Jennifer K Mahal “After all those years...
Jennifer K Mahal
“After all those years being stuck on the page, did you ever
imagine you’d see me onstage?”
-- The Cat in the Hat
It isn’t easy being The Cat in the Hat. When Cathy Rigby took the
job portraying the red-and-white-hatted puss, she had 10 days to
learn the words, songs and blocking to open in “Seussical the
Musical” on Broadway.
“It was the most difficult thing I’ve ever done in my life,” said
the two-time Olympic gymnast. “I had a tape recorder in my ear every
night.”
“Seussical,” with Rigby in the lead, appears at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center through Jan. 4. The musical, created by Lynn
Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty (the duo behind “Ragtime”) and available
on Decca Records, is based on the whimsical world of Dr. Seuss.
The Cat in the Hat narrates the tale, which follows the adventures
of Horton, JoJo, the Whos and Gertrude McFuzz. Bits and pieces of the
tale are taken from some of the 48 children’s books that Theodor
Seuss Geisel wrote and illustrated, including “The Butter Battle
Book,” “And to Think that I Saw It on Mulberry Street” and “Green
Eggs and Ham.”
“When I played Peter Pan, I remember James Barrie writing that you
have to play this in earnest,” Rigby, a mother of four, said. “It was
more of my adult side that found the Cat in the Hat, that experience
that no matter how prepared you think you are, there are always
obstacles thrown in the way.”
Rigby, an Orange County native, said she enjoyed reading “Hop on
Pop” to her children.
Eric Leviton, who plays Horton the Elephant, said his favorite
Seuss tale is “The Grinch that Stole Christmas.”
Leviton, an Irvine native, said the best moment for him is seeing
the audience’s reaction to their favorite characters coming to life.
“In Chicago, one woman came up to me and said, ‘I just need to hug
you, it’s so wonderful,’” said Leviton, who attended Orange Coast
College before graduating from UCLA and starting a career in theater.
“Then there are the kids seeing it for the first time. ... It’s
exciting being part of the beginning of theater for young kids.”
Many of Seuss’ books are cautionary tales. “The Grinch” talks
about the over-commercialization of Christmas, “The Butter Battle
Book” deals with war, “Horton Hears a Who” talks about belief in
yourself and the meaning of friendship. Some of those messages have
found their way into “Seussical.”
“Life can always take interesting turns and challenges,” said
Rigby, who celebrated her 21st wedding anniversary to husband Tom
McCoy on Sept. 11. “You have to know you will get through it. That
you do have the strength and that old thing of really having to
believe in yourself is the thing that will get you through life.
“Every time JoJo and Horton and Gertrude think they have solved
the problem by artificial means, the Cat goes, ‘Oh how happy, how
sweet,” Rigby said. “But this tale is not over.’”
And it won’t be over until Jan. 4, after which “Seussical” moves
on.
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