Roger Bart knows a little something about being animated. He won a Tony Award in 1999 playing Snoopy in You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, two years after providing vocals for the title role in Disneyβs 1997 animated film Hercules. And that same quality abounds in his current role, starring as the wild-haired and arm-flailing Doc Brown in Broadwayβs new hit musical Back to the Future at the Winter Garden Theatre.
βThese parts that are animated and yet rooted in reality are good fits for me, particularly ones that allow me the opportunity to be smart and zany,β� Bart told °λ΅ΊΜεΣύ recently over the phone.
Bartβs had his fair share of zany. Aside from Snoopy, Bart has played Carmen Ghia, eccentric βlive-in assistantβ� to director Roger De Bris in The Producers; and Dr. Frederick Frankenstein in Young Frankenstein. Together with his Back to the Future role, you could also say heβs got a knack for bringing iconic screen performances to the stage.
βIβm not an impersonator,β� Bart says. Some of his characters are so beloved that their screen versions are imprinted on the brains of fans, but Bart says trying to recreate that same magic is a foolβs errand. By way of example, he recalls how years ago, as he was preparing to go on tour with a revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, he went to see the same production on Broadway, which then featured Brooks Ashmanskas in the role Bart was to play on the road.
βI spent the entire tour trying to do this one bit that Brooks did that was so funny,β� he remembers. βIt killed meβthe whole tour, I could never get it. It felt like a failure.β� It was an important lesson that his time would have been far better spent coming up with the Roger Bart version of the bit. βFor your own sanity, you want to make it your own.β�
But that can be a bit of a high-wire act, because fans of the movie franchise might be disappointed if they donβt get the Doc Brown they know and love on stage. βI try to lift certain qualities of [Back to the Future film star] Chris Lloydβs voice and of his expression that will manifest physically,β� says Bart. βBut the thing I most try to doβthat I see in Chris Lloyd when heβs in anything, whether itβs Taxi or Roger Rabbit or Back to the Futureβis that sense that thereβs an actor who is rooted deeply in truth even while doing a performance that is animated. And the sense that anything can happen.β�

Rooting Back to the Futureβin which Bart plays a slightly mad amateur scientist who turns a DeLorean sports car into a time machine that activates when you add a little plutonium and reach the precise speed of 88 miles per hourβin truth might seem like an odd exercise. But actually, Bart says itβs everything when it comes to comedy and, particularly, musical theatre. βIβm already in a medium where we burst into song, where everyone in town knows the words and the steps to the number,β� he explains. βWeβre asking the audience to buy into a lot. The more honest you are, the better it is. I feel like a kid playing good guys versus bad guysβtotally committed to the fantasy.β�
Bartβs able to focus on that because the comedy part comes pretty easily. βIt runs in my blood,β� he says, referring his grandmotherβs brother who was a whistling comedian on the vaudeville circuit and toured with George Burns and Gracie Allen. Combined with a childhood obsessed with Looney Toons and the likes of Art Carney, Jackie Gleason, and Groucho Marx, Bart says the art of getting laughs feels ingrained. βIβm a musical person, and a very mathematical person,β� he explains. βBoth of those things are intrinsic to good comedy. How to land a jokeβitβs math. Itβs these rhythms, this sense of delivery.β�
Performers love to talk about applause, but Bart thinks thatβs a little overrated. For him, itβs all about laughter. βItβs so gratifying,β� he says proudly. βI donβt want to be too much of a downer, but weβre in a world that has a lot of suffering. It can be tough. When people come into a room and I get to make them laugh in a communal way for a couple of hours, thereβs really nothing better.β�
Well, that and getting to ride in a flying car. Bart admits thatβs pretty cool too. βThere are times I wish I had not had Indian [food] between shows. But itβs, for the most part, very fun.β�