Just wondering what peoples opinions are for an actress to play the role of Hedwig on Broadway. Is that too much of gimmick casting. I'm guessing it would also be difficult transforming into Tommy at the end.
It would need to be actress of a certain caliber. Any suggestions?
I'd love a woman as Hedwig on Broadway. With the past 2 Hedwigs they changed their pattern of casting white men who are like at least 35 and up so I hope they will continue this trend. A woman could change things up even more.
Not sure I really have an actress in mind just yet though.
From what I remember, Sheedy couldn't handle the negative press she was given and had some sort of breakdown.
An actress would be great, but it would have to be the right one. Everyone keeps saying Gaga, but while I can imagine her killing the role, her fanbase would overwhelm.
""What? The original production? It won an Obie and The Outer Critics Circle Award and ran for 857 performances." No, obviously not the original production. Ally Sheedy's performance during the original run.
"
Well not obviously because before you updated your message it read like you were referring to the entire production.
She's too old for it (although Hedwig is ageless) but I think Ute Lemper would be a killer Hedwig.
"Impossible is just a big word thrown around by small men who find it easier to live in the world they've been given than to explore the power they have to change it. Impossible is not a fact. It's an opinion. Impossible is not a declaration. It's a dare. Impossible is potential. Impossible is temporary. Impossible is nothing.”
~ Muhammad Ali
I think Lena Hall would be a very popular choice for this... It would be interesting to see what she did with the role, plus her previous association with the revival could peak public interest.
Is there some sort of benefit to having a woman play Hedwig? I admit that I don't see any payoff here, only novelty.
Hedwig is a man with damaged genitalia who dresses in performative drag. He sings in a man's baritone range and exposes his (male) chest at the end. He isn't a woman, so where is the plus here?
A woman is (or not long ago was) under serious consideration for this role, or at least was wanted. But the one I knew of was not a pop star or a musical theatre star. A more "prestige" female actor.
"To quote Hedwig, right before Wig in a Box - "I am.....a woman""
And to quote Sally Durant Plummer, "In Buddy's eyes, I'm young, I'm beautiful."
To think that everything that emerges from a character's mouth is merely blatantly factual and true ignores the magic of the ambivalent (or the way characters either lie or can have blind spots about themselves).
"A woman is (or not long ago was) under serious consideration for this role, or at least was wanted. But the one I knew of was not a pop star or a musical theatre star. A more "prestige" female actor. "
The first person that came to mind when I read this was Tilda Swinton.