Wong
Goes Pop
Article by Leslie
(Hoban) Blake
BD Wong talks about his debut at Joe's Pub
June 1, 2000
A
dozen years ago when B.D. Wong won several of theaters most
prestigious awards (including the Drama Desk, Theatre
World, and Tony) for M. Butterfly, no one could have
predicted the twists and turns his remarkably sturdy career
would take. A vociferous advocate of non-traditional
casting during the Miss Saigon flap of 91, Wong is living
proof of n-tcs success.
The once fragile, cross-dressing star of David Henry Hwangs
Tony winner has been in some 20 films (hes currently
filming The Salton Sea, starring Val Kilmer), and will
perform the lead role in the new original cast recording of
Lovely Ladies, Kind Gentlemen, a 1970 (flop) musical
version of Teahouse of the August Moon. And let us not
forget his fourth season as Father Ray, the resilient
prison chaplain on Tom Fontanas starkly dramatic (and
recently re-renewed) HBO prison series OZ. Along the way,
hes also become a song and dance man both on and
Off-Broadway.
Even before last seasons Broadway audiences discovered his
musical prowess as Linus in Michael Mayers updated,
multicultural You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Wong wowed
audiences downtown at his theatrical home, The Drama Dept,
co-starring in a stylish revival of the 1933 political
musical As Thousands Cheer.
"I love musical theater," he enthuses, "and my experiences
with Charlie Brown and As Thousand Cheer were great for me,
because I got to do these things I hadn't done before."
Now, hes readying his Joe's Pub cabaret debut, which he'll
perform the first three Mondays in June. "The show isnt
what anyone might expect," he reveals. "Its called 'Pop',
and my postcard states that I'm not singing show tunes."
"I've just reached a point where I know this is the perfect
creative outlet for me," he continues. "I was looking for
something to do when the Pub opened. Ive seen a couple of
things there and I love the space and the kind of people
who are working there. It's something I've never done
before, and I'm really dying to do it. I'm starting from
the ground up with an incredible music director named Dan
Lipton, and we've been working on the Pub show on-and-off
for a few months, often via email."
The actor explains, "We met working on a play that I'm
hoping The Drama Dept will produce for me in the near
future, a one person musical. Musicals are really in my
heart, but I'm primarily not a singer. I'm about
interpretation and more and more I enjoy singing as an
outlet for acting. What Im most interested in right now is
the kind of pop music that has theatricality poetry and
drama songs that lend themselves to storytelling and
character."
"All the songs weve chosen are by singer-songwriters from
the last three decades, who originally recorded them as
well. Some are very old, some very new, ranging from
vintage Paul Simon to Macy Grey and the Ben Folds Five.
(Dan and I really love this group!). I want to explore this
music from an actors standpoint in the context of the
ever-changing relationship between musical theater and pop
music."
"I didnt want to just do 'An Evening with ...', I'm not
interested in sharing myself by telling stories about my
childhood or talking about the shows Ive done although I
might if it relates to the character in the song." Wong
explains, "At this stage of my own creativity, I still want
to be the messenger, channeling someone elses work. So for
me its about choosing great material and playing different
characters. I'm not a pop singer. I'm not going to wail on
that little stage or offer yet another cover. I want to get
to the point or the root of the song. Dan and I have even
said, okay, this song isn't from a show, but what if it
were the 11 oclock [or breakout] number? And thats how I'll
perform it."
So does Wong see this eclecticism as a real trend among
younger performers hitting the cabaret scene? Or is it just
coincidence that at Joes Pub this May and June, three young
musical theater lights (Melissa Errico, David Campbell, and
now B.D. Wong) have all eschewed the great American
songbook in favor of the pop/rock scene? Errico performed
an all-Randy Newman evening, and Campbell chose fellow
Saturday Night actor Michael Pembertons music. Wong
comments, "To its credit, Joe's has become this place where
anything can happen and that's exactly what it should be.
No ones making us do this [cabaret], and yet were all doing
it with a very Public-Theater sensibility that I think Joe
[Papp] himself would really have loved. Maybe knowing that,
on some level, has encouraged all of us as artists to do
what we really want to do."