An interview with Claci Miller, star of Atlanta Lyric Theatre's Thoroughly Modern Millie

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    [post_content] => Encore Atlanta was honored to have a chance to chat with Claci Miller, the star of Atlanta Lyric Theatre's production of Thoroughly Modern Millie. Like her character, Claci went to New York City with big dreams that had to make room for reality once she fell in love. In this interview, she shares what brought her to Atlanta, what she loves about the show and why she thinks audiences will fall in love with the Lyric's production.

My name is Claci Miller and I am playing Millie in Thoroughly Modern Millie, which is fun!

So tell me about your character, what is your favorite thing about her?

Oh, that's a good question … she's spunky and she has a dream and she is not afraid to go out and get what she really wants. But deep down inside, she discovers that love is more important than what she thinks she wants. So it's a really sweet, coming of age story for a girl in her 20s in New York City. I relate to that a lot because I went to New York in my 20s and I was very gung-ho ("I'm gonna be a Broadway star!"). And I found love — on the subway — but I found love and it, love sort of helps put life in perspective a little bit.

So is that one of the reasons why you moved to Atlanta?

It is actually. My husband and I were living in New York City when 9/11 happened and it really helped us to sort of reevaluate our priorities. And we moved to Los Angeles and he got a job in the financial industry. And he doesn't tell anyone he used to be an actor, because who would trust an actor with their money? (laughs) So we moved to Los Angeles and he started working with a financial institution and we got transfered here to Atlanta. Closer to home for me, closer to family. So in a round-about way, yeah.

If someone has never seen Thoroughly Modern Millie before, how would you tell the story to them, in a nutshell?

In a nutshell, a little girl goes to the big city to seek her dream and she wants to marry her boss. She thinks she's modern, so she bobs her hair and wears short dresses, you know short dresses for the 1920s. So she gets a job as a stenog[rapher] and she plans to marry her boss. And her plan is thwarted when she literally trips a man in the street. And through meetings and friendship they fall in love. And his plan is to just play and have fun. He's a very wealthy person and they kind of court and through the process, they fall in love and discover the real meaning of life. And it's a very sweet sweet story.

What's your favorite part of the show or musical number?

I really love the closing song in Act One, it's where, on the balcony. Jimmy, the character that plays opposite Millie, get in an argument, and they kiss, and he runs offstage and he leaves Millie standing on the balcony over New York City discovering what has just happened and what is happening in her heart. It's called "Jimmy" and she discovers as she's singing the song, her feelings for him. I get to wear this great blue sparkly dress and stand alone onstage, in the spotlight, and it's a really fun number. It's sort of where all her emotions come to a head in the show. It's very sweet, and I like it a lot.

So you've been doing this show in front of audiences for a weekend already. What are they responding to most?

The dancing in the show is so fabulous. I really don't know — I can't pinpoint one thing about the show. I think it's just a great melding of the minds. First of all it's a beautifully written show, it's a great show. And the dancers — every single person in this show is so exact and so precise. Karen, the choreographer, has been so … I don't want to say like [mimes cracking a whip] but she's been so great with everybody in the show. She's been like, she knows exactly what she wants and it's so clean and it's so beautiful and so period and the costumes are so gorgeous. But after the dance numbers you can hear the audiences [gasps and claps] you know as people applaud because they're so excited. I don't know that you see dancing like this in musicals in Atlanta. In my experience, the Lyric really produces for people on a large scale for this city, glamorous musical theater. And I think the theater where it's produced, the Strand Theatre in Marietta, it's an Art Deco theater, so the set the costumes, it all blends in to a huge Art Deco ’20s experience. It's really beautiful, visually to see.

If people want to get tickets to see the show, where can they go?

They can go to the website, http://www.atlantalyrictheatre.com and there's a whole Get Your Tickets Now! section, with a view of the theater and the box office number is there or you can get your tickets online.

Great, and how long is the show running for?

It runs through Oct. 2nd, next Sunday. [post_title] => An interview with Claci Miller, star of Atlanta Lyric Theatre's Thoroughly Modern Millie [post_excerpt] => [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => open [ping_status] => open [post_password] => [post_name] => an-interview-with-claci-miller-star-of-atlanta-lyric-theatres-thoroughly-modern-millie [to_ping] => [pinged] => [post_modified] => 2011-09-23 14:49:43 [post_modified_gmt] => 2011-09-23 18:49:43 [post_content_filtered] => [post_parent] => 0 [guid] => https://encoreatlanta.com/?p=4937 [menu_order] => 0 [post_type] => post [post_mime_type] => [comment_count] => 0 [filter] => raw )

Encore Atlanta was honored to have a chance to chat with Claci Miller, the star of Atlanta Lyric Theatre‘s production of Thoroughly Modern Millie. Like her character, Claci went to …

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Interview with Freddie Ashley, Actor's Express artistic director

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    [post_date] => 2011-09-23 11:32:57
    [post_date_gmt] => 2011-09-23 15:32:57
    [post_content] => Spring Awakening Director Freddie Ashley shares with us why he chose the show to kick off Actor's Express' 24th season, some of his favorite characters and moments, and what he hopes audiences take away from his production.


Tell me a little about Spring Awakening, why did you select it to kick off your 24th season?

I fell in love with Spring Awakening the first time I ever heard the cast recording, and I saw a production of it on the national tour. And I thought, it would work so well in an intimate space. And when we looked at planning this season, knowing we had been in this big financial emergency and that things had been really dire. I was looking for a way to say, "Actor's Express is back!" And this show has such a bold imprint that it leaves on the audience, I thought what better show to announce our emergence from this campaign than a show like Spring Awakening.

What do you connect with most in the show?

I think it's one of those things that everybody's been there. We've all been a teenager and we've all gone through those awkward moments, and some of us had healthier teenage years than others. Some of us had traumatic teenage experiences, some of us had ideal teenage experiences, but we've all been there and we know what it's like to have those questions and those anxieties and those discoveries. I think it's something everyone can identify with.

Do you have a particular character that you identify with most or who is your pet favorite?

I shouldn't choose, but I love the characters of Moritz and Ilse. Mortiz, who is the sort of doomed character who's full of angst, he can't seem to get anything right and he's under a tremendous amount of pressure to excel at school. Ilse is a young woman who has escaped an abusive household and gone to an artist colony, but who is living this sort of dangerous and fast life now. There's something about those two characters who have lost their innocence before it was time for them to lose their innocence that I find really heartbreaking and beautiful. And there is a scene between the two of them in Act Two that is one of the most tender, sweet and heartbreaking scenes that I've ever directed in any show. I just loved getting to that scene every night in rehearsal. Yeah, those were the two characters that I just loved so much.

What's your favorite song?

Oh gosh, I don't know if I can even answer that! I have different favorites for different reasons. There's no number like the song "Totally Fucked" it's an amazing, energetic explosion of a big ol' number — the dancing, the music, the movement — it's a great song. But there's also the "Song of Purple Summer" at the end of the show that's so sweet and tender and beautiful and uplifting. I love the "Bitch of Living" in Act One. It's hard to choose just one because the score is so rich. You have these songs that rock out and then these songs that are very tender, sweet ballads, it's hard to choose which ones you love the most. Or it's hard for me, at least.

What do you hope the audience takes away from your production?

Well, I hope that people, first and foremost, have a really rich emotional experience. I think this show is such a roller coaster ride. There are really really funny parts of the show and there are really really tragic parts of this show. And I want people to walk out of this show feeling like they just experienced something significant. I think the show has the power to do that. I also sort of hope that people think about the world that they're living in and the world that they're giving the young people who will take our places. You know, there's something of a cautionary tale in Spring Awakening. It's about what happens when you don't talk to your kids and you don't listen to your kids. And I think that's a responsibility we all shoulder to make sure that we leave the world a better place for the people coming along after us.

Can you give us a little preview of what's coming up after Spring Awakening?

We have a beautiful new play called Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them. It's a rolling world premiere through the new play network that started at the Humana Festival in Louisville, Ky. And it opens in late October, just an unbelievable coming of age story about a young brother and sister who have been abandoned by their father and form a new kind of family for themselves. And it's just fantastic writing. We're falling that with a big Broadway hit, Next Fall. Then we're doing a co-production with Theater Emory of Night of the Iguana in the spring and we're ending the season with Xanadu and we also have Libby Whitmore with Libby's at the Express.

Where can people go for more information?

People can absolutely go to http://www.actors-express.com or follow us on Facebook and Twitter. [post_title] => Interview with Freddie Ashley, Actor's Express artistic director [post_excerpt] => [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => open [ping_status] => open [post_password] => [post_name] => interview-with-freddie-ashley-actors-express-artistic-director [to_ping] => [pinged] => [post_modified] => 2011-09-23 11:32:57 [post_modified_gmt] => 2011-09-23 15:32:57 [post_content_filtered] => [post_parent] => 0 [guid] => https://encoreatlanta.com/?p=4932 [menu_order] => 0 [post_type] => post [post_mime_type] => [comment_count] => 0 [filter] => raw )

Spring Awakening Director Freddie Ashley shares with us why he chose the show to kick off Actor’s Express’ 24th season, some of his favorite characters and moments, and what he hopes …

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