The meaningful medium
Elia Powers
Few mediums can match the ubiquity of television, but performer Bebe
Neuwirth prefers the quaintness of the theater.
“I’m a dancer,” said Neuwirth, 46. “That’s what I love more than
anything else. I’d rather be on stage than be anywhere else. It’s the
visceral experience of performing that draws me back.”
Still, it’s inevitable that many who attend Neuwirth’s concert
tonight at Orange County Performing Arts Center’s Segerstrom Hall
will recognize her from her recurring role on “Cheers.”
Neuwirth won two Emmy Awards in the early 1990s as psychologist
Dr. Lilith Sternin-Crane. She made appearances on “Frasier,” a
“Cheers” spinoff, and is now acting in NBC’s “Law & Order: Trial By
Jury.”
But Neuwirth makes this clear to anyone who asks: Her television
career has always been secondary to her work on stage.
“People tend to know performers from television,” said Jerry
Mandel, president of the Orange County Performing Arts Center. “But
she’s really made a name for herself as a singer and dancer.”
Neuwirth will help bring Broadway to Orange County with a
“Spotlight Series” performance at the center. She said her set is
split evenly with music written by legendary German composer Kurt
Weill, (“The Threepenny Opera”) as well as John Kander and Fred Ebb
(“Cabaret,” “Chicago”).
She said she has performed this show three times before but has
never stepped on stage in Orange County.
Neuwirth grew up nearly 3,000 miles away in Princeton, N.J. She
began her performing career as a ballet dancer at age 5.
After spending one year in college, Neuwirth made her Broadway
debut in “A Chorus Line,” where she was an understudy.
She won her first of two Tony Awards in 1986 for a revival of
“Sweet Charity.” Her other came for her role as Velma Kelly in
“Chicago.”
Neuwirth incorporates dancing into her one-woman routine and said
she is selective about the songs she performs.
“It’s hard to make something ring true, and it’s hard to make the
choreography look good if it’s not meaningful to you,” she said.
Throughout her career, Neuwirth has found numerous Broadway
scripts that pass her test. Among her most notable shows are “Fosse,”
“Damn Yankees” and “Dancin’.”
When Mandel visited New York City a few months ago, he saw
Neuwirth perform her latest show, “Here Lies Jenny,” in a converted
zipper factory. The off-Broadway performance was also built around
the music of Weill.
Mandel said he was captivated by Neuwirth’s performance and wanted
to see her on stage in Orange County.
“Broadway is the most important type of show we do, and Bebe is
one of Broadway’s brightest starts,” Mandel said. “This is a chance
for her to do her favorite pieces, and that’s a rare opportunity.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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