
In an award-winning career that has encompassed TV, film, stage and concert work around the globe, Betty Buckley is probably best known as the quintessential musical theatre actress. Dubbed “The Voice of Broadway,” the multitalented artist has helped change the face of musical theatre with roles that run the gamut from the wife Thomas Jefferson (1776), which marked Buckley’s Broadway debut, through a critically acclaimed, Olivier Award-nominated performance as deluded, silent-screen star Norma Desmond (Sunset Boulevard), a part she re-created on Broadway. The Ridgefield Playhouse and Ridgefield Magazine Broadway and Cabaret Series bring this “tour de force” live in concert on Saturday, May 7 at 8 p.m.
For anyone who has ever heard the Tony-winning actress sing, it is evident she possesses one of the finest, and perhaps the most unique, instruments: a voice of supple steel, capable of piercing the soul with either its razor-edged belt or ethereal upper register. Whether she’s breaking your heart with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Memory” in her Tony-winning turn as Grizabella the Glamour Cat in “CATS”, bringing down the house with “The Writing on the Wall” in a gender-bending performance in “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” or simultaneously frightening and moving an entire audience as religious fanatic Margaret White in the cult-classic musical “Carrie”, a Betty Buckley performance is one that remains indelibly etched into one’s mind and soul.
Other theatre roles have included Martha in “Arsenic and Old Lace”, the domineering stage mother Rose in the musical theatre classic “Gypsy”, Countess Aurelia in the long-awaited London debut of “Dear World”, and, most recently, Gertrude Hayhurst Sylvester Ratliff in the Signature Theatre Company’s world premiere of Horton Foote’s “The Old Friends”, which garnered Buckley a 2014 Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play. In addition to her contributions to the stage, Buckley has also released an astonishing 16 solo albums, a rarity in the world of musical theatre and in an ever-changing music business. She has been nominated twice for a Grammy, the music world’s highest honor: in 2000 for “The Diaries of Adam and Eve” and again in 2002 for her London recording, “Stars and the Moon: Live at the Donmar.”
In 2012 Buckley was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame, where her name — engraved on the walls of the Gershwin Theatre — is forever linked with the greatest stars Broadway has ever produced, from its inception to present day.
For tickets ($65), call the box office at 203-438-5795, or visit ridgefieldplayhouse.org. The Ridgefield Playhouse is a non-profit performing arts center located at 80 East Ridge, parallel to Main Street, Ridgefield, CT.