In a recent interview with New York Daily News, Jeremy Jordan, who stars as the lead Jack Kelly in the hit Disney Broadway musical "Newsies", spoke of the comparison between the 1899 strike that the young newsboys held against the tyrant Joseph Pulitzer and the Occupy Wall Street protests.
"The newsboys are the 99% and Pulitzer is the 1%. Everyone can relate to the underdog."
Jordan can personally relate to being an underdog. After a car accident that happened around Christmas when he was 12, Jordan's whole life was changed.
Jeremy Jordan was a kid when he first saw the
big-screen version of “Newsies.”
And he’s been obsessed ever since with the
Disney musical about ragtag newsboys waging a strike in 1899 against the
powerful publisher Joseph Pulitzer when he tried to pinch their meager profits.
The 1992 flick, now a cult classic, was panned
by critics and flopped at the box office.
But where others found fault, Jordan found
inspiration. And come Thursday, when “Newsies” opens at the Nederlander
Theatre, he’s hoping to turn that boyhood fascination into Broadway magic.
“I was 8 or 9 when ‘Newsies’ came out and I saw it in the theaters
and billions of times on VHS,” Jordan, 27, recalls. “These newsboys were guy
guys, and the movie made us feel powerful as kids. It really influenced my
life.”
Written by Bob Tzudiker and Noni
White, it starred Christian Bale as Jack Kelly, the kids’ charismatic leader,
and featured toe-tapping tunes by Jack Feldman and Alan Menken.
“Newsies” kept popping up in his
life, even when he went to Ithaca College, where he earned his Bachelor of Fine
Arts in musical theater. He says, “We put on a show for incoming freshmen that
was themed to ‘Newsies.’ But we rewrote the words. Instead of singing ‘Santa
Fe,’ we sang ‘BFA.’”
In Broadway’s “Newsies,” Jordan
plays Jack. The 5-foot-9 leading man takes on the role on the heels of his
recent big-screen debut in “Joyful Noise,” playing Dolly Parton’s gospel-loving
grandson.
And like other showbiz pros,
Parton has been singing Jordan’s praises: “I love Jeremy to death. He’s a joy
to be around and a great singer, too. We got to do a duet [‘From Here to the
Moon and Back’], which was a real treat.”
Menken, the multi-Oscar-winning
composer of “Newsies,” adds: “Jeremy is a dream. In his looks and his acting,
he’s like a young Marlon Brando.”
Disney turned to some heavy
hitters for what they hope will win the accolades that the Kenny Ortega movie
never got.
Tony winner Harvey Fierstein (“La
Cage aux Folles”) penned a book that revised the story and introduced a new love
interest for Jack — Katherine, a crusading journalist played by Kara
Lindsay.
With an additional handful of
fresh songs and dynamic new dances, the revamped “Newsies” opened to raves at
the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, N.J.
Daily News critic Joe Dziemianowicz gave the Paper Mill show
four stars and hailed Jordan as “a bright new star with a velvety voice.”
Reviewers also drew comparisons
between the Occupy Wall Street protests and the musical’s scrappy kids who were
rallying in the streets for fair wages.
Jordan agrees, “The newsboys are
the 99% and Pulitzer is the 1%. Everyone can relate to the underdog.”
As the champion of the poor
newsies, Jordan literally steps into the limelight by belting “Santa Fe,” a
showstopping solo that ends Act I.
“It’s epic and such a joy to
sing,” he says. “It’s a powerful, soaring song that I’ve always loved. You get
a big spotlight on you and have a huge high note. For an actor, it doesn’t get
any better than that.”
Jordan wasn’t always naturally drawn to the spotlight.
Debbie Stone Moyer, his mom,
recalls, “Jeremy was horribly, horribly shy as a kid. He didn’t have a lot of
friends. And we were poor.”
Jordan, whose parents divorced
when he was small, remembers living in low-income housing in Corpus Christi,
Tex., and moving 12 times before going to college: “There wasn’t enough room,
or the neighborhood was bad, or the landlord kicked us out. But my mother was a
good mom. She always fed and clothed [my younger brother Joey, my sister Jessa
and me]. And she gave us what we needed.”
However, a Christmas car accident
changed his life at age 12.
“There was an 18-wheeler on the
side of the road that pulled out and hadn’t really put their lights on. We
smacked into it and it was pretty bad. I got whiplash and punctured a lung, but
I was fine. I used to be into sports, but I had to give it up; that’s why I
started singing.”
Jordan then focused on choir,
even winning national honors. Ironically, the singer caught the acting bug
while he played the Mute in “The Fantasticks.”
The arts also became his refuge
from drama at home. Jordan, who was a straight A student, remembers, “Anytime
my parents fought, I’d close my [bedroom] door and turn up the music.”
Moyer adds, “I was drinking while
Jeremy was growing up. My kids didn’t know. I hid it. They just knew that Mom
could be perfectly normal one minute and a raving lunatic the next. But when
Jeremy was 16, I got sober and I’m most thankful [I did], or else I
wouldn’t have been able to send him to school. I’m so proud of him. Whatever
has happened to Jeremy is Jeremy’s doing.”
Jordan says, “One of the reasons I went to New York for college
was to reinvent myself. My parents have both been through divorces and that
made me desperate to find true love. And nobody in my family is artistic, so
that made me pursue it even harder. In high school, I just fit in and I
didn’t want to fit in anymore. I wanted to be bolder and stand out.”
And ever since he arrived in New
York, Jordan has stood out.
When he subbed for
Constantine Maroulis for the first time in “Rock of Ages,” he “blew away”
director Todd Graff, who just happened to be in the audience that night. And
that’s how Jordan was discovered for “Joyful Noise.” Later, when he starred in
the recent revival of “West Side Story,” the legendary Arthur
Laurents, who co-wrote the show, called him “the best Tony I’ve ever seen in my
life!”
Not that there haven’t been disappointments. His Broadway musical
“Bonnie & Clyde” ran for only 69 performances last year, even though he and
Laura Osnes earned kudos as the title outlaws.
Jeff Calhoun, who directed Jordan
in both “Bonnie & Clyde” and “Newsies,” says, “Clyde and Jack are underdogs
who have a great heart. And I cast Jeremy in both roles because he can be
incredibly strong and violent but also vulnerable and sexy. You can’t teach
that. You're born with it. It’s called star quality.”
As “bittersweet” as “Bonnie &
Clyde’s” closing was, it allowed Jordan to rejoin “Newsies,” and he “couldn’t
be more grateful or excited.”
His castmates were equally eager
to welcome him back. Andrew Keenan-Bolger, who plays Jack’s pal, Crutchie,
says, “Every boy on that stage idolizes Jeremy as a person and as a performer.”
Asked to describe his favorite
thing about playing a newsboy who also loves to draw, Jordan says, “Jack puts
on this facade for everybody. You see this leader who’s cool and charismatic,
but underneath it all, he’s this romantic. He hates his circumstances and he
wants to reinvent himself and find a better life as an artist.”
Actually, that could describe
Jordan and his own journey from Texas to the Great White Way.
As for “true love,” he’s found
that, too; he’s engaged to Broadway actress Ashley Spencer (“She’s
gorgeous and talented; as an actor, hello, that’s a turn-on!”).
All in all, a buoyant lyric from
“Newsies” might just capture Jordan’s joy nowadays: “Look at me. ... Victory!
Front page story. Guts and glory. I’m the king of New York!”
Entire interview from NY Daily News.
Entire interview from NY Daily News.
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