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Early life and training
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Theatre work
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In 1976, producer David Merrick hired LuPone as a replacement to play Genevieve, the title role of the troubled pre-Broadway production of The Baker's Wife. The production toured at length but Merrick deemed it unworthy of Broadway and it closed out of town.[8]
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In 1979 LuPone starred in the original Broadway production of Evita, the musical based on the life of Eva Peron, composed by Andrew Lloyd-Webber and Tim Rice, and directed by Harold Prince.[13] Although LuPone was hailed by critics, she has since said that her time in Evita was not an enjoyable one. In a 2007 interview, she stated " 'Evita' was the worst experience of my life," she said. "I was screaming my way through a part that could only have been written by a man who hates women. And I had no support from the producers, who wanted a star performance onstage but treated me as an unknown backstage. It was like Beirut, and I fought like a banshee."[14] Despite the trouble, LuPone won her first Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.[15] LuPone and her co-star, Mandy Patinkin, remained close friends both on and off the stage.
In May 1983, founding alumni of The Acting Company reunited for an off-Broadway revival of Marc Blitzstein’s landmark labor musical The Cradle Will Rock at the American Place Theatre. It was narrated by John Houseman, with LuPone in the roles of Moll and Sister Mister.[16] The production premiered at The Acting Company's summer residence at Chautauqua Institution, toured the United States, including an engagement at the Highland Park, Illinois' Ravinia Festival in 1984, and played London's West End. When the run ended, LuPone remained in London to create the role of Fantine in Cameron Mackintosh’s original London production of Les Misérables, in 1985, which premiered at the Barbican Theatre, home of the Royal Shakespeare Company.[17] LuPone had previously worked for Mackintosh in a short-lived Broadway revival of Oliver! in 1984, playing Nancy opposite Ron Moody as Fagin.[18] For her work in both The Cradle Will Rock and Les Misérables, LuPone received the 1985 Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical.[19][20]
She returned to Broadway in 1987 to star as nightclub singer Reno Sweeney in the Lincoln Center Theater revival of Cole Porter’s Anything Goes. She starred opposite Howard McGillin, and they both received Tony Award nominations for their performances.[21][22] The Lincoln Center cast reassembled for a one-night-only concert performance of Anything Goes in New York in 2002, where LuPone met her future Gypsy co-star, Boyd Gaines.[23]
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In November 1995 LuPone starred in her one-woman show, Patti LuPone on Broadway, at the Walter Kerr Theatre.[26] For her work, she received an Outer Critics Circle Award. The following year, she was selected by producer Robert Whitehead to succeed his wife, Zoe Caldwell in the Broadway production of Terrence McNally’s play Master Class, based on the master classes given by operatic diva Maria Callas at Juilliard, New York.[24] LuPone received positive reviews in New York, with Vincent Canby writing : "Ms. LuPone really is vulnerable here in a way that wasn't anticipated: she's in the process of creating a role for which she isn't ideally suited, but she's working like a trouper to get it right."[27] and took the play to the West End. In November 2001, she starred in a Broadway revival of Noises Off, with Peter Gallagher and Faith Prince.[28]
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Since 2001, LuPone has been a regular performer at the Chicago Ravinia Festival. She starred in a six-year-long series of concert presentations of Stephen Sondheim musicals, which began in honor of his seventieth birthday. Her roles here have included Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd, Fosca in Passion, Cora Hoover Hooper in Anyone Can Whistle, Rose in Gypsy and two different roles in Sunday in the Park with George.[29]
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In August 2010, LuPone appeared in a three-day run of Irving Berlin’s Annie Get Your Gun, in which she played the title role opposite Patrick Cassidy, at the Ravinia Festival, directed by Lonny Price.[36]
Most recently, LuPone created the role of Lucia in the original Broadway production of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, which opened at the Belasco Theatre on November 4, 2010, and closed on January 2, 2011, after 23 previews and 69 regular performances. LuPone was nominated for a Drama Desk Award and an Outer Critics Circle Award for her performance in Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.
LuPone will make her New York City Ballet debut in May 2011 in a production of The Seven Deadly Sins, directed and choreographed by Lynne Taylor-Corbett. LuPone will sing the role of Anna in the Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht score.[37]
LuPone recently concluded a four-night performance engagement as Joanne in the New York Philharmonic concert version of Stephen Sondheim's Company, in which she starred opposite Neil Patrick Harris with whom she appeared in the 2000 and 2001 concert productions of Sweeney Todd.
Solo concerts and tours
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She also appears at venues across North America in concerts with Mandy Patinkin, such as at the Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in September 2010.[40][41]
Film and television work
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She played Lady Bird Johnson in the TV movie, LBJ: The Early Years (1987).[43][44]
LuPone played Libby Thatcher on the television drama Life Goes On, which ran on ABC from 1989 to 1993.[45][46][47]
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LuPone’s TV work also includes a recurring spot on the last season of HBO’s series Oz (2003).[51] She appeared as herself on a February 2005 episode of Will & Grace.[52] She also appeared on the series Ugly Betty in March 2007 as the mother of Marc St. James (played by Michael Urie).[53] Lupone guest-starred as Frank Rossitano's mother on an episode of 30 Rock which aired on March 6, 2009,[54][55] and again on May 6, 2010. She will also later make an apparence as herself in Glee.
Stance on distractions from audience members
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A related incident occurred at the second to last performance of Gypsy on January 10, 2009. Agitated at a man taking pictures with the use of flash, she stopped in the middle of "Rose's Turn" and loudly demanded that he be removed from the theatre. "You heard the announcement in the beginning, you heard the announcement at intermission! Who do you think you are?" she yelled at him. After he was removed, LuPone restarted her number. The audience applauded her stance.[57][58] The event was recorded by another audience member, who released it on YouTube.[59] She later claimed that such distractions drive "people in the audience nuts. They can’t concentrate on the stage if, in their peripheral vision, they’re seeing texting, they’re seeing cameras, they’re listening to phone calls. How can we do our job if the audience is distracted?", and also mentioned that "the interesting thing is I’m not the first one that’s done it".[60]
Memoir
Ms. LuPone wrote a memoir, recounting her life and career from childhood to the present, which was released in September 2010. It was simply titled Patti LuPone: A Memoir, which was, according to LuPone, the winner of the competition she held to name the book.[61][62]Personal life
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Awards and nominations
- 1976 Tony Award nomination, Best Featured Actress in a Musical - The Robber Bridegroom
- 1976 Drama Desk Award nomination, Outstanding Actress in a Musical - The Robber Bridegroom
- 1980 Tony Award, Best Actress in a Musical - Evita
- 1980 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actress in a Musical - Evita
- 1985 Laurence Olivier Award, Best Actress in a Musical - Les Misérables and The Cradle Will Rock
- 1988 Tony Award nomination, Best Actress in a Musical - Anything Goes
- 1988 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actress in a Musical - Anything Goes
- 1993 Laurence Olivier Award nomination, Best Actress in a Musical - Sunset Boulevard
- 2006 Tony Award nomination, Best Actress in a Musical - Sweeney Todd
- 2006 Drama Desk Award nomination, Outstanding Actress in a Musical - Sweeney Todd
- 2008 Tony Award, Best Actress in a Musical - Gypsy
- 2008 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actress in a Musical - Gypsy
- 2011 Drama Desk Award nomination, Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical - Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (pending)
Recordings
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Selected recordings include:
- The Baker’s Wife (Original cast recording)
- Evita (Original Broadway cast recording)
- The Cradle Will Rock (The Acting Company recording)
- Les Misérables (Original London Cast recording)
- Anything Goes (New Broadway Cast Recording)
- Heat Wave (John Mauceri conducting the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra)
- Patti LuPone Live (Solo Album)
- Sunset Boulevard (World Premiere/Original London Cast Recording)
- Matters of the Heart (Solo Album)
- Sweeney Todd (New York Philharmonic recording)
- Sweeney Todd (2005 Broadway Cast recording)
- The Lady with the Torch (Solo Album)
- The Lady With the Torch...Still Burning (Solo Album)
- To Hell and Back (Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra World Premier recording)
- Gypsy (2008 Broadway Revival Cast Recording)
- Patti LuPone At Les Mouches (Live Solo Recording of 1980 club act)[67]
- Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
She was the recipient of two Grammy Awards in 2009 in the categories of Best Opera Recording and Best Classical Album for Kurt Weill: Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.[69]