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Tony Nominee Lauren Ambrose Finds Her Own Eliza Doolittle

When it comes to tackling Lerner and Loewe’s My Fair Lady (currently running at Lincoln Center Theater’s Vivian Beaumont), star Lauren Ambrose has a plethora of source material available for consultation. “There’s the original myth, George Bernard Shaw’s interpretation of that myth [as] a play, then there’s the movie, then there’s the musical, then there’s a movie of the musical…” she pauses. “It’s like excavating, looking for our truth and our version in this moment.”

Read: BARTLETT SHER DIRECTS MY FAIR LADY FOR 2018 AUDIENCES

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Lauren Ambrose Joseph Marzullo/WENN

In absorbing the many iterations of the story and portrayals of Eliza Doolittle, Ambrose’s most informative source has been herself. “I think of my own growing up quite a bit in this play,” she says. “I used to be really wild and dissatisfied and angry and had a journey toward becoming a lady; I think that’s with anybody coming into their own power.”

Combining her own calm power with cleverness and cunning inspired by Wendy Hiller (who played Eliza in the 1938 movie), Ambrose creates a strong, ambitious, “superhero” of a woman. Her Eliza is one of agency, a poor flower seller who decides to defy her station by taking linguistics professor Henry Higgins up on his bet that he can train a ragamuffin like her to pass as a high-society Londoner. “It drives the whole plot that she does this courageous move by showing up in this world that is not her own. I find it very moving and very brave.”

Ambrose, too, shows up in a world not entirely her own. An accomplished stage performer, My Fair Lady marks her first Broadway musical.

“She is one of the best actresses I know,” says director Bartlett Sher, who worked with Ambrose in 2006’s Awake and Sing!. While Eliza is known as one of the most vocally demanding roles in the canon, Sher needed someone who—through the yelling and the belting and the pinging, all in two accents—could maintain the inward spirit of Eliza.

“I’m an actor before I’m anything else,” she says. Still, Ambrose isn’t trying to dis-appear into the part. “It reminds me of this hairdresser: Some people would come in and say, ‘Here is a picture of Brad Pitt and I want to look like Brad Pitt.’ She’d say, ‘You’re going to look like you with shorter hair,’” Ambrose recalls. “Ultimately, it’s me with shorter hair. It’s me playing Eliza Doolittle.”

As Eliza discovers herself and her poten-tial, so does Ambrose. “I hope to continue to learn to hold myself as an equal in this world,” she says. “Higgins and Eliza need to achieve an equality, but part of that is Eliza holding herself in that space—that’s something I feel like I’m learning every day.”

First Look at Paradise Blue Off-Broadway With Dear Evan Hansen’s Kristolyn Lloyd

The Signature Theatre’s production of Dominique Morisseau’s play Paradise Blue began performances Off-Broadway April 24 ahead of a May 14 opening night. Tony winner Ruben Santiago-Hudson, who directed the world premiere at the Williamstown Theater Festival in 2015, helms a company made up of Francois Battiste (Head of Passes), Kristolyn Lloyd (Dear Evan Hansen), J. Alphonse Nicholson (Luke Cage), and Keith Randolph Smith (Malcolm X, Jitney).

Flip through photos of the show below:

Set in Detroit’s gentrifying Blackbottom neighborhood in 1949, the new play looks at the changes a community endures to find its resilience. The story follows Blue, a troubled trumpeter and the owner of Paradise Club, who is torn between remaining in Blackbottom with his loyal lover Pumpkin and leaving behind a traumatic past.

Paradise Blue is the first play of Morisseau’s Signature Residency, which will include three productions over the course of five years.

The creative team includes Neil Patel (scenic design), Clint Ramos (costume design), Rui Rita (lighting design), Darron L West (sound design), Thomas Schall (fight direction), Kenny Rampton (original music), and Bill Sims, Jr. (music director). Laura Wilson is the production stage manager. Casting is by Caparelliotis Casting.

2018 Tony Award Nominations: Check Here for Live Updates

The nominations for the 2018 Tony Awards will be announced May 1 at 8:30 AM by Hamilton Tony winner Leslie Odom Jr. and current Waitress star Katharine McPhee.

Check back here for updates as nominations are revealed.

The 72nd annual ceremony will be broadcast by CBS from Radio City Music Hall June 10. Sara Bareilles and Josh Groban will co-host.

As previously announced, this year’s awards will present Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre honors to Andrew Lloyd Webber and Chita Rivera, the Isabelle Stevenson Tony Award to the Nederlander Organization’s Nick Scandalios, and Tony Honors for Excellence in the Theatre to New York Times photographer Sara Krulwich, costume beader Bessie Nelson, and Broadway dry cleaning service Ernest Winzer. New York City’s La MaMa will receive the Regional Theatre Tony Award.