“I sprang from the womb fully formed in a blonde wig and go-go boots,” says David Colbert, who brings his acclaimed interpretation of Hedwig and the Angry Inch for a second year as a benefit for Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS. This fully costumed and staged event will be presented at newly rennovated Player's Theater at 115 MacDougal Street in the heart of the West Village. Tickets to this eagerly anticipated one night only event can be purchased by going to the BC/EFA website www.broadwaycares.org
To be fair, the go-go boots quote was an off-hand response to a question about his childhood, and, much like East German émigré who becomes a rural Kansas housewife, Colbert knows about small-town life. “I grew up in a very small town in North Carolina. My father was a Marine and our town was close to a military base,” the performer says. “My mother was a music teacher and church organist.”
This musically straitlaced background led Colbert to Baltimore’s Peabody Conservatory of Music, which led to a spot in a professional opera chorus in Pisa, Italy. “I only studied classically because I wasn’t allowed anything else. It wasn’t until I left home that I really discovered the freedom of other styles.”
While in Italy, Colbert also performed in a punk band, excellent preparation for this breakthrough role.
Showcasing His Talent
Colbert has been playing Hedwig (off-and-on) for four years now in cities like Milwaukee, Wilmington, DE, and Philadelphia, where he was based for awhile.
“The first time I performed this role, I produced the show myself,” admits Colbert, then a struggling performer looking for a break. “I was living in Philadelphia and working as an opera-singing waiter and singing with Peter Nero and the Philadelphia Pops,” but sizable theatre roles proved hard to come by. “Every time I auditioned, I would get (repeated) call backs for the non-speaking, walk-on singing role, like “Teen Angel” in Grease.”
After hearing the Hedwig soundtrack at a party, “I fell in love with the score, and thought, I want to do this show…to show that I can do this show,” he says. “Before I performed the role for the first time, I hadn’t seen theplay or the movie, only heard the music.”
The Joys of Intimacy
Although he admits “Hedwig has pretty much been the main thing for me the past couple of years,” Colbert has found time to appear in regional productions of Hair and Cabaret.
In addition, he continues to pursue his love of performing solo. “Cabaret (the art form, not the musical) is just another way to perform for me. I like the lack of a fourth wall and the intimate audience,” says the singer, who’s performed New York and throughout the Northeast – at Don’t Tell Mama, Helen’s, Swing 46, and at Odette’s in New Hope, PA among other venues – as well as overseas.
Bringing a Universal Message Back to New York
The annual Broadway Cares Hedwig Hallowe'en benefit was the result of “a few phone calls and a lot of incredible people volunteering their time, space and equipment,” Colbert says. “Since I kept doing this production over and over, I thought it would be nice to do it once up here where I live.” Colbert's instincts paid off last when last year's benefit played to a completely sold out house
While touring with the show, Colbert says he’s been pleasantly surprised by the universal appeal of John Cameron Mitchell’s sometimes shocking musical.
“When we (performed in) Wilmington, we had several matinees in a very conservative town,” he remembers. “All of the sudden I was performing for middle-aged bankers and retirees. Many of them were immediately on the defensive when the show started, but almost every single one was waving there hands in the air by the end of the show. It was a terrific feeling to have little old ladies come up to me at the end of the show that recognize the story of love and self-acceptance. Under all the glitter, saran-wrap and tomatoes, the message is truly universal.”
Labels: AIDS, Benefit, Broadway, Fundraiser, Gay, Hedwig, HIV, Lesbian, LGBT, Musical, New York, NYC, Theater, Theatre, Transgender
Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids (BC/EFA) in association with GoFigure Productions present a one night only performance of John Cameron Mitchell and Stephen Trask's Off-Broadway Smash Hit HEDWIG and the ANGRY INCH on Monday October 30th at 8PM. This Halloween benefit for BC/EFA will once again feature David Colbert in the title role and Petra DeLuca in her gender-bending role as Hedwig's lover, Yitzhak. |
Back after last year's smash SOLD OUT success at the York Theater
Hedwig moves downtown for ONE NIGHT ONLY
to the newly renovated Player's Theater in the heart of the
Since the SOLD OUT benefit performance last year at the York Theater, Colbert and DeLuca have performed in Sarasota, FL, where David was named Best Actor in a musical by the Sarasota Herald Tribune, and in Lexington, KY, where the entire company was inducted by Governor Ernie Fletcher into the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels, the highest honor awarded in the state.
As Hedwig, David Colbert brought audiences to their feet with his impassioned portrayal of the German-born rocker who survived a botched sex-change operation to become an over-the-top rock diva in the spirit of Freddie Mercury with Farrah Fawcett tresses. Since 2002, between the two of them, Colbert and DeLuca have taken their portrayals to
Hedwig and the Angry Inch tells the story of an "internationally ignored" rock singer, Hedwig, and her search for love and stardom. Born a boy named Hansel whose life's dream is to find his other half, Hedwig reluctantly submits to a sex change operation in order to marry an American G.I. and get over the Berlin Wall to freedom. The operation is botched, leaving her with the aforementioned "angry inch." Finding herself high, dry and divorced in a
FOR TICKETS AND INFORMATION - visit – www.broadwaycares.org or call 212.840.0770 x268