Multitalented Karen Ziemba can do it all—and does, winningly, in Curtains, her latest journey into the world of John Kander and Fred Ebb
by Andrew Gans © playbill.com
Karen Ziemba may have won a Tony for her performance as a verbally abused spouse in Susan Stroman’s acclaimed dance musical Contact, but it is the work of John Kander and the late Fred Ebb that has tested her mettle as a true triple-threat performer, one who can act, sing and dance with equal authority.
Ziemba, who made her Broadway debut in the original production of A Chorus Line, first came to the attention of the Tony-winning composers in the Off-Broadway revue And the World Goes ’Round, where she earned a Drama Desk Award for a performance that featured wonderful takes on such Kander and Ebb tunes as “A Quiet Thing” and “Arthur in the Afternoon.” In the composing duo’s 1997 musical Steel Pier, Ziemba created the part of Rita Racine, a role that was written for her and one that garnered her first Tony nomination. Ziemba later joined the long-running revival of Chicago as merry murderess Roxie Hart and also took part in a workshop of the long-gestating Kander and Ebb musical The Skin of Our Teeth. “[Their work] is just so eclectic,” Ziemba
says about the composers also responsible for the musicals Cabaret, Woman of the Year, The Rink and Kiss of the Spider Woman. “Things can be bombastic and things can be very broad, but there’s also a lot of stillness and reflection in their [work], too, so it runs the gamut. Plus, they have also written great stuff for dancers.”
Ziemba is currently dancing up a storm on Broadway in Curtains, which features music by Kander, lyrics by Ebb, a book by Rupert Holmes with additional lyrics by Kander and Holmes, all based on the late Peter Stone’s original book and concept. The new musical at the Al Hirschfeld, which opened in March, casts Ziemba as Georgia Hendricks, the lyricist of the showwithin- the-show and one of the possible suspects in the murder mystery investigated by Lieutenant Frank Cioffi (played by David Hyde Pierce). “I think that when I took on the role of Georgia,” Ziemba says, “[Kander and Ebb] created a character that went beyond what they originally thought because of what I do. So that’s part of the reason that I do some dancing in the show.”
“She doesn’t just dance. She acts and then she dances.”
Curtains director Scott Ellis
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