Bebe Neuwirth Believes in Storytelling

showstoppers

Places, please for ELLE’s column Showstoppers, where theater’s biggest stars reflect upon the moment in their career where the famous phrase “the show must go on” became a little too real. When things don’t go according to plan onstage, here’s how the pros react—and what they take away from it.

This month, Bebe Neuwirth, who stars as Fraulein Schneider in the new revival of Kander and Ebb’s Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club, talks about the importance of theater after the COVID-19 pandemic and the time a bat flew on stage. Here, in her own words, the two-time Tony and two-time Emmy award-winning actress shares how theater can be deeply spiritual and how community is a part of the human experience.


The first thing that came to me was the time a bat flew onto the stage. I mean it was just something you had to get through and ignore what was happening. There are goofy things.

But, when the world shut down because of COVID-19, we were all robbed of the communal experience. There was a real need to gather again in theaters and experience shows, tell stories, and hear stories, because I believe that it is a primal drive in humans. That is part of our human experience that is ancient. It’s who we are. We gather in our tribe and together we sit by the tribal fire. We sing stories, and we dance to stories, and we dance together, or we participate in some way, whether you’re the storyteller by the fire dancing or you are on the outside banging your hands on the dirt and listening. We are all participating together as a community, and I really believe that’s a primal thing we have. I don’t think that we’re necessarily conscious of it.

It was chipping away at us in many different ways. I believe very strongly that this was one of the aspects that was really hard for the audience, and certainly hard for performing artists, because that’s who we are. That’s how we express. A lot of people tried to make things happen on Zoom. I participated in a lot of it. I was very grateful for it, but there was also something deeply sad about it, because we weren’t by the footlights, our modern day tribal fire.

I certainly feel that the theater can be deeply spiritual. There is a nobility of the entire company coming together. People get injured in shows, especially dance shows, and I’ve seen people limp off stage or pull themselves off stage, and then understudy or swing hurries up and gets into costume. I’ve been thrown on in the middle of shows. I’ve been in shows where they’ve brought the curtain in and asked for a doctor in the house.

I can’t tell you how quickly people and crews and stage management moves when somebody goes down and doctors are called. The things that happen backstage are really remarkable. There’s also that feeling of the company rallying to support that person, but rallying to support the show and the audience. The audience is the other partner. It’s a rehearsal until the audience is there. We are all together. We have to continue to make this event happen and carry on, and do the very best we can as if nothing happened. It can be very difficult because we might love the person who has fallen ill or hurt themselves. It can reinforce how much we love what we do, how fragile existence is, how fragile the show itself is. It just really galvanizes a company and focuses. It’s a humble nobility. Doing the right thing for the good of the whole, of the group.

cabaret

Marc Brenner

Talkback

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Bebe Neuwirth currently stars as Fraulein Schneider in Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club at the August Wilson Theatre. Tickets can be purchased here.

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