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Press Index
Laura Bell Bundy: Making Her Place
Saturday, July 21, 2007; by Eugene Lovendusky
Laura Bell Bundy, the Tony and Drama Desk
nominated actress of Legally Blonde,
celebrates the release of her debut country
album entitled "Longing for a Place Already
Gone" with concerts at the legendary Birdland on
Mondays July 23 & 30 and August 20 at 7PM. BroadwayWorld.com's own Eugene
Lovendusky, based in San Francisco, had the
opportunity to chat with Bundy between shows
this Saturday, to discuss her original music,
her new record label (The Lab) and to recount
some of her Broadway experience
Eugene Lovendusky: Thanks
for taking a moment out of your busy Saturday
schedule to chat with BroadwayWorld.com and
congratulations on your debut album! You'll be
at Birdland Monday night celebrating your CD
release. What can the concert audiences expect
to hear?
Laura Bell Bundy: They can
expect to hear country music! [laughs] It's my
first time ever performing my music live, so
it's going to be a virginal experience for me as
well as for everybody there. It's going to be
really fun. There's tunes for fun and crazy and
rocky and it's probably not what Charlie Parker
intended for Birdland! [laughs] It's probably a
little crazier and wilder in terms of the
country edge. And there's some sort of really
sad, sweet ballads. I'm hoping that people will
be entertained and feel moved at some point and
think that they want to go hang out in the South
for a while. [southern accent] It's "southern"
without the prejudice, lemme tell you! I'm an
open-minded southern girl.
Eugene: [laughs] I know you
are! Your childhood music inspirations included
country singers like
Dolly Parton, Patsy Cline, Johnny Cash how
do you tribute these legends in "Longing For A
Place Already Gone"?
Laura Bell: Even in the
title itself; it's longing for music already
gone or longing for a place in my past already
gone or memories. The album is very much a
"throw-back," influenced by Loretta Lynn, Patsy
Cline, Elvis, Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard.
Every decade from the 1940s and up is somehow
represented on the album. "Just Me" is Merle
Haggard, deep south. "I'll Make The Money" is
essentially a really rockabilly tune, which is
very Elvis. All the songs are original tunes.
I wrote or co-wrote most of them. A few my
producer wrote; and the ones he wrote were from
almost 25 years ago! It was what was appealing
to me, the old stuff. "Dancing With Myself,"
which is the Billy Idol tune, is the only song I
covered on the album.
Eugene: I was just going to
ask about him (your co-producer), Larson Paine.
How did he come into the picture?
Laura Bell: I actually met
Larson on Larchmont in Los Angeles. He was
eating and he stopped me because I was massaging
my larynx. I was doing a show and trying to
loosen up my throat. He had sort of this
southern vibe about eating alone and talking to
people. And it was funny because I had just
having eaten with
Larry O'Keefe and
Nell Benjamin. I had just eaten Greek with
them and we were talking about
Legally Blonde but it wasn't official,
this was before I did the workshop. Then I walk
out onto the street and that's where I met
Larson. I ended up sitting down and talking
with him and he came to see the show I was
doing and he said: "Oh my god! I want to write
for you!" Then we started writing together and
we totally hit it off. We had the same sense I
said: "I don't want to do commercial country. I
don't want to do that pop country. I want to do
more of a throw-back because that's what I like
to write and that's what I feel connected to."
If it happens to get on the radio? Great. But
I'm not going play to making it a hit. If it
is, it is. I just want the songs to be appealing
and fun and heart-wrenching.
Eugene: That's so faithful.
Laura Bell: If I'm going do
this, I'm going to do it right and I want it to
be a representation of me. And the next album I
do is going to be different because I'm going to
change. I already did that thing where I had a
band and I had a great time with a band but
it was almost like pandering to get a record
label deal. This way, if I did the album
myself, and I produced it myself with my own
label, it was going to be done the way I wanted
to do it. If people like it or don't like it,
it doesn't matter; I got something that means
something to me. I feel like that's a way
people can change the way music is to be
guided by someone they believe in and trust.
Larson and I really believed in each other. It
was like brother/sister, father/daughter, we
were laughing and yelling, that's how it is when
you make an album! Essentially the trust was
there and I got something great.
Eugene: You say this music
means a lot to you... what side of Laura Bell is
revealed on the album?
Laura Bell: There's lots of
sides. The CD doesn't really create a mood. It
creates more of a journey. It starts out with a
simple bluegrass tune, sort of melancholy and
sad, like "Lovin' and Lyin'," then it's sexy and
there's some funny songs in there where I'm
talking, like "Designated Drunk." There's a
humor side, a sexy side, but there's also a
pretty sad side, the country side. It's the
backwards side of me!
Eugene: It sounds like it's
going to be quite a treat and congratulations on
putting it all together! Switching gears to your
Broadway career, I watched an old video of you
from the Broadway Beat archives, where you're
discussing your role in Ruthless! You
had such poise at a young age. Where did you
get that "show business etiquette"?
Laura Bell: Oh my god!
[laughs] I guess it's more from the people
around me. It's freaky to watch those videos
I recently saw somethingYou know, it was on
your website! And I was like: "I am a freaky 35
year-old woman stuck in a 10 year-old body!" It
was really, really trippy. One thing I can say
is that as I've gotten older, I've gotten
younger. I've grown up but I've kind of
immatured (but matured!) but I've allowed myself
to be a kid. When I was a kid, I was so much of
a professional and carried myself that way. It
was crazy.
Eugene: It was funny.
Laura Bell: It's hilarious!
[laughs]
Eugene: [laughs] Tell me
what its like to create an original role, like
Amber (Hairspray)
and Elle (Legally
Blonde)
Laura Bell: For me, it's the
best part. Being a creative person. It's so
much more rewarding when you find things on your
own, to live whatever the writers are writing or
to display what the director is looking for.
You are the thing that everybody uses to get the
story out. There's a responsibility to the
story, but there's also the sense of fun you
have. When everybody else leaves, you get to
continue to create. For me, there's no other
way! I really like creating from the ground up.
Eugene: On that subject, you
were the original understudy for the role of
Glinda in
Wicked. Would you ever like to ride the
bubble again?
Laura Bell: Sure! Sure! I
think I would rather want to create something
new, but I really did enjoy doing that show. It
was a really fun show to do.
Eugene: You kept some very
fine company in the 2007 Best Actress in a
Musical category. What zipped through your mind
when the Tony nominations were read?
Laura Bell: I literally was
like, Oh my god Oh my god "Oh my god, oh my
god you guys!" Really I swear I was shocked and
excited and that little 10 year-old in me went
crazy. I was jumping around my house screaming.
I was really surprised because it was such a big
year for women on Broadway and I thought for
sure: "Oh, maybe another time I'll get my
chance." But it's amazing the work that I did
was actually acknowledged in that way. I think,
ultimately you know in your heart how much work
you've done. You know what you're doing, if
you're being honest on stage or not. That's all
you being you. But when you acknowledges it
especially with a Tony Award nomination you
just can't help with the guilty pleasure!
Eugene: I hope you get the
pleasure again. Describe one of your most
unforgettable on-stage moments.
Laura Bell: When I lost my
shoe in San Francisco during "So Much Better!"
[laughs] I kicked my leg up and my shoe flew out
into the audience. And I was like: "Well, I got
one shoe on!" So I took off the other shoe, threw
it off-stage, and I finished the number in bare
feet. It was hair-raising, it was so much fun.
Oh! And when I lost my wig during "The Bend and
Snap." I had to put it back on: "So much for
being legally blonde, I'm legally bald!" Orfeh
was trying to help it was so funny
Leslie Kritzer looked at me like she had
seen the Ghost of Elle Woods. We couldn't
speak! Each time I had to bend and snap, I had
to hold my hair. I always tend to remember the
funny moments. When I lost my shoe (even though
it was funny) there was something motivating
about it, I just ended in this spastic emotional
way. I tend to remember the more extreme
moments.
Eugene: It's been a great
asset for your success today, but was there ever
a time you wished you weren't blonde? Were you
bullied or were you ever a victim of "blonde
abuse"?
Laura Bell: I don't think I
was bullied. If I was bullied, I fought back or
turned the other cheek. I have been put in a
box, I guess: "Oh you're blonde, you can't play
brunette." And I'm always like: "You know what?
I'm going to prove you wrong, I'm going to make
my hair brown." And there's been occasions
where I've gone brown and got parts! I'm not
above doing that! I hope after this, I can get a
role where it won't be: "Oh, you can't play any
role other than a blonde." I'm proud of being a
blonde. I'd be proud of being a brunette or a
red-head. I don't think it matters.
Eugene: How much longer are
you strutting your stuff at the Palace Theatre?
Laura Bell: I'm here through
February. [southern accent] I gotta file, thank
you.
Eugene: Well congratulations
on your album and your musical endeavors and
your concert coming up. Have yourself a great
summer! Photos:
"Longing for a Place Already Gone" (courtesy
LauraBellBundy.com); Laura Bell Bundy (2007) by
Walter McBride; Laura Bell Bundy as Elle Woods
in Legally Blonde (2007) by Joan Marcus; Laura
Bell Bundy at BroadwayWorld.com's On Ice Holiday
Concert (2006) by Walter McBride Press Index
Source:
http://www.broadwayworld.com/viewcolumn.cfm?colid=20148 |