• Home
  • About
  • Biography
  • Calendar
  • Discography
  • UNICEF
  • Photos
    • Professional
    • Candid
    • Events
    • TV
    • Bubel/Aiken Foundation
    • UNICEF
  • Videos
    • American Idol Performances
    • Bringing Broadway Home
    • Interviews
    • Montage Video Players
    • Talk Shows
    • Tours
    • UNICEF
  • Celebrity Apprentice
  • Blog Watch
  • Archive
Layout Image
Official NIP banner

Clay Aiken – A Smile For January 18th

By musicfan123 · Comments 14128(14)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2012%2F01%2F18%2Fclay-aiken-a-smile-for-january-18th%2FClay+Aiken+-+A+Smile+For+January+18th2012-01-18+09%3A18%3A25musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D14128
Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

For some reason I smile when January 18th comes around.  All I can think about is January 18, 2008.  That was the day that Clay Aiken made his Broadway debut in the hilarious Spamalot.  Playing multiple roles, Clay portrayed a friar, a guard, another guard, and the cowardly Sir Robin, the knight who is a bit of a chicken, afraid of everything and loves to sing.

The role of Sir Robin is a lead part in Spamalot and was originated by David Hyde Pierce.  Spamalot is a Tony winning musical.  It was directed by Mike Nichols and co-created by Eric Idle.  Clay said that the chance to work with both of these men was “a reason to jump at the opportunity.”

The crowds loved Clay, but so did Mike Nichols.  He said:

Clay Aiken is amazing beyond that glorious voice.  Turns out he is an excellent comic actor and a master of character.  People will be surprised by his wide-ranging talent.

Besides the good words from Nichols, Clay also got great reviews from the Broadway critics.  The following review from Newsday is a fun read.  Remember, if you can’t read it, just click on the picture and it will become enlarged.

I was one of the lucky people who had the opportunity to see Clay on Broadway more than once.  I was even lucky enough to sit in the right seat one night and be the appointed peasant of the night.  I loved seeing Clay act, sing and dance…”all at the same time.”

I am sure that Clay will return to Broadway someday.  I can’t wait.  Whatever role he chooses will be interesting and exciting.

Hosaa has put together a wonderful Spamalot montage.  She shows the special relationship between Clay Aiken and his fans.  It’s a must-see.

Two days before Clay opened in Spamalot, he visited with ET and he gave a cute interview about his preparation for the show.

Comments 14128(14)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2012%2F01%2F18%2Fclay-aiken-a-smile-for-january-18th%2FClay+Aiken+-+A+Smile+For+January+18th2012-01-18+09%3A18%3A25musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D14128
Categories : Clay News
Tags : Broadway, Clay Aiken, David Hyde Pierce, Eric Idle, Linda Winer, Mike Nichols, Newsday, Sir Robin, Spamalot, Tony Award

Clay Aiken – Impressions Of Life in Spamalot

By musicfan123 · Comments 12016(8)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F09%2F14%2Fclay-aiken-impressions-of-life-in-spamalot%2FClay+Aiken+-+Impressions+Of+Life+in+Spamalot2011-09-14+07%3A06%3A35musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12016
Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Tuesday night, I found the following review/interview about Clay Aiken.  It was first published on Broadway.com/buzz.  The interview is rather long, but it is very interesting.  I am sure I read this article in 2008, but there is a lot I didn’t remember.

The link for the story is no longer available so I tried to add pictures that I have that fit the text.  I hope you enjoy this look into Clay Aiken history.

Clay Aiken
by Kathy Henderson 

Everybody knows that Clay Aiken can sing, but—surprise!—he can also hold his own on a Broadway stage. To be more precise, he can hula, ogle scantily clad girls, discuss flying coconuts in a British accent, pretend to poop in his tunic, do a Cossack-style line dance and perform a lightning-fast patter song (“You won’t succeed on Broadway if you don’t have any Jews”) without dropping a syllable. As Sir Robin in Spamalot, the 29-year-old American Idol runner-up appears perfectly at ease in the world of Monty Python—which, he recently claimed, he thought was a person until he saw the show. The “fish out of water” angle of Clay Aiken starring in Spamalot has already led to a couple of snarky magazine articles, including one in New York in which the writer recorded Aiken’s quotes in an exaggerated imitation of his North Carolina accent. No wonder his personal publicist now keeps a sharp ear (and a stopwatch) on Aiken’s interviews. The truth is, Clay is smart guy who knows what works for him, and he was shrewd enough to realize that Spamalot, in its own nutty way, would be a good match for his talents and his sunny sensibility. “If somebody said to me, ‘Who in this cast has never done theater?’ he is the last person I would have chosen,” says Hannah Waddingham, the Olivier Award-nominated British musical star who joined the Tony-winning musical as the Lady of the Lake the same night Aiken debuted. Three weeks into his run, Broadway’s new Sir Robin shared his impressions of life in Spamalot.

How did you feel after your first Broadway performance? 

I thought, “Well, thank god that’s over!” [Laughs.] A lot of people had asked me if I was nervous, and I didn’t know the appropriate response. I really wasn’t. I don’t know if that’s bad—to not be nervous. Yeah, it was the first time I was doing this, but the audience thing doesn’t freak me out that much. I figured I was going to screw up at some point, so there’s no reason to be nervous about wondering when [laughs]. It was actually somewhat relaxing, because the rehearsals are sooo grueling. It’s not just the schedule, it’s all the information and learning “this that, this that, this that, this that.” Having the opportunity to go out and do everything you learned was kind of refreshing and kind of nice.

Had you ever acted on stage? 

I played Will Parker in Oklahoma! when I was in tenth grade.

That’s a good part for you. 

After that, nothing. I got cut from a high school musical [Guys and Dolls]. I must have done so bad, they didn’t want me back! [Laughs.]

Were you a fan of Broadway musicals? 

I didn’t really know much about them. My knowledge of Broadway musicals ended at Oklahoma! When you do a show in high school, it’s supposed to be a learning experience, so you learn a little bit about where the show started and who wrote it and where it was produced, etcetera. I saw Miss Saigon on Broadway when I was in tenth grade; I drove up here with some friends from church and we saw that, and it was pretty impressive. But as I’ve told a number of people, the only other show I remember seeing outside of high school was a regional theater production of Big River when I was in seventh or eighth grade.

And Martin Moran, who preceded you as Sir Robin on Broadway, was the star of that show, right? 

Yeah, that was kind of neat for me. I still haven’t met him, actually!

So, who talked you into coming to Broadway? 

I wasn’t talked into it. My manager is not a pushy person at all; he brings opportunities to me and says, “Think about it. If you want to do it, that’s great. If you don’t, you don’t.” We had had…I wouldn’t say offers, I would say interest from a number of shows in the past.

Which ones? 

I’m not telling who I didn’t pick! We’d had interest, but it was never something I ever thought I’d do. Nothing really struck me as exciting, but my manager said, “You know what? If you’re going to do one, I think [Spamalot] is the one to do.” And I was like, “Really?” So I saw the show and then I called him and said, “How do you figure this is the one to do?” He said, “Because of that reaction—because no one is going to expect it. It’s not a show where you get to sing huge ballads and moving, soaring numbers. It’s something completely different, and if you’re going to do something like this, you should do it not as ‘I’m bored,’ but as ‘This is an opportunity for me to grow and learn something new and branch out a little bit.’” And that’s the reason I wanted to do it.

You didn’t have to audition, or try out a British accent? 

Well, almost all the people I work with are British; it’s been that way for five years, so I just mimic them. I did meet with [Spamalot director] Mike Nichols and we discussed some things and I did a few lines with him. They didn’t ask me to sing or dance; they probably should have asked me to dance. We sat down and very casually walked through a few things that they had already asked me to do before we committed to it on either side. I think they wanted to see how they felt about it and I wanted to see how I felt about it too, so we kind of auditioned each other. I didn’t audition Mike Nichols—don’t say that! But I wanted to get a feel for what this would be like, because I knew it was going to be very different from what I’m used to.

That meeting obviously went well.

There was a big concern for me—and I’ll speak to you about this because your outlet speaks directly to [theater] people—about what they call “stunt casting.” Based on some research I did, I know that a lot of diehard Broadway fans can’t stand it, so there was automatic concern that people within the industry were going to be upset that I was doing this because I took [the role] away from somebody else or I didn’t earn my way; I didn’t audition the way everybody else does. I was concerned about that, not just in terms of Broadway fans but people in the cast who might have wanted to see somebody else get it. And I could not have been more wrong when it comes to the people who work in the industry. There’s always going to be some 13-year-old sitting at his computer in Topeka who’s bitter. But every person I’ve worked with has been unbelievably phenomenal and welcoming.

Mike Nichols isn’t known for stunt casting. And in any case, you are a natural at this. What’s been the biggest challenge for you?

It’s so physically demanding, which is interesting because [original Sir Robin] David Hyde Pierce is an amazing actor, but he’s not a dancer and neither am I. The fact that they would ask us to do this part cracks me up. David Hibbard, who plays Patsy in the show and whose dressing room is next to mine, has become one of my favorite people because he’s been so warm and inviting. He was telling me that when he first got to the show, for whatever reason they had him play Robin for two weeks, and he said he was never able to breathe because it’s such a hard part. And he was in Cats for years. I said, “How interesting, because I can’t breathe either!” Every single night, it just kicks my rear end! It’s exhausting. So I’m not to the point where I think I’ve got everything right. They say that eventually your body gets used to it and it doesn’t wear you out as much. I’m hoping that when that day happens, I’ll be able to reflect a little bit more as I’m doing it. When I do a concert, I know the songs frontways and backways; I can sing a song and be thinking about something completely different while I’m doing it.

I doubt that! 

Are you kidding me? When I’m singing a song onstage in concert, I’m wondering what I’m doing for dinner. I’m like, “Oh wow, look at that person in the third row. Does she know her buttons are not in order?” I don’t worry, I don’t listen to the lyrics, I don’t pay attention at all. I know that sounds horrible and I probably shouldn’t tell you that, but it’s true. I can think, “Oh that sounded good, I did well there.” I can critique myself as I go. Here, I’m still thinking about “OK, left, right, jump, left, up, down, left, left, switch switch, flip, turn!” I don’t have enough brain cells left over to consider whether or not I’m doing it well.

Is it fun to sing the show’s politically incorrect song about Broadway shows needing Jews to be a success? 

You know, I’m kind of politically incorrect myself. I do worry sometimes, because it’s a very fine line between humor and anti-Semitism, so I’m very careful as to how I say it. It’s interesting, though—the first time I saw the show, I remember that being the song I laughed the hardest at. Every time I’ve seen it, it always gets the biggest laugh. I don’t know that I’m doing it justice because I can’t really get the audience’s reaction. I’ll watch other people’s scenes and listen to the audience laughing and enjoying themselves, but in mine, I can’t hear the audience for the amount of breathing that’s going on in my ear [laughs].What are you enjoying most about being on Broadway? 

I love the people I work with. I really enjoy getting there [to the theater] and talking to them and listening to what goes on backstage. It’s kind of nice to have a big group of people to work with as opposed to being by yourself [doing concerts]. I’ve only been doing this for three weeks, so it’s still new.

What’s been the biggest surprise? 

I think I’ve been surprised at how much of a family the backstage is. David [Hibbard] put together this little quiz about knowing your fellow cast and crew members and whatnot. He got tiny secrets about each person, things that no one would expect about you, and he put about 100 of them into this quiz. You would not believe how much that has occupied everybody in the building. Everybody is running around trying to figure out everybody else’s thing. It’s really like a family.

How does eight Broadway shows a week compare in difficulty to ten weeks of competition on American Idol? 

Sixteen weeks! Without question, Idol was harder because there was the rehearsal period, kind of like I was telling you about for this, and the performance period all put together. There were so many different things involved, with eight-hour days, 10-hour days, 13, 14, every day of the week on Idol. Here, it is eight shows a week, but only two and a half hours a night. The weekends are unbelievably exhausting because we do five shows, but Idol does beat it as far as the amount of work. I don’t think people understand how much work is involved for the contestants on that show. It’s not just showing up on Tuesday and Wednesday night. At the same time, it’s different than a touring schedule. On tour, I do five shows a week, and they’re not as physically exhausting because I’m not dancing. But I’m sleeping on a bus and traveling to a different city every night, so it’s six of one, half a dozen of the other.

Are you surprised that so many American Idol alums have turned up on Broadway? 

Not really. My situation is slightly different because I went into a show that was kind of unexpected; it’s not a singing show. The other people who have done stage work from Idol have done shows where singing is important, and Idol finds people who are vocally talented. Fantasia was unbelievable in The Color Purple, but we always knew she could sing; we knew she had the ability to perform on stage. And we knew, because she was on Idol, that she had the ability to work hard. The same, I think, is true for everybody who has done [Broadway]. Diana DeGarmo was there with Fantasia, Frenchie Davis, Ruben [Studdard] is about to head out [on tour in Ain't Misbehavin'], so it doesn’t surprise me that much. If you can handle three weeks of Idol, you’ve got the stamina [to do Broadway] because it’s very stressful. I will say this, though: If I ever hear Simon Cowell insult someone on the show by using “You belong on Broadway” as a put-down, he can kiss my butt for that!

There you go! 

People on Broadway are, without question, the most talented people in the country because they’re doing seven things at once! They’re dancing and they’re singing and they’re acting and they’re speaking in tongues and they’re playing piano and tapping. I mean, if Simon uses that as an insult again, he can kiss it! If you think about the people who are most well known for being phenomenal at their craft—Glenn Close as a prime example—the reason they’re so good is because they started on stage. If you can do this Broadway thing, you can do anything. I’m considering running for President! [Laughs.]

How do you see your career progressing? Will you continue to do covers or record new music? 

We did the cover thing last time; it’s not a goal to do that again right now. Our next album is going to be all new stuff. That’s kind of what I wanted to do last time and we took a detour. We’re in the process of working on it. There’s not horribly much to say about the next album, but we’re hoping it’s out in May.

Where are you on the spectrum of, say, a singer like Michael Buble vs. the kind of pop music they play on a top-40 station? 

I’m not going to compare myself to anybody. I don’t know that I want to be on the spectrum. I don’t plan to be on the radio. I’m not cool enough to be on radio. I’m still dorky and not relevant enough to some people to be on radio, and it’s not a goal of mine. We’ve got this amazing producer who’s going to do the entire album, and one of the challenges for him has been not worrying about radio, because he’s been so attuned to trying to make hits. We’re like, “Uhhh, nooo,” because once you try to cater to the radio stations, you stop catering to (a) the listener and (cool.gif me. I was discussing this very thing with my executive producers the other day and we said, if you try to make the music fit what you think radio is going to want, you’re going to miss the mark. But if we just go out and do what we do well, then it’s going to be natural and maybe radio will like it. It’s not something that I’m averse to; I would absolutely love it if it happens, but it’s not something to work toward at the expense of doing what we want to do.

You were a teacher before American Idol, and now you’re involved with UNICEF. Do you see yourself performing for the rest of your life, or could you walk away and do something totally different? 

I’m never really good at answering that question; the answer changes every day. I enjoy what I’m doing right now. As long as I’m having fun, I’m going to continue to do it. When it stops being fun, I’ll stop. But right now, it’s fun.

Did you get to see Clay in Spamalot on Broadway?  Do you think he might be returning to Broadway soon?
Comments 12016(8)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F09%2F14%2Fclay-aiken-impressions-of-life-in-spamalot%2FClay+Aiken+-+Impressions+Of+Life+in+Spamalot2011-09-14+07%3A06%3A35musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12016
Categories : Clay History, Clay News
Tags : American Idol, Big River, Broadway.com, Clay Aiken, David Hibbard, David Hyde Pierce, Diana DeGarmo, Fantasia, Frenchie Davis, Guys and Dolls, Hannah Waddingham, Kathy Henderson, Martin Moran, Mike Nichols, Miss Saigon, Monty Python, Oklahoma, Ruben Studdard, Shubert Theatre, Spamalot, Tried & True, UNICEF, Will Parker

Clay Aiken – Theatre Experience A Reality!

By musicfan123 · Comments 10072(4)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2010%2F11%2F01%2Fclay-aiken-theatre-experience-a-reality%2FClay+Aiken+-+Theatre+Experience+A+Reality%212010-11-01+08%3A30%3A06musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D10072
Monday, November 1st, 2010

Have you ever heard of the Theatre Development Fund?  If you are a Clay Aiken fan or someone who has had the opportunity to attend a show on Broadway, you probably know more about the organization than you think you do.  The most visual project that they have is running the TKTS Discount Booths.  These booths offer tickets to Broadway and Off-Broadway musicals and plays at up to 50% off.

The Theatre Development Fund is the largest not-for-profit service organization for the performing arts in the United States.  It was established in 1968 to foster works of artistic merit by supporting new productions and to broaden the audience for live theatre and dance. For over 40 years, TDF has played a unique role in strengthening the performing arts in New York City. TDF’s programs have:

  • Filled 72 million theatre seats
  • Provided subsidy support to over 900 plays, including 30 Pulitzer Prize honorees
  • Returned over 1.6 billion dollars in revenue to thousands of productions

On October 16, 2008, after Clay Aiken finished his run on Broadway, TDF opened their new TKTS Discount Booth in Duffy Square.  The booth is the centerpiece of the newly designed and expanded plaza and operates under a glowing red glass staircase. They also operate satellite TKTS booths in Downtown Brooklyn and at South Street Seaport.

According to Broadwayworld.com:

TDF’s membership and voucher programs touch the lives of tens of thousands of New Yorkers who might not otherwise be able to afford the unique experience of theatre. TDF’s award-winning education programs, Open Doors, Stage Doors and Residency Arts Project (RAP), involve thousands of New York City public school students each year, most of which have never attended a live theatre performance. TDF’s also produces the theatre magazine, Play by Play, which is written by and for high school students. (www.playbyplayonline.org)

For Clay Aiken and his fans, the TDF’s Accessibility Programs (TAP) is an interesting and important part of their mission.  They make the theatre experience a reality for people with physical disabilities. They also present highly regarded open captioned and sign language interpreted performances for theatre patrons with mild to severe hearing loss, and audio described performances for those who are blind or with low vision.

TDF also sponsors comprehensive training courses for future producers and maintains a 70,000-item Costume Collection which rents professional costumes at low cost to hundreds of not-for-profit organizations across the United States each year. For more information about TDF and its programs, go to www.tdf.org

On October 31, 2008, the Theatre Development Fund published an interview with Clay Aiken.  The article was well-written and very positive regarding Clay’s performance in Spamalot.  You can read it below!

Clay Time: How “American Idol” Clay Aiken became a Broadway knight.

“Simon Cowell can kiss my butt if he wants to use that ‘Broadway’ insult again,” quips Clay Aiken, the former American Idol star now enjoying a stint as Sir Robin on the Great White Way in Monty Python’s Spamalot (now in its final months at the Shubert Theatre). “So often the judges on Idol will use ‘Broadway’ as an insult for a singer’s performance. But I think there’s more talent onstage here at the Shubert Theatre than in all of the music industry.”

Aiken’s casting, along with that of Idol contender Fantasia as a replacement Celie in The Color Purple, has raised a few eyebrows. Were these reality TV creations really qualified to strut their stuff on the Main Stem?

“I think one reason people who’ve been on Idol are showin’ up on Broadway is that they’re people who can do something live,” Aiken notes, making a clear contrast with both film and TV actors and studio-produced pop singers, all of whom get multiple takes to get it right. “The talent for singing live—that’s what you need here.”

Of course, there’s more to a Broadway role, even in a silly romp like Spamalot, than a good singing voice. There’s also the acting and the dancing. Aiken credits author Eric Idle and director Mike Nichols with steering him well in the first department.

“Eric Idle was very complimentary, which always helps when you have no idea what you’re doing,” Aiken says. “Mike Nichols, in addition to being the premeir director of our lifetime, is very easy to work with. I like to think I take direction well, but I can imagine that sometimes a director might have a really hard job in explaining a part, and what’s required. Mike comes up with the most colorful and hilarious ways to explain what he’s looking for.”

Nichols also stressed something you might not expect in such a go-for-broke comedy.

“Overall, I probably have a tendency to overdo certain things,” Aiken admits. “Mike is big on subtlety and kept reminding us, ‘You aren’t funny—the script is funny.’ It’s all very silly, but what makes it funny is that none of the characters realize how stupid they really are, so it actually gets more laughs when the lines are played a little more straight.”

As for the dancing, Aiken says simply: “Someone giving me choreography, that’s just a catastrophe waiting to happen.”

This North Carolina native, who still has a slight twang, is nothing if not forthright. “I had absolutely no exposure to this material before,” Aiken admits. “I literally thought Monty Python was a person. And the first time I saw the show, actually, I thought it was stupid. At the end, I thought, ‘Really? It’s so silly.’ “

This impression was largely the result of what Aiken calls his “limited exposure to Broadway—show likes Wicked, you know, with soaring melodies and big plotlines. I looked as hard as I could at Spamalot and couldn’t find the plot.” He’s glad he gave it another chance.

“When I saw it again, I realized, there’s still not much of a plot here—but it’s the funniest thing in the world. It’s very sarcastic and intelligent humor, and I’m an intelligent person, I like to think.”

When he met Eric Idle, he recognized him not from his Python days but from the broad 1990 comedy Nuns on the Run. “I remember that film because it was the first time I ever saw naked boobs on-screen.” (Not Idle’s, we’re presuming.) “And I’d seen John Cleese on Will and Grace.”

Then Aiken dropped a whopper.

“I still haven’t seen the movie,” he says, meaning the 1975 classic, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, on which Spamalot is based. “I’ve been avoiding it like the plague. I mean, I play Eric Idle’s part, and I’m sure I would just copy everything he did.”

As you may have noticed, a big part of Aiken’s disarming, country-boy charm comes out in his light but persistent self-deprecation. Asked if he ever breaks character to laugh at his colleagues’ onstage antics—i.e., if he ever “loses it,” he responds, “I lose it regularly—lose my place in the script, lose my place in the dancing.”

But yes, he has broken up onstage, as well: “Rick Holmes, who plays Lancelot, is one of the funniest people in the world,” Aiken avers. “And regularly while I’m ‘dead’ onstage, Rick will say something that’s not in the script, and we just can’t stop laughing. You know, in this show it’s OK, because the audience can see that the people onstage are having just as much fun as they are, and the people up there—minus me—are so good at what they do.”

Critics have been kinder than that, noting how well Aiken fits into the show. A future on Broadway could be in the cards for this Clay Idol.


Comments 10072(4)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2010%2F11%2F01%2Fclay-aiken-theatre-experience-a-reality%2FClay+Aiken+-+Theatre+Experience+A+Reality%212010-11-01+08%3A30%3A06musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D10072
Categories : Clay News
Tags : BroadwayWorld, Clay Aiken, Decca Records, Duffy Square, Eric Idle, John Cleese, Mike Nichols, Monty Python's Spamalot, Rick Holmes, Simon Cowell, Spamalot, Theatre Development Fund, TKTS Discount Booths, Tried & True

Mike Nichols – Clay Aiken’s Broadway Mentor

By musicfan123 · Comments 3728(10)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F04%2F17%2Fmike-nichols-clay-aikens-broadway-mentor%2FMike+Nichols+-+Clay+Aiken%27s+Broadway+Mentor2009-04-17+07%3A02%3A49musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D3728
Friday, April 17th, 2009
Museum of Modern Art

Museum of Modern Art

April 14, 2009 was the opening of a two-week, 17 film retrospective of Mike Nichols’ films that surveys the wide range of his directing career.  Spanning more than four decades, the series comprises a collection of Nichols’ most significant works in film, from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) and The Graduate (1967) to Charlie Wilson’s War (2007), and the HBO dramas Wit (2001) and Angels Knowledge (1971) and Catch 22 (1970) open and close the two-week exhibition.  The Mike Nichols Retrospective will run through May 1.

Opening night started with a question and answer session with Mr. Nichols.  An interesting question was asked by a reporter from indieWIRE.  The question, “How does it feel to be here at the MoMA?” was simple, but Mr. Nichols response was well thought out.

“It feels wonderful,” Mike NIchols told the indieWIRE reporter as he entered the MoMA screening of his 1971 film “Carnal Knowledge.  “Especially here at the MoMA where I used to come see movies as a kid.  All on my own, I’d come see old movies.  Now I’m here with old movies of my own.”

Rajendra Roy is the Chief Curator of Film at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.  Mr. Roy and his colleagues felt honored to have been able to work with these films.  He had the following to say about Mike Nichols and his films:

“While remaining one of the most productive forces in the creative industries-film and theater-Mike Nichols’ body of work is clearly one most referenced and revered in contemporary cinema. His ability to form lasting and consistently fruitful partnerships with writers and actors places him among the standard bearers for the great collaborative traditions of Hollywood. Emerging filmmakers have much to learn from the intellect and timeless humanity of Nichols’ work.”

Mike Nichols

Mike Nichols

An accomplished performer and renowned stage director, Mike Nichols is among an elite few who have been awarded all of the major American entertainment awards: a Grammy, Emmy, Tony, and Oscar. In 2003 he was a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors, and in 2004 the Directors Guild of America honored him with its annual Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his contributions to the film medium over the past four decades

A child war refugee, Nichols immigrated with his family to the United States to escape the Nazis.  He worked his way through college at the University of Chicago, where he decided to become an actor.

Clay as Sir Robin

Clay as Sir Robin

Mr. Nichols is now 77 but has no plans to slow down.  Among the possible projects on his plate are movies based on the scripts of David Mamet and Tony Kushner.  He is also considering a theatrical revival of a Harold Pinter play.

Mike Nichols was the director of Spamalot at the Shubert Theater in New York.  He took a chance and cast Clay Aiken in the musical as the timid Sir Robin.  Mr. Nichols said of Clay;

Clay is amazing, beyond that glorious voice,” said director Mike Nichols. “Turns out he is an excellent comic actor and a master of character. People are going to be surprised by his wide-ranging talent, since the first impression is of great country charm and a singer to remember. This guy is not only a star; he is a lot more. We’re lucky to get him for ‘Spamalot’!”

Many words have been used to describe Mike Nichols; urbane, witty, exuberantly versatile, humane.  But above all, Mike Nichols has won the admiration and respect from people who care about theater, movies, laughter, and most important, life.

Comments 3728(10)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F04%2F17%2Fmike-nichols-clay-aikens-broadway-mentor%2FMike+Nichols+-+Clay+Aiken%27s+Broadway+Mentor2009-04-17+07%3A02%3A49musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fwww.claynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D3728
Categories : Clay News
Tags : Clay Aiken, Mike Nichols, MoMA

Too Busy To Remember

By musicfan123 · Comments 378(12)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F01%2F21%2Ftoo-busy-to-remember%2FToo+Busy+To+Remember2009-01-21+19%3A23%3A47musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclayaikennews.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D378
Wednesday, January 21st, 2009
Clay Aiken as Sir  Robin

Clay Aiken as Sir Robin

How did we let January 18th pass us by?? Were we too busy with holidays and Inaugural festivities?? How could we forget??? January 18th was an anniversary of sorts.

The audience arrived, the orchetra tuned up and the lights dimmed.  Clay Aiken took the stage for the first time on Broadway.  Playing the role of Sir Robin, Guard I, and Brother Maynard in the award winning musical,  Spamalot,  Clay sang, danced and acted……..all at the same time.

Mike Nichols, the director of Spamalot, said about his new star:

“Clay Aiken is amazing beyond that glorious voice. Turns out he is an excellent comic actor and a master of character. People will be surprised by his wide ranging talent…….This guy is not only a star, he is a lot more. We are lucky to get him for Spamalot.”       

Clay went on to receive glowing reviews from the Broadway critics, the Broadway community and the Broadway audiences. Fans traveled from points all over the world to see the show and support Clay in his Broadway debut.

Aiken’s run on Broadway concluded on May 4th, but he returned in the fall for another 4 months of goofy humor and supreme silliness.

Clay made stage door appearances, signed Playbills, raised money for BroadwayCares and won the hearts of the Broadway world.

We don’t know what is next for Clay Aiken; however, January 18th will always be an anniversary to remember.

Comments 378(12)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2009%2F01%2F21%2Ftoo-busy-to-remember%2FToo+Busy+To+Remember2009-01-21+19%3A23%3A47musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclayaikennews.wordpress.com%2F%3Fp%3D378
Categories : Clay News
Tags : Broadway Cares, Clay Aiken, Mike Nichols, Spamalot

Celebrity Apprentice: Clay’s Presentation

Chat

chatbox popout

Follow Us!

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on RSS

Search

Quote of the Day

It is not always about performance art, but about receiving positive energy from people with positive spirits. Sometimes we can see someone's spirit, and those are the people with great energy. Those are the people that get me through the day, especially on Broadway. -Clay Aiken

Subscribe To Clay Aiken News Network


Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Upcoming Events

    There are no events.
More » « Previous     Next »

CANN Radio

Clay's Websites

  • Clay Aiken Fan Club
  • Clay Aiken iLike Page
  • Clay Aiken Myspace
  • Clay Aiken on Facebook
  • Clay Aiken YouTube Channel
  • National Inclusion Project
GoodSearch
& GoodShop
YOU SEARCH OR SHOP
WE GIVE!
Search the Web now Free coupons at top stores
Raise money for National Inclusion Project - Bubel Aiken Foundation - BAF  just by searching the web and shopping online!
Search the Web now
Search the web now!
Free coupons at top stores
Free coupons at top stores!
Add GoodSearch and GoodShop to your site Add to your site

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Visitor Map

Locations of visitors to this page
Clay Aiken News Network
Copyright © 2012 All Rights Reserved
iThemes Builder by iThemes
Powered by WordPress