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THE CHER SHOW powerhouse Stephanie J. Block discusses her deep dressing room chat with Cher, what it was like to film FALSETTOS and more.
Here are some of the must-read highlights:
ON HER DEEP DRESSING ROOM CHAT WITH CHER
“She came two weeks before opening. When she sat in the audience for the first time, we all knew she was there-you know when she’s there. We knew she was emotional. We had to put it in context. The Malibu fires were hitting, so a whole lot of personal stuff was also happening in her life. She came the very next day while we were in rehearsals. She and I sat in my dressing room for about 40 minutes, and there was a lot that was shared. At a certain point in the conversation, I said, ‘I admire you greatly. I’ve studied you for a year now, but I want to let you know that I am an actress playing a part. I haven’t studied you my whole life. I’m not looking for anything from you. I’m not looking to fly into stardom or ride your coattails because I am playing you. I am a mom and a wife. I’ve been hired to play this role.’ We shared a bottle of water. We sat on my couch in my dressing room, and the conversation changed. That was important. For me and for her.”
ON THE RESPONSIBILITY OF STARRING IN THE CHER SHOW
“Every night when I pop up, you never quite know what you’re going to expect. The backstage life is very complicated to the show. There is no rest. I’m on stage for a good chunk of it, but any time I’m off, it’s not checking the emails and using the bathroom. It really is doing costume changes and wig changes. It has been a different discipline. The vessel is different. These costume changes are monster, and the weight of the costumes is monster. So, literally and figuratively, I feel like there is a lot on my shoulders.”
ON HER POST-SHOW ROUTINE
“I feel like my metronome slows down on the drive home. Putting my head on the pillow doesn’t happen until after midnight, one o’clock in the morning. I eat a full meal. Sebastian [Arcelus, her husband] and I eat together. He stays up! He’ll put [daughter] Vivienne to bed, sleep for an hour or two, regroup and then meets me at the door every night to welcome me home. I’ll text him when I’m about two minutes away, and there he is at the door with the dog. Come on!”
ON HER CAREER
“Nothing has ever happened quickly or easily for me. I am a workhorse. I always have been. Do I wish things might have been a little easier? Sure. But that’s not my jam, and that’s never been in the cards. Looking back, I’m really glad because every job has been a massive lesson. I like having to work hard. I went back to a journal, and it always said, ‘I want to work in the industry until I’m 70 years old.’ That’s not about the quick, fast and easy.”
ON FILMING FALSETTOS
“[Director] James Lapine is a genius. We all thought him to be a little crazy when he was like, ‘You all have to drop it down.’ We fought him a bit in the sense that we wanted to be purists and bring the show that we were doing every night at the Walter Kerr, but he was like, ‘Stephanie, I promise you, you’re going to want to just not cry that hard,’ or ‘You’re not going to want to deliver it with that intensity because it will not translate on the screen.’ When we all saw it, we thought, ‘He was exactly right.’ We felt really proud of what it ended up being.”
ON MEETING CHER
“She entered the rehearsal space at New 42nd Street Studios with this gorgeous velvet sort of fedora/sombrero hat, these reflective aviator sunglasses and about 15 people around her to support her, love her, protect her. She wanted to meet us. She met me before, much to my chagrin. I hid. I didn’t have the fedora and the glasses, so I just hid. But I was summoned. My producer said, ‘She really does want to meet you before.’ So I came down and met her. She was lovely and gracious. She said, ‘Look, I know what this takes. I know how vulnerable you have to be. I know that you know that I’m sitting five feet away from you. Thank you.’ With that, she kind of released herself and us. We could see the tears coming down her face, and we could see her grabbing the hands of those next to her. But we didn’t quite know what that meant. We didn’t know if it was breaking her heart or if she was proud and pleased. A couple of weeks later, we got that call that she loved us and wanted to move forward.”