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The Naked Critic

The Remarkable Loretta Swit is Coming to Houston!

By buzzbell
30 Jun 2009
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The Remarkable Loretta Swit is Coming to Houston in 42nd Street!

What's the first thing that comes to mind when you hear the name Loretta Swit?

Hot Lips.

To associate Loretta Swit with Hot Lips is to touch the tip of the iceberg of this prolific, passionate, and deeply spiritual award-winning actress.

Did you know...

...that Loretta Swit and Alan Alda were the only two actors to have made the M*A*S*H journey from pilot to final episode from 1972 to 1983?

...that before Loretta Swit achieved legendary status as Hot Lips on M*A*S*H and during its run, she became an accomplished stage actress, studying with the infamous acting teacher Gene Frankel?

In fact, she and fellow student and actor
F. Murray Abraham were guest lecturers at many of Frankel's classes, giving tips to aspiring young students about the acting profession.

Long before Swit became Hot Lips and won two Emmy awards for her brilliant portrayal of her character, Major Margaret Houlihan, she performed multiple roles on Gunsmoke,
Mission: Impossible, Hawaii Five-O, and Mannix.

Swit was the original Cagney in the TV movie pilot of Cagney and Lacey but was precluded by contractual obligations from continuing the role.
Sharon Gless replaced her when the show was picked up.

In 1967, Swit toured with the national company of Any Wednesday, starring Gardner McKay.

She was cast as one of the Pigeon sisters in a Los Angeles run of The Odd Couple, starring Don Rickles and Ernest Borgnine.

In 1975, she stepped into Ellen Burstyn's shoes on Broadway opposite Ted Bessell in Bernard Slade's Same Time, Next Year.

She succeeded Cleo Laine in The Mystery of Edwin Drood on Broadway.

She played Agnes Gooch in the Las Vegas version of Mame, starring Susan Hayward and, later, Celeste Holm.

Swit starred in The Vagina Monologues
Off-Broadway and has toured with the show.

She has played the lead in Mame.

She did the national tour in 1995 of Willy Russell's one-woman show, Shirley Valentine.

And her resume goes on and on and on...

Loretta Swit is one of our most prominent, versatile, and hardest working actors and, rightfully so, received her star along the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1989.

We have a chance to witness the amazing Loretta Swit in all of her glory right here in Houston, Texas, at Miller Outdoor Theatre, Thursday-Tuesday, July 9-14, at 8:15 p.m., in Theatre Under the Stars' free summer musical offering, the nostalgic and classic tap-dancing extravaganza, 42nd Street. 
Swit is portraying Dorothy Brock, a Prima Donna past her prime, who is rehearsing for another starring vehicle on Broadway.

On Monday, June 29, 2009, Loretta Swit and I begin a wonderful telephone conversation.
She is in a rehearsal studio in Manhattan. 
As she is handed the cell phone by the PSM of 42nd Street, she vocalizes with a few impressively solid notes.

Oh my gosh, you have a gorgeous voice!

(Laughing) What's the buzz, Buzz?!

(She assures me that I can call her Lorette.)

The principals start today!
The ensemble has been rehearsing for quite awhile now.

(She has never done the show before.)

It's great fun for me---a brand new role---I'm having alot of fun.

Tammy Grimes, Christine Ebersole, and Shirley Jones have all have done this role before.

Those are the only kind of roles to do, right?

(I related to her how I watched the last show of M*A*S*H with one of her co-stars Harry Morgan's son, Dan Morgan.)

(She sighs.)

(Dan died of AIDS in 1989.)

What is the best stage performance you have ever seen?

Can I narrow it down to musicals?

Sure.

Film. Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music without question.
The most exquisite voice---like a bell chime and she looked so fresh and beautiful.
It was so divine and inspiring.
It could not have been done better.

Onstage.
Angela Lansbury in Mame.

I was in rehearsal to play Agnes Gooch in Mame and our director, Gene Saks, gave us carte blanche to go and watch Mame with Angela which was on Broadway at the Wintergarden Theatre.

When you watch a performer carry a show like Mame and you see how she does it every single show with no lows---I mean---Tuesdays are a bummer. You're coming back from Sunday night and all day Monday and Tuesday.
Even audiences are reluctant to go to Tuesday performances because they know you are gearing up again.
She was there.
Full out there.
One of two fan letters I have ever written in my life I wrote to Angela Lansbury.

And I just saw her recently on Broadway at the Shubert Theatre in Blithe Spirit.
She can do anything. 
She is my inspriration.

What other shows have you seen in New York?

I caught my lovely friend, Debbie Reynolds, at the Carlisle. Her last show was Saturday.

What's the best stage performance you've ever given?

As you know, performers are the worst judge. We're not watching.
We are doing the work and, hopefully, having a ball on that stage.
I figure if I'm having alot of fun, then the audience must be as well!
There are roles that I love and when you love them that much then, probably, you are good.

I think a prerequisite to doing well in a role is that you must be in love with that character and that show.
And then you get fickle.
You go on to the next show and you fall in love with the next character.
My favorite character is always the one that I am playing at the time.
So I'm now in love with Dorothy Brock in 42nd Street.


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The Naked Critic: Houston's counter critic Buzz Bellmont joins us at TheatrePort
to bring us~ Nakedly honest critiques of the performing arts.
Visit him at the Chronicle User Blogs as well ~ http://bit.ly/bKmars

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