Zitat des Tages von Bebe Neuwirth:
Part of the success of the show is that the audience sees themselves in the characters, becomes the characters. The more they inhabit the characters, the more they see.
People are at their happiest if they are true to themselves. I think that applies to their chosen profession, friends and relationships. It goes for your health too. If you are true to yourself, it seems to me everything should work out pretty well.
Shakespeare feels very natural to me.
I don't see my dancing or acting as two separate things. I don't define them separately, so I can't say one has helped the other, It's all the same thing. More than anything I love being on stage and performing.
I am just a plain Jew; I mean have no training.
I was not influenced by concerts as a child, but I was very strongly influenced by the ballets I saw.
If I'm not in shape, it feels like something is wrong. If I haven't been able to get to class for a while or I've been sick, I don't feel complete. It doesn't feel like the electricity is making its connections.
I've never danced professionally as a ballet dancer, but all of my training is ballet, and I am a Fosse dancer.
In New York I was always offered the hot, sexy roles. But in L.A. I was offered the plain, dowdy roles. It says a lot about the difference between the coasts.
When I was born, they put casts on my legs 'cause I had some kind of dysplasia or something. My legs were all messed up.
Stage and film are just two wildly different animals. Why compare the two?
I missed New York. Every break I had from the series, I'd fly back to the East Coast just to get back onstage.
I've been on stage since I was 7. That's where I'd rather be than anywhere else. Just because you can do a bunch of things doesn't mean you are a bunch of things. I can act. I can sing. But I am a dancer.
You have to be aware. Like, I'm not going to do any downhill skiing. It looks like a whole lot of fun, but I'm not going to risk breaking a leg. I want to be dancing the way I'm dancing now for 30 more years.
One of the things that's great about doing a show over and over again... is that you have to find ways to make it spontaneous, as though everything is happening for the first time... to continue to mine the material and find new things.
I've been very fortunate in my collaborators throughout my career.
My audition song is, and has been since 1977, 'I Love a Piano.'
When you're a dancer who is injured, you are at the bottom of the food chain. We are so replaceable.
Creating a role is an interesting thing - each show or each situation is different.
Anything that I do, I try to make it as good as I possibly can.
On the rare occasions I go to the gym, I prefer silence.
The first Broadway show I saw was when I was 11. I saw 'Hair.'
Certainly the life of a dancer is very difficult. The training is very hard and relentlessly grueling.