Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Five Questions for Leigh Scarritt


San Diego theatre veteran Leigh Scarritt is appearing with Lyric for the first time this season, as Aunt Alicia in Gigi. Leigh is a regular on San Diego stages including Starlight and the Old Globe. She’s an actress, singer, dancer, choreographer, director, writer, and composer, who also teaches voice and is a personal exercise trainer (whew). Leigh wrote, composed, and directed the play Angels Among Us at the Coronado Playhouse. She has appeared in television shows including Three's Company, Too Close for Comfort, General Hospital, and The Jerry Lewis Show. Her movie appearances include Used Cars with Kurt Russell and In Search of My Son with Richard Thomas. She took a break from rehearsals to answer our Five Questions.

When did you know you wanted to be in musical theatre? 

I think I did my first prossional show when I was maybe 4. I was Gretel in The Sound of Music. My grandfather was dying at the time and he came to see the show. It felt like a gift for him and it was such a gift for me that even though he was ill, he came to see it. I remember the power of his love from the audience and my love for him, and that anchored me in the power of love as it transferred over the pit lights.

Also, I was a very painfully shy kid. I always felt the most free and the most myself on stage.

Did you have a mentor? Who was it, and what did he or she do to encourage you?  

My mother’s a brilliant musician herself, and really planted in myself and my siblings the love for art in every different form, whether painting or sculpting or instrumental music, theatre… She birthed that and fostered it. Then there was a wonderful woman here in San Diego named Deanne Johnson, who picked my out of a lineup for a show at Lyric Dinner Theatre when I was 16 -- the lead in Babes in Arms. She saw something in me that she thought was worthwhile. It was my first lead role as an adult, and I got my Equity card from that. I must have done 20 shows for her in the next 20 years.

What’s the most unusual or useful advice you’ve ever received concerning your career? 

Don’t try to be someone you’re not, be exactly who you are, so you get hired for the right projects. Don’t try to chase your tail.

What do you think most people would be surprised to know about working in musical theatre?  

It ain’t all that glamorous backstage! Sometimes there’s only one toilet.

If you could have a different job, what would it be? 

I wouldn’t have a different job! My first job is being a parent, and I would completely content if that was all I had ever been. But any other profession -- no.

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