LuPone-a-palooza!

Patti LuponePatti LuPone is performing her latest cabaret act, Far Away Places, at Live at the Rrazz in San Francisco. Photos by Rahav Iggy Segev/photopass.com

Need your Patti LuPone fix? You've come to the right place.

We have for you an interview with Ms. LuPone in connection with the San Francisco debut of her latest cabaret show, Far Away Places, at the newly configured Live at the Rrazz performance space in the Cadillac Building.

Here's a sample of the interview in the San Francisco Chronicle:

But don't expect LuPone back on Broadway anytime soon. She's a little bitter about the Great White Way at the moment, having just come off two flop shows, the musical version of "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown" and David Mamet's most recent play, "The Anarchist," opposite Debra Winger."I'm mightily depressed about the state of our art," LuPone says of the commercial theater. "I've been in this business a long time, but I'm still so naive. I've always trusted producers, but Wall Street has taken over, and they don't know what the f- they're doing. I wish they'd go buy baseball teams and leave us alone. These money people are destroying Broadway. They throw money at a show, then abandon it, and they're messing with the economy of the people who rely on this profession. This isn't a game for us."

Read the entire interview here.

Patti Lupone

We also have a review of Far Away Places from the San Francisco Chronicle.

But LuPone's sweet spot is the combination of aggression and endearing sincerity she displays on the muscular and melodic Brecht-Weill "Bilbao Song" and Sondheim's daffy "By the Sea" from "Sweeney Todd," a show she performed with the San Francisco Symphony and in a Broadway revival.Then there's the full-on drama of the Brecht-Weill "Pirate Jenny," an angry aria that runs with blood and ferocity. When she finishes the number, eyes blazing, you want to hand her a straitjacket and a third Tony Award.

Read the review here.

FOR MORE INFORMATIONPatti LuPone's Far Away Places continues through Sunday, March 24 at Live at the Rrazz, 1000 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco. Tickets are $60-$75, plus a two-drink minimum. Call 800-380-3095 or visit www.liveattherrazz.com.

Previous
Previous

At SF Playhouse, pretty is as Pretty does

Next
Next

Look! You can see Jersey Boys from The Mountaintop