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Press Index
Catching up with Laura Bell Bundy
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| Laura Bell Bundy on
stage Dec. 10 at the Lexington Opera House for a holiday concert with lifelong
friend Lyndy Franklin. Copyrighted photo by Angela Baldridge for the
Herald-Leader/Kentucky.com |
The last time we had a good chat with Laura Bell Bundy, it was the eve of the opening of
Legally Blonde -- the Musical, the Broadway hit that has made the Lexington-native a
certified stage star.
A lot has happened since that late April night: Bundy received a Tony Award nomination
for best actress in a musical, the show was filmed and aired nationwide by MTV, and Broadway
endured a 20-day shutdown with the stage hands strike. All that, and she also released her
solo debut as a country artist, Longing for a Place Already Gone, and played gigs
around New York to promote it.
So, we decided to take advantage of Bundy being in town for her holiday concert with
fellow Broadway performer, Lexington-native and lifelong friend Lyndy Franklin to chat with
her about how it?s been going and her future with and beyond Blonde.
Here?s an edited transcript of that conversation:
Copious Notes: Tell us about the strike.
Laura Bell Bundy: There were rumors like, ?OK, tonight, you might need
to take your stuff out of the theater,? months before we struck. Then, all of a sudden,
within 48 hours it was like, ?Take your stuff out of the theater, if you need anything. Make
sure you take it home tonight.? We weren?t able to get into the theater, even to get our
costumes for the Thanksgiving parade [Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade] because the Local One
stage crew opens the door to the theater.
But we were required by Equity (the stage actors union) to show up at what would be our
half hour (call) and stay until the time of the show in case there was a deal. We had to do
that for the first week. The second week, they started to say, ?Well, you don?t have to come
tonight because we know they?re not negotiating.? So then we started to come every couple of
shows.
CN: So, what was it like being closed during that period of time, during the
holiday season, when you?re one of the hottest tickets on Broadway?
LBB: It was really unfortunate, because I?m sure we would have had
incredible audiences during those weeks. Our show was pretty much sold out for that week and
it?s a big money-maker week that lasts them a long time. You have two major weeks a year:
Thanksgiving week and the week following Christmas.
But in a lot of ways, it was OK for me, because my family was up in New York, and I got
to spend a lot more time with them. CN: Was there anything else you had to do on Thanksgiving other than the Macy?s
Parade? LBB: Not on Thanksgiving itself. But I had to some stuff
that week, like special appearances. And I caught up with a lot of friends that aren?t in
theater. I can?t go out at night on Friday or Saturday, because that?s the hardest part of
the week for me -- I have five shows between Friday and Sunday. So I got to hang out with a
lot of friends that I don?t normally get to see.
CN: What is your future with the show?
LBB: Technically my contract ends Jan. 20, but we?re in talks to
renegotiate for a while. I?ll probably stay until the summer. I think we all want that.
There are other things I want to do, but I think we can work it out where I can do those
other things.
CN: What are some of the other things you?re looking at?
LBB: I pitched a show to Warner Bros., and they bought it. But because
of the writers strike in Los Angeles, that?s been put on hold. But I essentially have a
short-term deal with Warner Bros. as a creator, producer and an actor. So, I?ll have to
leave and do that, if a pilot?s made. And then, I have my music, and I?ll probably doing
some festivals in the summer, like I?ll probably be doing the South-by-Southwest Festival in
Austin, Texas. And I?m putting together a live show to take on the road, probably in the
summer of 2008.
CN: How has the CD been going?
LBB: It?s been good. It?s hard to do gigs in New York while Legally
Blonde is going without calling out a show of Legally Blonde. To sing
two-and-a-half hours eight shows a week and then do an hour-and-a-half gig is just brutal.
So, I cut back a little bit. But when I was doing them consistently, there was a strong
momentum going. A lot of stations around the country are playing my music -- indie-country
stations and Americana stations, and mainstream country as well. And I got some good
reviews. So what I?m noticing is momentum is picking up. I co-produced it and released it on
my own label so as to not have any creative control taken away. So, in doing that, you have
to have a slow distribution process getting it out there. But Legally Blonde has
helped a lot, and it?s been good.
CN: What was the MTV thing like?
LBB: Most people on Broadway never get the chance to have a
professionally recorded video of their show. We?re lucky if we have a bootleg we buy off
eBay a few years later. So, it was really amazing for all of us to have a copy of this show
. . . I can show my kids when I?m old. My cousins are getting to see it, my nieces and
nephews who can?t come to New York as often as they?d like.
It was a perfect match for MTV. It?s pop culture and it?s the right demographic for our
show and it?s their demographic. But also, MTV has gotten away with having a lot of
programming that doesn?t have music on it, and it?s supposed to be music television. This
was music television. This was a musical on their network, and it was perfect for them. It?s
perfect for us, too. There?s the thing of, ?Oh God. People will see it on TV and then they
won?t come and see the show.? But there have been a lot of people who have seen it on TV and
then come to see it live.
The fans are a bit crazier, since MTV. Particularly on the weekends, when the show
starts, they start screaming. I think it?s the MTV crowd, because they know the people on
stage.
CN: Do you think people in your generation and younger generations still have any
sort of mentality that, ?If I see it on TV, I don?t have to go?? With so many things these
days, even on Broadway, it seems having a movie or a TV show helps the live show sell more.
LBB: It depends on your own mentality. If you want to save a buck, you
see it on TV. If you?re into having the live experience of seeing the people that were on
your television screen live, to see if something goes wrong when it?s live, to sing the
songs when you?re in your seats, you?re going to want to see it live. It just depends on
what kind of person you are. Now, a 13- to 18-year-old person typically wants to see
something live. You don?t just buy the CD and say, ?I?m not going to see the concert because
I have the CD.? Most likely, you only want to see a concert if you already have the CD. And
I don?t know if that works the same way if you see something on television and want to see
it live. But there is a demographic that does that and then there?s also a mentality of
wanting to see it live. It?s the High School Musical crowd, it?s the, ?I?ve seen
the Disney movie, and now I?m going to see the live version and get the doll and everything
that goes with it.?
MTV was pretty open about the fact that they wanted this to be their High School
Musical. The only reason they didn?t put it out on DVD is they can?t. We didn?t give
them the rights, because if you have the DVD, are you really going to come see the show?
CN: Do you think there will be a DVD from the show, eventually, from this
version?
LBB: I think there will be, if the show closes in New York, they?ll
probably do the deal for the DVD, and that would be a good idea, because they?d make a
fortune.
Press Index Source: http://copiousnotes.typepad.com/weblog/2007/12/catching-up-wit.html |