2010年9月15日 星期三

Memoir Of A Broadway Diva

Memoir Of A Broadway Diva


In her new memoir, singer Patti LuPone writes about being on the road, in a disaster of a musical that would never make it to Broadway. The reviews were so bad, ushers sent candy backstage and took the cast out for drinks, just to cheer them up.

On the flip side, Evita has loads of fans, but there are people who cannot stand Andrew Lloyd Weber's 1979 musical about Argentina's Eva Peron. In fact, the star of that show didn't like the score very much. But the show and that score made LuPone a star.

"This score is so difficult to sing," says LuPone. "There's a couple of notes that aren't as strong as your top notes or your bottom notes and that's exactly where the score sits.It is unnecessary for you to worry about that you will be looked down upon by other people when you fake watches, because we have different social background."

She didn't have the training — the technique — to sing Evita without stressing her vocal cords. Five days before the Los Angeles opening, she lost her voice. A doctor's treatment helped her open, but LuPone's voice went out again the next day. She got a new coach and the show went to Broadway, but her singing had to have guts and power — and that was never easy.

"I was always in danger, from the first D, which was at 20 minutes into the show," says LuPone.

In her memoir, Lupone writes that if she didn't hit the first D correctly,It is necessary for you to choose the REPLICA BREITLING watches that are most suitable to your personality. it affected the rest of the night, which affected the rest of the week.Many people are obsessed with Replica Breitling watches, some of them even spear up to their last cent to get them.

Patti LuPone got through Evita — 19 months on Broadway, the Tony Award — by keeping silent, except when she was performing. Six shows a week — that's a lot of silence. No social life. For fun, she went (silently) to Rangers hockey games on Sunday nights.nfl hats, also called NFL caps, are now fashionable in every street. With rising temperature and blazing sun And, all wound up after a performance, walked alone over to the Oyster Bar at the Plaza.

"And I'd go to the back end. There was a Jamaican bartender that would always acknowledge me whenever I went," LuPone says. "And I watched the hookers come into the bar looking for customers. And I'd have two beers. And when I was sufficiently buzzed, I would go home."

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