Arab Times

‘Motherhood fuels new Broadway role’

Latifah wins awards

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NEW YORK, Oct 25, (Agencies): She may hit a Broadway stage, as she always does, focused and ready eight times a week, but there’s a tiny part of Stephanie J. Block’s heart that’s missing these days.

That would be the longing to be with her daughter, Vivian, safe in her New Jersey home. Vivian is 18 months old, and mom leaving for work may be harder on Block than the little one.

“I thought it was going to be much smoother as far as the transition. I miss her desperatel­y every day. I think about her every second of the day”, she said. “It really does fuel what I’m bringing to this character”.

The role Block is playing is also a mom, but that family is somewhat in crisis. Block stars as Trina in “Falsettos”, a musical about a large and eccentric New York family at the end of the 1970s. Trina’s husband has left her for a man and she’s trying to cope and keep their son connected.

“My family’s not fractured or falling apart, but tears are always sitting here. I am so friggin’ tired and it just works for what this part is”, she said, laughing. “The part came to my life at just the right time”.

Block, who has had roles on “Homeland” and “Orange Is the New Black”, is part of a cast that includes some of Broadway’s best — Christian Borle, Andrew Rannells, Tracie Thoms, Betsy Wolfe and Brandon Uranowitz. It opens Thursday at the Walter Kerr Theatre.

Block

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Choreograp­her Spencer Liff shared the stage with Block on the musical “9 to 5” in 2009 and said he thinks “Falsettos” is her breakout: “Not that she hasn’t had moments before, but Stephanie is going to blow this town away in this performanc­e”.

Block has played everything on Broadway, from Liza Minnelli in “The Boy from Oz” to a 16th-century Irish chieftain in “The Pirate Queen” to a cross-dressing man in “The Mystery of Edwin Drood”.

She showed talent early growing up in Orange County, California. “My parents knew there was some sort of talent there because I was singing any commercial I would hear on the television when I was 3 or 4”, she said. “People were patting me on the back and telling me I was a little Ethel Merman, who, at 7, I had no idea who that was”.

Her path to “Falsettos” actually began when she was starring in 2012 as the title character in “The Mystery of Edwin Drood”. In the audience one day was James Lapine, a Tony Award-winning director and playwright.

Lapine was putting together the cast for a 2013 musical adaptation of “Little Miss Sunshine” and thought Block would be perfect for the role of the mother, though she was yet to be one in real life. He later kept her in mind for the role of the mom Trina during this revival of “Falsettos”.

“I’ve always had this big momma bear thing about me. I do love kids”, said Block. “I’ve got a gazillion nieces and nephews. There’s a nurturer in me that James saw. Now I do have a little person and that’s changed everything”.

Co-star Wolfe, who also shared the stage with Block in “Edwin Drood” and now plays a friend of her ex-husband, said she’s seen a change in Block since her friend’s motherhood.

David Hyde Pierce is giving a quietly devastatin­g performanc­e at Playwright­s Horizons in “A Life”, Adam Bock’s meditative one-act play about the meaning and implicit value of a human life. In this Playwright­s Horizons production, director Anne Kauffman dramatizes the play’s unanswered questions by showing us how futile it is even to ponder these existentia­l questions.

Pierce immediatel­y engages us in the life of his character, Nate Martin, when he delivers a lengthy monologue about a seemingly insignific­ant man who thinks deep thoughts when he dares to think at all. “The truth is so hard to find and it’s almost impossible to hang onto” is the kind of thing that pops out of his mouth when he’s wondering why his last boyfriend dumped him.

There’s something absurdly endearing about a man who seems unaware of how desperatel­y lonely he is, and who makes disturbing revelation­s about his life without recognizin­g the depths of his despair. “I get nervous when it comes to love”, he admits. “I want it, but every time I get it I’m afraid I’m going to disappear”.

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