Broadway's Mean Girls The Musical | Talks at Google

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Edit: I mean 8 times a week, not 8 days

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/MistakesNeededMaking 📅︎︎ Oct 13 2019 🗫︎ replies
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[MUSIC PLAYING] [VIDEO PLAYBACK] [MUSIC - JEFF RICHMOND, "REVENGE PARTY"] - Wait, why don't I know you? - Regina George is not cool. She's a life ruiner. ALL: [SINGING "REVENGE PARTY"] - They want me to have lunch with them all week. ALL: [SINGING "REVENGE PARTY"] It's so fetch. [MUSIC - JEFF RICHMOND, "I SEE STARS"] ALL: [SINGING "I SEE STARS"] - Wow, are you trying to make the rest of us feel dumb? - I'm not trying to. It's just happening. ALL: [SINGING "I SEE STARS"] - You can't sit with us. - You are filled with lies. - Whatever, I'm getting cheese fries. [END PLAYBACK] JOEL NEWMAN: Can you all join me in welcoming the cast of "Mean Girls" on Broadway to the stage? [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE] [INAUDIBLE] KATE ROCKWELL: Hi, guys. RENEÉ RAPP: Hi. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Hello. KATE ROCKWELL: Yo. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Hey. Hi, everyone. JOEL NEWMAN: Welcome. Awesome. Hey, everybody. My name is Joel Newman. As I mentioned before, we're here with the cast of "Mean Girls" on Broadway. So before we get started, for those of you who haven't seen the film, let me give you a quick recap of the film and the play. So unless you have been living under a rock, you probably know that "Mean Girls, the Musical" is based off the 2004 cult classic by Tina Fey of the same name. "Mean Girls" tell the story of Cady Heron, a teenager who moves from the African savanna to the suburbs of Illinois, where she has to learn to navigate the new world of high school hierarchy. The play follows Cady's attempts to find her place in the popularity pecking order and her struggle with the Plastics-- a trio of lionized frenemies led by the charming, but ruthless, Regina George. But when Cady devises a plan to end Regina's reign, she learns the hard way that you can't cross a queen bee without getting stung. It's an awesome play for those of you who haven't seen it. KYLE SELIG: That was a really good synopsis. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, that is. KATE ROCKWELL: Did you write that? JOEL NEWMAN: Thank your PR people. They're right back there. KYLE SELIG: Google. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Nice. JOEL NEWMAN: So before we get started, I think it would be great if you wouldn't mind just introducing yourselves and saying what part you play. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Yes. Hi, I'm Erika Henningsen. I play Cady. RENEÉ RAPP: Hey, guys. My name is Reneé Rapp, and I play Regina. KRYSTINA ALABADO: I'm Krystina Alap-- oh, my god. I am Krystina Alabado, and I play Gretchen Wieners. KATE ROCKWELL: I'm Kate Rockwell. I play Karen Smith. KYLE SELIG: I'm Kyle Selig, and I play Aaron Samuels. GREY HENSON: I'm Grey Henson, and I play Damian Hubbard. JOEL NEWMAN: Awesome. So I thought maybe a good way to start would be to talk a little bit about the show's trajectory. So I know-- let's see-- Erika, Kate, Grey, and Kyle, you guys have all been with the musical for quite a while now, right? You've been here pre-Broadway for sure at least. So I was thinking maybe you could tell us a little bit about your journey with the show. How did you first get involved? And then I'd like to hear a little bit about how the show has changed over time because obviously, musicals in development take a long time, multiple years, so how has it evolved since it started to Broadway today? KATE ROCKWELL: Well, Grey and I have actually been with it since its literal very first out loud kind of anything. It's called a table read. And we kind of sit around in a circle, and we're handed a script, and we just literally read the words out loud for the first time. And we only did act one. GREY HENSON: It was like four years ago. KATE ROCKWELL: It was 2015. I was actually just looking at this the other day. It was like June 1st of 2015. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Wow. Whose house was it at? Was it at somebody's house? KATE ROCKWELL: No, it was at Casey's studio. It's like right around here. GREY HENSON: And they just called in favors basically. I knew Casey from "Book of Mormon." KATE ROCKWELL: And I knew Nell Benjamin, who was lyricist, and she called me. And then a bunch of people from "Kimmy Schmidt" were there reading because they were working on the TV show at the time. Some other people that Casey knew were there. So it was just a kind of a it had nothing really to do with the actual production of the piece as much as it was like, you understand this general kind of character. Can you just read it out loud? JOEL NEWMAN: And Casey Nicholaw is the director? KATE ROCKWELL: Yes, Casey Nicholaw is the director. And Tina Fey was there and so was Jeff Richmond, who wrote the music. So they kind of just listened to that out loud, but it's basically like a thank you so much for your time. Goodbye, we'll never see you again usually. GREY HENSON: Well, Casey literally said, he's like, when we actually do this on Broadway, we're going to hire real teenagers to play these roles. KATE ROCKWELL: None of you will be in it. GREY HENSON: Because, like, I mean, we were in our late 20s. Like, you know, Kate, you look great. KATE ROCKWELL: Yeah, sure, that's what I am-- my late 20s. GREY HENSON: So he was like, so you're not going-- he was basically like, you're just not going further. KATE ROCKWELL: Yeah, you will not get this job. GREY HENSON: It's Tina Fey humor. Like it's adult humor. I mean, it's for kids or whatever, but we grew up with the movie. I knew that high schoolers, apart from this 19-year-old girl in front of me, like you know I mean? Like couldn't really nail it the way that I think-- KATE ROCKWELL: And comedy is hard. Like comedy takes-- GREY HENSON: Maturity. KATE ROCKWELL: Yeah, and understanding of rhythm that comes from-- unless you're really lucky, that comes of age. So I think that's why we all got lucky enough to still be here. But we did that was a long time ago. And then we did-- there was one more reading-- a full reading called a 29-hour reading where basically it's a week of that same thing, but you add music in. And then we did what we call a lab or a workshop, which is four weeks of rehearsal where you basically put up a fake version of the show with fake set, and no costumes, and no any kind of technical element, but fully staged and choreographed. And that was in the spring of 2017. And then the fall of 2017, we-- and you were part of the lab. KYLE SELIG: Yes, that's right where I came-- third place. KATE ROCKWELL: That's where Kyle came in. And then for our out of town, which was in DC, fall of 2017, we acquired Erika. And then that got us basically into the holiday season of 2017. Then we started the Broadway process in the spring of 2018. And now, it's the fall of 2019. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: It's been a long time. JOEL NEWMAN: And how different is what you were doing let's say like in DC versus what's on Broadway today. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: So what we did in DC was called a pre-Broadway tryout, which was basically we mounted the show fully realized at the National Theater, but it wasn't in New York. So it didn't have the pressure of, like, New York critics coming down. Maybe some of them came, but it was listed as, like, this is the pre-Broadway tryout. It's still in development. It changed not just between DC and New York, but in DC we were there for a month performing it. It changed so much. We had-- I mean, we all had a ton of changes. Simply because I operate as the character who you see the story through-- I just watch everything or I'm partaking in everything-- there were, like, seven different versions of the opening number that we did night after night. And we'd try it on Tuesday, be in rehearsals on Wednesday with the new lyrics, put those lyrics in on Wednesday night, scrap those, show up on Thursday morning for rehearsal, new lyrics, put those in. There was a night where Grey sang a duet with me that never existed after that evening. So it was kind of insane. It was all over the place. And I think that happens when you have somebody like Tina, who works in television, so she can write like lightning fire. She's in the audience watching it one night. And if something doesn't land or something doesn't work, she has six other versions ready to go, just from writing on her notepad that evening. JOEL NEWMAN: And when would you guys get these revised scripts? ERIKA HENNINGSEN: The next morning to do that night usually-- usually. GREY HENSON: And we putting those changes for like 2,000 people for the first time that night. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: You just forget the audience is there at a certain point. You're like, you don't matter. I just have to say the right words tonight. GREY HENSON: So I open the show with a picture of George Michael that Damian holds and he sings with. And every day in previews, we would have new lyrics for the very beginning of the show. And so I'd write my lyrics on the back of George Michael because I was like, I do not know what I'm saying today. KRYSTINA ALABADO: That's why I always say if you ever see a Broadway show in previews, remember this conversation because you are seeing actors and dancers doing a dance number they have never done before until that afternoon. So it is an interesting process. KATE ROCKWELL: It was the script that was changing, but also the score was changing, the choreography was changing. I mean, the opening sequence is such a good example because there were nine different songs-- not just lyrics, but like melody lines and how things were cut together. And at one point, we had her parents, and then we cut her parents, and then there was a big fight sequence, and then we cut the fight sequence, and then we put her parents back, but they were singing something else. And I mean, just the whole number was new every single night. KYLE SELIG: And for reference, this is also all just Washington, DC, and then we did it again once we came to New York to do it on Broadway. Again, like changes that morning, we'd do it for a New York audience on Broadway for the first time. JOEL NEWMAN: How long would previews generally be on Broadway? KYLE SELIG: I think both times, we did six weeks. But also in DC, we opened the show, and then went back into previews for the last two weeks of our-- so it was always like this is not the version that we're going to land with. We still have more work to do-- different songs, like death by a million cuts, just a million tiny little changes. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: If you see the tour, the tour is also different from the Broadway version. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, that's true. JOEL NEWMAN: And the tour just opened. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: And the tour just opened. Yes, correct. JOEL NEWMAN: Wow. So looking at where you guys started, I guess, or even DC to Broadway, beyond songs changing here and there, were there big sort of thematic changes or was it really just, yeah, switch a number here and there, a joke didn't land, let's replace it? ERIKA HENNINGSEN: I would say, I think we all experienced a lot of changes. I felt a very large amount because if you are familiar with the movie, Cady has voiceovers. She has the ability-- you can see what she's going through from a close-up, from a voiceover, from a really close cut to just like this part of her face. You can't do that on a massive Broadway stage, especially in a massive Casey Nicholaw musical. So when we were in DC, the biggest thing we were dealing with was how do we make Cady an agent of her story and not a recipient, if that makes sense. It was like things were just kind of happening to her, and she wasn't really the engine behind any of it or we didn't know how she felt about it. So that was the biggest thing for me that changed. And I think it's still something that they kept retooling in the tour of how do we make this character that in the movie, we can empathize with her because we can zoom in so close to her, but how do we do that on a Broadway stage when she is surrounded by 25 dancers working their butts off, and a huge orchestra, and lights, and everything like that? So that was a big thing. And I think thematically, we can all probably talk about this-- about how it was updated in terms of, like, it went from it was a movie of the early 2000s, and now it's a movie of Gen Z for sure. KYLE SELIG: And speaking specifically of my role-- the love interest for this girl-- it became about how do we make it very 2019, where is this girl, like, doesn't necessarily need to fall in love at the-- how do we make the whole story not about that? And what it turned into was there was a version of the show where we didn't end up together. It happened for, like, one night or it happened in rehearsals right before we took the show to tech. And I remember specifically Tina coming up to me and being like, I don't know if we're going to stick with this because people are paying $200. They should probably kiss at the end, do you know what I mean? But it's just finding the balance of a thousand different issues like that that are very topical in 2019 and finding the right balance. JOEL NEWMAN: Sure. So Krystina and Reneé, these guys have been with the show for a long time. You guys are much more recent additions. Krystina, I think you were April? KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yes, I started in March of-- yeah, so I've been in the show for six months. I replaced the original Gretchen Wieners, so I'm Gretchen Wieners number two or number three-- 3.0 because Lacy is 1.0, I guess. JOEL NEWMAN: And Reneé, you joined very, very recently in September, is that right? RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Just a couple weeks ago. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah. I'm like, did I? I don't-- yes. JOEL NEWMAN: So what is it like jumping on? This is a moving train with a well-oiled machine, a lot of history. What has that been like for you guys? RENEÉ RAPP: For me, honestly, it was a really, really big change to what I was doing in life before. But also, like, I was last year, I guess-- right? I don't know. The clock is all wrong, you guys. But like last year, I was living in high school. So then to do a show which-- right. It is almost comedic. I'm like, yes. But to go into a show that takes place in high school now, I think there were a lot of really hard things to deal with because I do not have the experience and the expertise that these guys do honestly. But also the advantage and the thing that I've found most helpful is that they are all literal experts at what they're doing, so I'm learning from them literally every night. Sitting here listening to them talk right now, I'm like, yeah, guys. That's amazing. Keep going. Tell me more. GREY HENSON: But let's be clear. Reneé has taught us so much about being a Gen Z. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yes, I've learned so many words from her. GREY HENSON: Like how to zoom in on Instagram. KATE ROCKWELL: She speaks a different language. KRYSTINA ALABADO: She really does. KATE ROCKWELL: All the words are familiar, but they're in a totally different order than I know them to exist in. KRYSTINA ALABADO: We've learned a lot from you. KYLE SELIG: She came in the first week and was like, oh, that slaps. And Erika and I looked at each other, and were like, what does mean? ERIKA HENNINGSEN: To your credit though-- KYLE SELIG: Do you guys know what that means? ERIKA HENNINGSEN: --the best thing about having you is, like, you're true. You have the confidence of true Regina George, but none of the bite in your real life. And that's the thing where I just think if you haven't seen "Mean Girls" in a while or if you, like, haven't seen it at all, come see it and also because you'll get to see Reneé because she just started. And it's like it's insane. She's awesome. RENEÉ RAPP: Thanks. KRYSTINA ALABADO: But it's a really nice place too. You know, when you are placed in a Broadway show, it is a machine that you kind of like get on while it's still going. So it definitely takes a lot of focus for us and also trying to meld in, but also be our own authentic version of those characters within something that exists already. But this company specifically and the people that taught us our roles were so good at allowing us to find our own way into these characters. And then the company behind us-- all these people on stage and our entire cast and crew at the theater-- is so welcoming of new energy and new people, and so really it was, I mean, easy-- like just an easy transition for both of us as newer company members. JOEL NEWMAN: Was it intimidating because you were both stepping into some pretty big shoes? Ashley Park, Taylor Louderman-- those are big names. What was it like to come into those roles? KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yeah. You know, For me, I had known Ashley before-- Ashley Park, who I replaced. She and I were friends before, so I texted her. And she was so excited that I got it, so it was a very sweet transaction for us because we had known each other for many years. And so it was really cool to have that experience with her. And I've replaced once before in a Broadway show, and then I originated a Broadway show in 2016 or '15, so I knew what I was coming into. You know what I mean? So intimidating, of course, because we can never replace the people that we're replacing. And I think if you go into it thinking about it that way, it's better. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's just it's-- it's like being a different-- your own version of how you perceive their roles in the show. And, like, I mean, like I'm a fan of all of the people who are sitting right next to me. Like, I'm a fan first. Like, I still go to work and it's like I'm going to a club where the bouncer is like, you shouldn't be here, but I'm like trying really hard. And I'm like, no, I need to. And he's like, OK, fine, go ahead. KRYSTINA ALABADO: [INAUDIBLE] RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, right. But you know, like, I was a fan of all of these guys and Taylor too. So it was really intimidating in the sense that wow, these guys are all really, really good at what they do. And I have no clue what I'm doing, but we'll just like wing it. But they're so supportive that the intimidation kind of just fizzles out and it just becomes more of like a grateful feeling to be a part of the family. KATE ROCKWELL: I will say too that we're really lucky in this show because we don't want anyone to come in and do a carbon copy of what-- just like we are not expected to come in and be carbon copies of the film actors. Like no one ever asked me to be Amanda Seyfried and do things like Amanda Seyfried did. We sort of process the new people that come in and take over in our show the same way, which is we want you to do it your way. And that goes all the way up-- I mean, Tina, and Casey, and everybody on the creative side, but also us on stage. I want us to build our own friendship, and inside jokes, and comedy timing, and stuff because I don't want to be replicating what we did before. I want us to have our own version. And I want us to have our own version. And that's true across the board. Everybody is encouraged to do it their way because that's what makes a show come alive and that's what makes comedy funny is truth and honesty. And if you try to force a square peg into a round hole just for the sake of making it the same, which, look, there are plenty of machines out there that do that. Ours is not that way, and I think that's one of the reasons that it's just as joyful now as it was when we first opened with a totally different company of people. JOEL NEWMAN: It makes total sense. Well, I can testify that you were absolute-- you both were absolutely amazing. RENEÉ RAPP: Thank you. JOEL NEWMAN: But maybe a great way of showing it would be for you to have you sing your first number. KRYSTINA ALABADO: [SINGING] JOEL NEWMAN: The personality you bring into the role. KRYSTINA ALABADO: I stand you Reneé. RENEÉ RAPP: I stand you Krystina. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: I never got to watch you sing this. I'm so excited. RENEÉ RAPP: Oh, my gosh. It's uh-- it's wild. It's wild. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Get ready. RENEÉ RAPP: Let's see. Hey, guys. How's it going? [MUSIC - JEFF RICHMOND, "SOMEONE GETS HURT"] Got it. [SINGING "SOMEONE GETS HURT"] [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE] Thanks, guys. Thanks, guys. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: She's also like dancing in a full-on, like, bunny Halloween costume at the same time. It's insanity. RENEÉ RAPP: Giant heels. KATE ROCKWELL: Y'all, carried around by six very attractive men. It's a tough job. RENEÉ RAPP: Very attractive men, but let me tell you, that corset-- uh-uh. It's tight. It is tight. Yes. JOEL NEWMAN: So I can ask you-- I mean, that is one of there's what? Like 20 plus numbers in this show? KATE ROCKWELL: It's 265. JOEL NEWMAN: How on Earth-- RENEÉ RAPP: So many. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Really? KATE ROCKWELL: 265. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Oh, yeah. JOEL NEWMAN: How on Earth do you guys keep your voices in good enough shape to do this eight times a week? Are you on vocal rest any day you're not singing? Do you have to do special training specifically for this kind of singing? How does that work? RENEÉ RAPP: Well, I think just for me from going into the show, I have never done a show really before. I mean, like I did stuff in high school of course, but that's like a weekend run of, like, three shows. And I actually notice now because Regina doesn't have much of a vocal tract that is like hit it, hit it, hit it, keep going. Like, I have some good downtime during the show. I snack a lot [LAUGHS] and then the corset doesn't fit. But yeah, so I've found that actually being in the show every night, I feel like I'm in better vocal shape than I have ever been in my whole life. And I think it's just because, like, you know, you're using your full range every night. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: You build up your stamina. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, yeah, you build up stamina, just like, you know, you go to the gym and work out so you're going to be stronger. But I mean, there are some days when I'm like, uh-uh, not today, not today. But yeah, I feel like it keeps you in really good vocal shape for this track specifically. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Yeah, I mean, there are so many tricks and stuff that we all use between like steaming and tea and all that. And we could talk about that for hours. I feel like everybody's regimen is a little different. For me, the biggest thing was learning how to talk properly because it's high school, so we feel everything. And I'm like a very nervous character in the show who wears a backpack, so I spend the whole first act like this-- just like, oh, my god, there's so much happening. And I was noticing that there was so much tension all over my body, so I ended up doing a bunch of speech therapy as I opened the show on Broadway because the singing was not the hardest part. It was yelling over the music. It was, you know, we're yelling. I don't know if it's because it's high schoolers. You're just very much like, life is so dramatic right now. So you feel the need to push sometimes. But it was figuring out a way to keep the energy up, but to not bring it so much into my voice-- into my speaking voice-- because that's what was making me lose my voice. KATE ROCKWELL: I mean, we are ultimately vocal athletes. I'm not an athlete in anything else, but we train vocally the same way that a marathon runner trains for the marathon, or a sprinting runner trains for sprints, or people who jump hurdles, or whatever other people do. I don't know. We train for it. And we know our voices inside and out. And our bodies are our instruments, and so we are very, very aware of every minute change. I mean, just listening you talk about that is so funny because the notion that you were aware that there was tension coming from shrugging your shoulders is something that, like, vocalists just know. We understand. And we work our butts off to make sure we understand, so that we can show up eight times a week and do. And there are people who make the choice to go on vocal rest when they're outside of their work. Some jobs require it. I mean, I don't know any Elphaba that's ever, like, gone out partying after a show because it's just too much. But part of the job, in addition to singing every night, is coming out representing your show and marketing your show. And so, like, there isn't really an off time. You have to learn how to maintain your job at night and give the performance that is deserved and expected by the audience, and then also go out and do the rest of your life as well. Otherwise, there's no long-term plan if you hole yourself up in a room outside of doing the show. You have to learn how to have a sustainable lifestyle, not just your job, but also everything that comes with it. KYLE SELIG: And to speak to the other side of that, a lot of it I find is a mental game. It's about-- KRYSTINA ALABADO: Agreed. KYLE SELIG: --it's about if you go into the show thinking, oh, my god. There's eight this week and like, I'm already tired. And nuh-nuh-nuh-nuh-nuh. You're-- my shoulders are up. You know, that's part of it. So it's about finding this balance for yourself, which is healthy in multiple ways than one. JOEL NEWMAN: And how about is it the same for dancing because this show also has a ton of dancing in it? And I don't think I've ever seen musical leads dancing the entire show. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: OK, Grey, I did not know. I got to watch the show, like, six months ago. Just I was out one night back from vacation and I got in time to see it. And I watched from the spot booth. And I did not realize how much Grey Henson dances in our show. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Grey, it's amazing. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: It is insanity. Also he has a knee injury. Explain. GREY HENSON: Well, I have-- [LAUGHTER] Thanks, Erika. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: How, how? I don't understand how you're doing it. GREY HENSON: Well, I play the gay role in the show, so of course he dances the whole time. No, I did "Book of Mormon" before this. And I played Elder McKinley, the gay role in that shows, so LOL. Call me for all your gay needs. But I did-- I rented a-- KATE ROCKWELL: Well, that's on the internet now. KYLE SELIG: Now, you're going to get some calls. GREY HENSON: Call me for your gay needs. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Put that on your business card-- Grey Henson, call me for your gay needs. GREY HENSON: Yeah, oh, that's a good tagline. I did "Book of Mormon" and I did a tap dance. I played Elder McKinley. I sang "Turn It Off" in that show. And so I did that with Casey Nicholaw in the first national tour, and so he knew I could tap. And so "Stop," the tap number that we opened the second act with, was added into the Broadway show after DC because he knew I could do it, and so he just threw me that tap dance. And then it has kind of become a dance role. I started dancing when I was three years old, but no one expects me to dance because I'm like six foot three and built like a linebacker. So, like, I think that's why it's impressive and it's fun. And also I've made dances out of where there were no dances in the show. KATE ROCKWELL: Yes, chose this dance. GREY HENSON: But it's fun. I mean, the best part of the show for me is, like, leading a tap dance on Broadway as like a gay teen who's not a teenager anymore. RENEÉ RAPP: I will say, I when I saw the show before I went in, I saw it and I actually had my dad with me one night. And my dad is now Grey's literal biggest fan in the whole wide world because he originally didn't know that much about theater. So we go to see "Mean Girls." And of course, like, they are all so impressive. It's sickening. But Grey comes out in the middle of act two and my dad has been like deadpan silent this whole time. And Grey starts tapping, and my father just like lights up like a Christmas tree. He's like, yes. He's like, this guy can move. And he's like speaking audibly, which you're not supposed to do in a theater. And he's like goes off. GREY HENSON: Doesn't he coach football? Like that's his-- RENEÉ RAPP: Oh, my gosh, he's coached like basketball. Like he's, like, you know. GREY HENSON: What he told me after the show was like, I just want to put a football in your hand. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, yeah. It was so funny, but it's amazing. It is amazing what he does. Like amazing. GREY HENSON: I mean, we all do pretty cool stuff in this show, but yeah, I guess I'm the dancer of the show. That's so weird. KATE ROCKWELL: You're Grey the great dancer. KYLE SELIG: There's a lot of ensemble members that are really upset with this conversation. KATE ROCKWELL: There are 25 dancers also in the show that are here right now. GREY HENSON: But your question was how do you physically stay up whatever. Yeah, I do have a knee thing. I have like a back thing. But the dancers in the ensemble of the show dance the entire time. And so we have physical therapy every week at the theater. So we have a physical therapist that comes and you can sign up for slots. And you go in and just kind of work. You do tune-up stuff. And people take classes if that helps them. It's a lot of rest for me actually to get through eight shows a week because it's your job. You wake up every morning. You're like, can I sing? Can I dance? How's my body so I can do that thing later on tonight, you know? KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yeah, and it is like-- I dance a little in the show too. And I tried getting into a workout regiment that I could do. And I remember I was trying to do like squats or something. And I jump a lot in the section of the show that I dance. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: In heels. KRYSTINA ALABADO: And I regretted it immediately. So I'm still even six months in trying to figure out how to give my body what it needs, but also be able to do the show because I was so sore that I had a hard time jumping at full. I was like, oh, that was such a mistake. Never again, never again. So it is like a trial and error a little bit too. KATE ROCKWELL: And in this show especially, everybody's jobs are so different. Like, the things that I need to get through my show because of my physicality are the exact opposite of, like, what Grey needs for his physicality. There is no one thing in this particular show that's good for everyone because everyone is doing a completely different-- we all have our own tone. Like everybody has their own literally music tones, but also, like, character physicality and everything. So it's really varied. JOEL NEWMAN: So pivot a little bit from sort of some of the logistical stuff to I guess maybe some of the deeper elements of the show. I think everybody knows "Mean Girls" as a comedy. Obviously, Tina Fey's book, hilarious. But it actually does deal with some deeper topics around insecurity, bullying, finding your place. Which of those-- I guess how do those themes resonate with you? And Krystina, maybe I can go to you in terms of your character particularly, she's really sort of at Regina's beck and call, tons of security. How does that resonate with you or how do you find that character? KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yeah, you know, it was interesting auditioning for Gretchen because even in the film, she does want to be liked so much and accepted. And she wants Regina to want her, which I mean, I think we all have experienced that, whether it's auditioning for a show for us, or applying for a job, or wanting that from your partner or a friend. And so it was very easy to tap into the song that I sing in the show, "What's Wrong With Me," which is what I auditioned with, because it is just something that not only did I think about a lot in high school and I think we all probably did, but still do as an adult at all times, just checking in with like am I enough? Is this enough? Am I good enough? And so I think that that's-- a lot of young people reach out to me in particular, and I'm sure other people, but about feeling that way. I get a lot of letters and stuff on social media about, like, I don't feel adequate enough in school. This song, I connect with so much, like it's made me want to be stronger. It's made me want to love myself more. And I don't know that Gretchen gets there in the show, but I always believe that when the show's done, Gretchen gets there. She hears it for herself. But I do think that that really resonates to the young people that see our show, specifically that song, and Cady's journey too, and wanting to be enough and fit in. And she makes bad decisions, and then she figures it out, which is good too. JOEL NEWMAN: Would you mind giving everybody a little taste of it? KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yes. So I will sing my song, "What's Wrong With Me?" for you right now. GREY HENSON: This is one of the original ones from the very beginning too that's been with the project from the very beginning. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Also, Gretchen is Tina's favorite character. Just a tidbit. KYLE SELIG: Don't mess it up. KRYSTINA ALABADO: OK. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: You never do. KRYSTINA ALABADO: All right. [MUSIC - JEFF RICHMOND, "WHAT'S WRONG WITH ME?"] [SINGING "WHAT'S WRONG WITH ME?"] [APPLAUSE] JOEL NEWMAN: Beautiful. So that was a lovely, a little sad. KRYSTINA ALABADO: Yes. JOEL NEWMAN: So to lighten things up, I'm sure one of the things you guys get asked about all the time is obviously Tina Fey's association with this show. She's an amazing writer, but I know she's been heavily involved with the show, both in its development, but I understand still to this day. Do you guys have funny stories about working with her or what's working with her been like in general? KATE ROCKWELL: I think about a lot the day-- she was with us every single day, every moment of the entire development process. She is not the person who, like, put her name on this, and then ran away. She didn't even just write the script and run away. Like she was there all day, every day with us all the way through awards season, all the way through all of that work that we had to do with the show. And then she still comes and raises money for Broadway Cares, which is our big Broadway charity. Every time we do our-- what is it when you do it twice a year-- fundraiser, she's there auctioning off herself and her time. But when I think about what it's like to work for her, I think of two specific little stories. One was when we first got into the studio, and she would sit at the table in the front. We would start rehearsing scenes and the deep dark pit of fear that goes through you when you have to make Tina Fey's jokes for Tina Fey. And the moment that she cracked and laughed for the first time-- that we saw her laugh at our show for the first time. And it wasn't even like a joke line. It was something else that she saw. I don't eve remember who it was. I remember being like, oh, there's literally nothing better in the world than making Tina Fey laugh. Nothing can make you feel better. And then the second story is when we did our album release, the first time we listened to our cast album. And so Jeff Richmond is her husband. He wrote the music. And this is his first musical, as well as hers. And we all got to go to Atlantic Records, who produced our album. We went to one of their spaces and listened to it out loud. And there was like sandwiches, and you know, wine, and whatever. It's like 11:00 at night. And Tina got up and started doing the raps to the songs. Do you remember this? She got up with DeMarius who was one of our original ensemble guys. And they started, like, just performing the whole scene for everybody was like just up doing like a lip sync battle with DeMarius to our own cast album-- our musical theater cast album. And then at the very end of the show-- at the very end of that listening party, if you, like, sort of caught out of the corner of your eye, her and Jeff, like her just celebrating him and his work. She's the most loving and joyful human being. And she's so supportive and so encouraging of all of us, and of him, and of her own stuff. And it was just she's like the best boss you could ever ask for. It's really inspiring and it's kind of astonishing to work for someone as celebrated as she is and to feel like it's every single aspect of that is deserved and worth it, and maybe even more. KRYSTINA ALABADO: She was heavily involved in our casting process as well. So it's amazing. You know, sometimes, those creators will step away because they have a billion other things to do. And Tina Fey is the queen of doing a billion things. And she cast me and Reneé. And she was there. And I remember leaving the room. And same thing-- I was like, she laughed once. I'm good. I don't even care. I was like, I'm good. She's so giving of her time, which is incredible because we all say, we're so busy, we're so busy, we're so busy, but Tina Fey is never too busy to show up for us. It's really incredible. It is incredible. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah. GREY HENSON: Yeah-- oh, sorry. RENEÉ RAPP: No, no, go ahead, baby. GREY HENSON: Oh, I am a huge "30 Rock" fan, and so I knew every episode of that TV show. Like I could quote them all, seriously, before I met her. So I was freaking out. But she's nothing like Liz Lemon. And I think people sort of assume she will be because it seems so natural for her, but she's definitely quiet, and she kind of whispers, and you have to lean in. And it's like, is that funny? Like, what are you saying? Yeah, she is nothing like that character. I remember being so shocked, but she loves talking about "30 Rock." And so I would like bring it up. I'm like, oh, my god, that one episode that reminds me of this. And she'd be like, oh, that was a funny one. Ah, that was funny one, right? [LAUGHTER] She's obsessed with it. Yeah, there was something-- I was like sweating in rehearsal one day. And does anyone love "30 Rock"? Does anyone know that show? Yeah. There was a one moment in it where she's like looking in the mirror before she's going out and she's like sweating. And she's like, stop sweating, you stupid bitch. That's what she says to herself. And I was like, I'm like you in that episode. She's like, that was so funny. That was so funny. She loves it, you know? And she's so proud of it. And she loves theater. She's like a theater nerd. And for opening nights, she gave Barrett, who plays Janis, a picture of her in like "Caberet" from college or something. JOEL NEWMAN: I want to hear your story. I just want to make sure we have a chance to open up the mics if people in the audience have questions as well. So maybe file up to the mics while you tell us your Tina story. RENEÉ RAPP: Oh, no, I was just going to say, going along with what you guys were saying, the first time that I met and sat down with Tina and we were talking, I don't know. There were no expectations. I guess I should say, like in a very like-- OK, this is like Tina Fey. And I'm like sitting there. I'm like, yeah, what the hell am I doing here? You know what I mean? But when I talked to her, I had just moved to New York on my own. I think I was probably like just turned 19. And I was terrified to be quite honest. And I have never felt so comfortable, and so, like, metaphorically hugged by another human being in my entire life. And she just gave me validation that I was on my own path and I was doing the right thing without knowing me through Adam, except auditioning for her. And I was like, oh, cool. This lady is, like, amazing. She made me feel so good at a time where she probably didn't know that I needed it, but I needed it so badly. And she gave that to me, and it was a huge, huge part of my life. JOEL NEWMAN: Awesome. KYLE SELIG: Just a very, very simple story. It was my birthday on Saturday, and she sent me a plant. JOEL NEWMAN: Happy birthday. KYLE SELIG: Oh, yeah, I was fishing. Thank you, thank you. [LAUGHTER] And she sent me a plant. And she's like in the midst of mounting a whole another production of this show in Buffalo and she still sent me a plant, which is just-- KRYSTINA ALABADO: She sent me a plant too. KYLE SELIG: Oh, OK, so it's a thing she does. OK. KRYSTINA ALABADO: No, no, I meant it in a good way. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: She remembers for everybody's birthday. KRYSTINA ALABADO: It's so nice. KYLE SELIG: She remembers people's birthdays. Like, what boss does that specifically for every person? She's awesome. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: I think that-- and I want to talk to other actors that she's worked with. I will say there is something-- and Tina has been honest with us about this-- Tina grew up wanting to do musical theater. And it's so funny because I still find myself being like, oh, my god. OK, she's in the room. OK, be cool, be cool, be cool. Like I still feel nervous around her, even though we've spent every day with her for a very long time. But I realized the other day when we saw-- we got to watch the tour production. And we got to be sort of generation one saying goodbye to generation two of "Mean Girls." And she was also there. And it was this moment where I thought, oh, there is such a mutual gratitude and appreciation for what we each do. We admire her so much, but it is really special to feel that your boss and this person who is-- it's Tina frickin' Fey-- like, she's the one we bow down to-- but she feels very fortunate to have us tell her story every night. And that's like the privilege that you kind of forget. And it is a really awesome thing that she's made that relationship feel so strong. I just admire her so much for that. KYLE SELIG: I just want to add to that also. There's this section of her book "Bossypants" where she talks about what got her through working on "30 Rock." And it's about how she was responsible for a bunch of people's jobs. She was the boss of this show for everyone else. And I mean, you think of boss, and you think somebody who's in charge and potentially out for themselves, doing it for them. And with Tina, we get the sense on this show that she has made this show for a bunch of kids to be employed, which is an amazing quality in a boss and should be the only quality for a boss. JOEL NEWMAN: That's awesome. So I think we probably have time for one last question because I know we have one more musical number. But this show is obviously-- the movie and the show is a cult classic. And it is known for lots of famous one-liners. So I'm interested to know if each of you has a favorite one-liner and if there's a one-liner in the show that everybody in the audience is just waiting for-- like just erupts? And does it change from night to night because there was definitely one line not family appropriate, on Saturday, the audience just broke out. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Do we have to censor? Can we not say things? KATE ROCKWELL: Too late now. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah, I was doing well for a while, and then I just let in. I was like, OK, whatever. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Well, I mean, people start laughing before Grey stands up to say, she doesn't even go here, because they see him in the back in the blue hoodie in the glasses-- RENEÉ RAPP: Waiting for it. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: --and they're like, it's coming, it's coming. RENEÉ RAPP: Yes, literally. GREY HENSON: It's so funny because that is the easiest line I have to do. You do nothing and say, "she doesn't even go here," and it's like done. But Damian has a lot of them, actually. Like "You go, Glen Coco" is in the show. And "her hair is full of secrets" is in the show. And I don't know, what other-- and like the Regina, you know, like, "whatever, I'm getting cheese fries" and stuff. KYLE SELIG: And we have, "your hair looks sexy pushed back," which is actually more a plot point, so it actually doesn't get laughs like you'd think it would. It's like, oh, sexy pushed back, but it's actually like a really dark moment in the show a little bit. KATE ROCKWELL: It's very intense. They actually did-- what I sort of marvel at is that a lot of the one-liners that we have in our show that are from the movie that are famous are not joke lines. They're not laugh lines because it's actually not funny to say something that you already know the joke, you know the punchline of the joke. Like the audience is so far ahead. So like the one that we toyed with for months-- I mean, on and off, and on and off-- is "if you're from Africa, why are you white" because it's so famous and it's probably one of the most iconic Karen lines. But if I start to say, "if you're from Africa," the audience will go, "why are you white," because everyone knows it and it's not funny anymore. So we had to eventually draw a lot of the things that we chose to keep in kind of outside of "she doesn't even go here" are plot point lines that are famous. I mean, we still obviously we have, "that's so fetch," but it's just a part of the scene. It's just a moment in the scene. It's like we're not asking the audience to get up and scream. And they don't because the scene is happening. So a lot of them, they're there, and you get to enjoy them, and hear them. And Glen Coco is maybe the biggest one actually. Glen Coco gets a musical moment, so that's pretty celebrated. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: I feel like that's why. I mean, there are a bunch of movie musicals now. That just happens. And I feel like what Tina did and what our team did best is that they didn't just put the screenplay on a table and shove songs into it. She totally reworked the screenplay. And a lot of that were the jokes. And she found jokes that were if we didn't think they could be better, and they're better. RENEÉ RAPP: Yeah. JOEL NEWMAN: Awesome. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Though I do miss "shave your back" by Jason. KRYSTINA ALABADO: I know, I love that. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: I love that one. JOEL NEWMAN: Well, I could ask you guys questions all day, but we are running out of time. So maybe we have one more. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Oh, I got to sing one last song. RENEÉ RAPP: Work that thing for us, Erika. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Also I have to ask you, where did you get your shirt from? AUDIENCE: Uh, me? ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Dogecoin, I love it. [LAUGHTER] I looked at it as soon as I sat down. GREY HENSON: She loves dogs. KATE ROCKWELL: Erika likes dogs. KRYSTINA ALABADO: She loves dogs. ERIKA HENNINGSEN: This is the song that Cady sings at spring fling after she's won the crown. [MUSIC - JEFF RICHMOND, "I SEE STARS"] [SINGING "I SEE STARS"] ERIKA HENNINGSEN: Key change. [SINGING "I SEE STARS"] JOEL NEWMAN: Yeah! [CHEERING AND APPLAUSE]
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Channel: Talks at Google
Views: 185,603
Rating: 4.9758382 out of 5
Keywords: talks at google, ted talks, inspirational talks, educational talks, mean girls the musical, mean girls musical, mean girls on broadway, mean girls interview, mean girls musical live performance, mean girls live
Id: wNcPNi6boc8
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 51min 23sec (3083 seconds)
Published: Thu Oct 03 2019
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