
“Learning about them night after night,” said the soprano, who will
perform June 29 at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Lauded in recent years for her portrayal of the title role in “Marie
Christine,” McDonald is also a prolific recording artist whose latest
album, “How Glory Goes,” made it onto the Billboard Top 200 chart. Her
solo recording from 1998, “Way Back to Paradise,” was also critically
acclaimed. Her new album, “Happy Songs,” is due out in August.
McDonald’s television-acting career includes parts in CBS’s “Having
Our Say: The Delaney Sisters’ First 100 Years,” “The Last Debate,”
several PBS productions and an upcoming NBC series called “Mr. Sterling.”
Her youth and versatility, not to mention her beauty, added Center
spokeswoman Angela Dickson, make her accomplishments even more stunning.
“She’s one of Broadway’s biggest stars, and we’re thrilled to have her
at the Center,” Dickson said.
McDonald started her musical career as a child -- she was 6 or 7 --
when doctors diagnosed her as very hyperactive and emotional.
“So instead of putting me on medication for it, the doctors suggested
they channel my energy,” she said. “That’s when [my parents] were like,
‘We know she’s musical.”’
She started voice, piano and dance lessons, performed in a theater
company in Fresno, where she grew up, and attended performing arts junior
high and high schools.
McDonald said the most important decision she ever made was to go to
the Juilliard School.
“I wanted more musical theater education,” the vocalist said. “I was
able to learn about the side of my voice that I didn’t know existed, the
operatic side.”
These days, McDonald has also gotten to know motherhood. With a
16-month old who’s already changed her life in “phenomenal” ways, the
performer says she’s experiencing a level of happiness she never knew
before.
“You also experience fatigue on a level you never knew,” the mother
said, laughing.
With three Tonys and an Emmy nomination -- for her performance in the
role of Susie Monihan in HBO’s “Wit” -- McDonald said her goals are the
same as they have always been.
“To cultivate and improve the gifts I’ve been given,” she said. “To
continue to move forward.”
FYI
WHAT: Audra McDonald performs
WHEN: 8 p.m. June 29
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $32-$62
CALL: (714) 740-7878
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