Broadway star Melissa Errico brings âSondheim in the Cityâ to šú˛úAV stage
Tony-nominated Broadway singer, actress, recording artist, and author Melissa Errico returns to šú˛úAV and her favorite songwriter with an entirely new program of Stephen Sondheim songs, celebrating her new album, âSondheim In The City.â Praised in The New York Times as âa New York house tour of thrill and heartbreak... from one of Sondheimâs deepest-hearted yet lightest-touch interpretersâ and hailed by Gramophone magazine as a work that âtakes the musical theater compilation album to a new level,â Errico will share her new collection at Walker Recital Hall on Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7:30 p.m., accompanied by her longtime musical director Tedd Firth.Ěý
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âThe finest all-Sondheim album ever recordedâ was the Wall Street Journalâs verdict on Erricoâs ecstatic, inward-turning âSondheim Sublimeâ (released in 2018). Now, her new tribute to Broadwayâs greatest songwriter, âSondheim In The City,â changes tone to offer us a more outward-driven, kaleidoscopic street fair of New York scenes and momentsâsummoning back to life the poetic vision of a man who once confessed that his entire creative life had been spent in a twenty-block radius of Manhattan.Ěý
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âSondheim in the CityââŻis the Sondheim of smart, sophisticated New York, the Sondheim of the quick, witty, sardonic, love-seeking, and sex-driven city he recorded and worked in through his long life. From the anthem of city busyness, âAnother Hundred People,â to the bittersweet hymns of city marriage, âSorry, Gratefulâ and âGood Thing Going,â with time for hardboiled surprises like âUptown, Downtownâ and surprisingly soft-centered ballads like âAll That I Needâ and âDawn,â Errico will sound out New York as she rounds out her portrait of Sondheimâand, as always in an Errico show, there will be smart talk from the celebratedâŻNew York Times columnist to go along with her sublime singing.Ěý
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Erricoâs history with Sondheim began when he selected her to star as Dot in âSunday In The Park With Georgeâ at the Kennedy Center, then as Clara in âPassionâ at Classic Stage Company, then in the NY City Center Encores! production of âDo I Hear A Waltz?â In 2020, she sang âChildren and Artâ in the Sondheim 90th Birthday Concert, âTake Me To The World,â and was featured on PBS television in a documentary special in which she sang a feminist version of âFinishing The Hatâ and joined Adam Gopnik and Raul Esparza to talk âSondheim on Poetry in America.â She was also featured in the New York Times tribute to Sondheim in November 2021 as one of the top 10 interpreters of his work. Ěý
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Touring the world with her inimitable thematic concerts, from Singapore to Paris to San Francisco and beyond, Errico has built a unique niche in the world of theater and jazzâso much so that when Steven Reineke, principal conductor of the New York Pops, introduced her Carnegie Hall debut, he announced that âMelissa Errico is a unique force in the musical life of New York City: a Broadway star, a concert artist, and an author who regularly contributes essays to the New York Times. Thereâs really no one like her!â The Times itself summed up her appeal simply: âAny chance to hear Melissa Errico sing is a chance worth taking.âĚý
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Errico made her first Erie appearance in October 2020 when she joined MIAC Artistic Director Dr. Brett D. Johnson via livestream for a special hour-long program of songs and stories from her celebrated career. In April 2022, she performed a ravishing concert on the stage of the beautiful Mary DâAngelo Performing Arts Center, captivating a crowd of MIAC supporters with Broadway, film, and jazz favorites by the multi-Oscar-winning composer Michel Legrand with additional songs by Cole Porter, Stephen Sondheim, Randy Newman, and others. She returned in September 2023 to headline MIACâs film noir-inspired soirĂŠe, mesmerizing a standing-room-only crowd with a program of swinging and sexy standards. Her latest collaboration with MIAC, âDiva to Diva,â is a series of conversations with other dazzling guest artists that gives audiences a chance to hear a little behind-the-scenes chat between two experienced professionals who have chosen the strange and perilous path of the concert/cabaret singer as their preferred means of personal expression.Ěý
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Her other recent concerts have included a Paris duet with her frequent singing partner Isabelle Georges, broadcast nationally on Radio France, followed by a sold-out cabaret at the historic Le Bal Blomet, and appearances in London. To rapturous response, she opened for music icon George Benson at the Montreal Jazz Festival. She has continued to tour from coast to coast and will make her London concert hall debut singing Sondheim in London on July 12, 2025. She has begun to expand into symphonic work and has made two successful appearances with orchestras in the US and Canada, with a holiday series ahead with the Syracuse Symphony conducted by Tedd Firth. She is also creating an original solo concert of early WWI jazz for the Kennedy Center in May. She and Tedd Firth have finished recording a new album of American Songbook music, which she mysteriously refers to as â...the field of poppies from which sprang Sondheimâs opium.â For tour dates, see . Ěý
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First known for her starring roles on Broadway, including âMy Fair Lady,â âHigh Society,â âAnna Karenina,â âWhite Christmas,â âDracula,â and âLes MisĂŠrables,â Errico has had a wide-ranging career from television and film to recording. She starred in the CBS show âCentral Park Westâ and played roles on âBlue Bloods,â âThe Knick,â and âBillionsâ on Showtime. She has starred in many non-musical roles by Shaw and Oscar Wilde, including âDear Liarâ in the spring of 2023, playing George Bernard Shawâs original Eliza Doolittle.Ěý
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She is currently working on expanding her collected New York Times essays about a singerâs strange life on the stage and road, gathered under the heading âScenes From An Acting Life,â into a book. She has three daughters and is married to tennis player and journalist Patrick McEnroe.Ěý
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Tickets, priced $40-$50, can be purchased online at , over the phone at 814-824-3000, or in person at the Mary DâAngelo Performing Arts Center box office (Tues.-Thurs., noon-5 p.m.). Each order is subject to a $4 per ticket processing fee, regardless of purchase or payment method.Ěý
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This performance is made possible through the generous support of B. Scott Kern, Esq. & Amy Cuzzola-Kern, Ph.D., and the 2024-2025 MIAC Live season is sponsored by Alan & Patti Schaal and VNET, with additional support from the Greater Erie Alliance for Equality and the Erie County Gaming Revenue Authority.