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Kristin Chenoweth ready for Oscar stage
Sandy Cohen
LOS ANGELES—Sets are being built. A stretch of Hollywood Boulevard is
closed. Rehearsals have begun. With the writers strike finally in the
rear-view mirror, round-the-clock preparations are under way for
Sunday’s Academy Awards. On Tuesday, Oscar’s head honchos traded their
offices at the Kodak Theatre for seats inside the landmark Capitol
Records building, where conductor Bill Conti and his 61-piece orchestra
practiced the year’s nominated songs. Joining them was Broadway star
Kristin Chenoweth and singer Marlon Saunders, who are set to perform
“That’s How You Know” from the movie “Enchanted.”
Chenoweth, a Tony Award winner and film and TV star, said it’s
“nerve-racking” to prepare for the Oscar stage. “It’s the biggest
audience I’ve ever had,” the 4-foot, 11-inch performer with the outsized
voice told The Associated Press. “I’ve played many of the famous concert
halls in the world but this is something altogether different. I’m just
going to try to perform the song and make it about the music and not get
too nervous.”
Her nerves didn’t show during the rehearsal. The diminutive star even
warmed up with an operatic aria that drew applause from the orchestra’s
brass section, which filled half the room. The other half held the
strings section and 16 backup singers. Conti wielded his baton from the
centre as Chenoweth and Saunders donned headphones inside individual
glass booths. Show producer Gil Cates and director Louis J. Horvitz,
along with associate producer Michael Seligman and talent coordinator
Danette Herman, watched from soft sofas in the adjacent mixing room. The
song was recorded so the singers could get a sense of their performance
when backed by the orchestra.
“I have one bad note,” Chenoweth confessed as she finished a take. “I
had a big crack.” She listened to the playback and cringed when she
heard the offending note. They tried it again. “Very good. Very good,”
Cates told her. “I just love hearing you sing. It’s superb.” Chenoweth
smiled and curtsied in response.
She was invited just weeks ago to perform the song and had to learn it
in a hurry. The composer and writer, Steven Schwartz and Alan Menken,
who are nominated for three of their “Enchanted” tunes, are colleagues
of hers from Broadway. “If they’re happy, I’ll be happy,” she said. But
first she’s got to deal with those nerves. “I’m trying to think of it
like another gig, even though I know it’s not the Met or Carnegie Hall.
It’s the Oscars and it’s several billion people,” she said, pretending
to gag at the overwhelmingness of it all. “I’m really excited about my
dress and I’m really excited about the whole night. Of course I’m
rooting for anything from ‘Enchanted’ to win”.
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