How My Fair Lady鈥檚 Shereen Ahmed and Adam Grupper Went From Broadway Understudies to Leading Players | 半岛体育

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Interview How My Fair Lady鈥檚 Shereen Ahmed and Adam Grupper Went From Broadway Understudies to Leading Players On the North American tour of the acclaimed LCT revival, Ahmed and Grupper bring a new My Fair Lady to the masses.

Shereen Ahmed had just finished her gig as the lead singer on a cruise ship when she stepped off the boat in New York harbor to spend two weeks crashing on a friend鈥檚 couch and auditioning for everything she possibly could. Running from room to room at Pearl Studios, Ahmed was stopped by her friend. 鈥淪he said, 鈥楬ey, no one鈥檚 in the room for the My Fair Lady open call鈥� because they were auditioning for Mrs. Pearce. 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 you just go be seen by Telsey?鈥欌� Ahmed recalls. 鈥淚 had no intention of booking the thing; I wanted to sing for myself really.鈥�

But Ahmed got a callback, and then another鈥攁t Lincoln Center鈥攖o read for Eliza. It didn鈥檛 go well. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥極h no, I did not book this. Well, I get to brag I was backstage at the Lincoln Center,鈥欌� Ahmed says. 鈥淭hat was enough for me. I totally won.鈥� Or so she thought. That night Telsey casting called to offer her a role in the ensemble of the 2018 Lincoln Center Theater revival鈥攕he would later become the understudy for the leading role of Eliza Doolittle. The show marked her Broadway debut.

On the flip side was her fellow ensemblist and the understudy for Eliza鈥檚 father Alfred Doolittle, actor Adam Grupper. Broadway鈥檚 My Fair Lady marked Grupper鈥檚 12th Main Stem credit. The two had gone on together a couple of performances during the Broadway run, but now, Ahmed leads the North American tour of the Bartlett Sher-directed revival as Eliza and Grupper plays Doolittle鈥攂oth full-time. The tour kicked off December 19 and is currently announced .

鈥淲e鈥檝e been onstage before together doing other people鈥檚 interpretations of these characters,鈥� says Ahmed, but this new production has changed everything between the onstage father and daughter.

A New My Fair Lady

Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe鈥檚 My Fair Lady has been an exemplar of the canon since it first premiered on Broadway in 1956. Sher鈥檚 interpretation highlights the beauty of a traditional My Fair Lady鈥攊n its lush costumes and luxurious sets鈥攚hile emphasizing the political themes of its source material: Bernard Shaw鈥檚 Pygmalion. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 been a tendency to think of My Fair Lady as a champagne musical and to forget its underpinnings,鈥� says Grupper. 鈥淭o forget how subversive it was in so many ways about its understanding of social class and sexism and the way that all plays out within the context of Edwardian England. It鈥檚 a much more thought-provoking piece than I think a lot of people give it credit for.鈥�

After all, the common flower girl Eliza Doolittle knocks on the door of famed linguist Henry Higgins to ask to pay for speech lessons so that she may become a florist in a proper shop. Higgins and his friend Colonel Pickering make a bet that, with his tutelage, Eliza can pass for royalty at the upcoming Embassy Ball.

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Shereen Ahmed in My Fair Lady Joan Marcus

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until this revival that I realized just how ambitious and hungry Eliza was to better her life,鈥� says Ahmed. 鈥淏art made that very clear from the get-go, that instead of this being an experiment on this girl plucked from Covent Garden, it was her story from the very beginning; it was her going to the professor鈥檚 house to chase this dream of hers and to better her life and to better herself.鈥�

Simultaneously, Lerner and Loewe considered the moral quandary of the class system through Alfred P. Doolittle, a utilitarian man who enjoys the freedom of his poverty until his own wisdom unintentionally turns him into a wealthy man bogged down with responsibility.

On the Road

The tour adheres to the revival鈥檚 emphasis on class politics and Eliza鈥檚 agency, and yet, it, too, is a re-imagining. 鈥淸Bart] re-directed it for a new cast and a new production on the road,鈥� says Grupper.

The show has been completely re-staged for proscenium theatres鈥攕ince the Broadway production bowed in the thrust of the Vivian Beaumont. Grupper says this has further stressed Sher鈥檚 point about social structures, beginning with the opening number. In the smaller spaces, 鈥渢here鈥檚 much more of a sense of the crush of humanity,鈥� the actor says. 鈥淭he show is all about pushing together different classes all in the same place, so to see that juxtaposition of costermongers and working girls and operagoers all intermingling in the same place and all being delighted by Higgins鈥� parlor trick he seems to be doing of identifying people by accents [in those first moments], it鈥檚 all cheek by jowl, and it makes the tension much more interesting.鈥�

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Adam Grupper as Alfred P. Doolittle in My Fair Lady

Re-staging aside, the entirely new principal cast鈥攍ed by Ahmed and Laird Mackintosh as Eliza and Professor Henry Higgins鈥攑roduces new versions of the characters and a singular alchemy.

鈥淏art directs to people in the room,鈥� Ahmed says. 鈥淲hen he saw what I bring to the stage or to her role, what Laird brings to Higgins, what all of these incredible actors that we have on tour with us bring and our essence, he directs us for that and what our strengths are.鈥�

Their Strengths

For Ahmed and Grupper, their experience in the Broadway production gave them a head start on understanding the DNA of the production, the world that Sher envisioned, and the history of Edwardian England provided by visiting experts during the Broadway rehearsal process. 鈥淚t was actually really informative, too, that I was in the ensemble because I get the world that Eliza鈥檚 living in and I was a part of that world that we were creating for Eliza,鈥� says Ahmed.

But the previous experience as understudies feels separate from creating the parts now. 鈥淎s a cover, you have to work within these boundaries. You鈥檙e stepping into someone else鈥檚 interpretation,鈥� says Ahmed. 鈥淲hen I would go on for Norbert [Leo Butz] or Danny Burstein, I would say, 鈥楾hanks for letting me borrow the car keys,鈥欌� Grupper adds. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very different to have that sense of ownership.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have the benefit of having worked directly with Bart about the character,鈥� Grupper continues. 鈥淓verything I gleaned about it, I gleaned from whatever I could see onstage, whatever I could learn from his assistant, from stage managers, from whatever background I could find, but that鈥檚 not the same as inhabiting the role.鈥�

Now, with the guidance of Sher, Ahmed and Grupper have found their own versions of their respective roles.

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Adam Grupper and cast in My Fair Lady Joan Marcus

鈥淪he鈥檚 a little more pointed, a little bit more ignorant [to start],鈥� says Ahmed of her Eliza. 鈥淪he鈥檚 been a fighter from the start and she鈥檚 witty and she鈥檚 vulnerable.鈥�

鈥淗er acting is so supple and she is so effortless at going between these two polarities and playing the cockney Eliza who鈥檚 almost feral, and the 鈥榚levated鈥� Eliza who has to have the same measure of will and strengths,鈥� Grupper notes of his co-star. Not to mention 鈥渢his voice of incredible purity and power鈥濃攁s he calls it鈥攁nd her 鈥渋ntelligence and empathy and integrity.鈥�

As for Grupper鈥檚 Doolittle, he embraces the 鈥渓ovable, jolly, drunken scamp鈥� the character has always been, but injects a subversiveness to him. 鈥淲hat he鈥檚 doing is not just pleasure-seeking for its own purpose, it鈥檚 a political act to be against the norms of Edwardian London,鈥� he says. Grupper allows himself to be a bit uglier as Doolittle.

Eliza and Her Father

These takes on the roles alter the dynamic between Eliza and Doolittle鈥攁nd, once again, Sher has altered his staging to accommodate. 鈥淚n that final scene, both of them dolled up, they both see each other and they both barely recognize each other,鈥� says Grupper, 鈥渂ut whereas Eliza has come up was through her own agency, Doolittle came up purely because of Higgins鈥� machinations鈥攁nd that鈥檚 a very interesting contrast.

鈥淚n a lot of ways Doolittle becomes far more intimidated of Eliza than she is of him,鈥� Grupper continues. A stark contrast to the Eliza who cowtows to her fathers demands for money, or who was forced to leave the house as a girl because of their abusive relationship.

On this tour, 鈥渙ur relationship鈥檚 turbulent, it鈥檚 confusing,鈥� Ahmed adds of her character and Grupper鈥檚. 鈥淔rom my point of view, [Eliza] feels a bit of bitterness.鈥�

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Leslie Alexander, Shereen Ahmed, and Kevin Pariseau in My Fair Lady Joan Marcus

The Larger Lesson

Yet, there is nothing but love between these co-stars and their gratitude to be able to play these canonic roles, especially for Ahmed. 鈥淏eing Middle Eastern, especially being a Middle Eastern woman, we鈥檙e stuck in these stereotypes of either over-sexualized harem or completely powerless women that there鈥檚 not much out there,鈥� says Ahmed. She relishes stepping into a role that has absolutely nothing to do with her race, color, or ethnicity.

鈥淚t feels entirely empowering to know that I can kind of carry a torch across the country to change that perception of what Middle Eastern women are capable of,鈥� she says.

Looking at Eliza and Doolittle, hearing Ahmed and Grupper, their own stories mirror aspects of their characters: Grupper a man who鈥檚 been around the block and appreciates the position he鈥檚 ascended to, Ahmed a woman with agency marching in to claim her dream. And it shows.

鈥淭hose class issues were so turbulent at the time [that for Eliza] to walk into this upper class house in the most beautiful neighborhood in London鈥� I kind of pull some of how I walked into that open call completely like an imposter,鈥� she sighs. 鈥淚 remember thinking to myself, 鈥榃hat am I doing here? But I鈥檓 going to do it anyway and crash this call.鈥� And now鈥 use it.鈥�

 
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