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GYPSY OF THE MONTH: Spencer Liff of 'Equus'...Yes, 'Equus'!

“I knew from the moment I worked with Rob that he was the guy I wanted to learn from,” says Liff, who has harbored dreams of choreographing ever since childhood, when he not only “would always make up dances for myself to do” but also “used to gather groups of kids from the neighborhood and boss them around and make them do anything I could choreograph.”

Liff was the groom in Wedding Singer’s opening number, “It’s Your Wedding Day,” and Amber played his bride. “We clicked instantly,” Liff says. “She was also my dance partner in Cry-Baby. Rob knows we come as a package deal now.” The high-spirited “Wedding Day” was performed on the Tonys and Today and at various other special appearances, garnering Liff a lot of attention (check out this BWW message board thread as an example). Liff took a leave from Wedding Singer for several months to film Hairspray, in which he portrays one of “the nicest kids in town” who dance on The Corny Collins Show. He was brought into the Hairspray movie by producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, who came to see Wedding Singer and remembered Liff from the Gypsy film they’d produced almost 15 years earlier.

He would gain even more exposure from his often-shirtless role in Cry-Baby, even though the show was panned by critics and closed after just two months. Liff and the other two main male dancers, Marty Lawson and Charlie Sutton, posed in skimpy swimsuits for HX magazine (“We were promised board shorts, but there was only Speedos when we showed up”) and were featured with Cry-Baby star James Snyder in Out magazine’s Hot List this summer. Liff also appeared with In the Heights ensemble member Afra Hines on the cover of Dance Spirit magazine’s Broadway-themed July/August ’08 issue. And he alone made it onto New York magazine’s pop-culture Approval Matrix for “the hottest abs on Broadway!” (He fell into the lowbrow/brilliant vector of the matrix.)

His performance in Cry-Baby, which included the athletic license-plates-on-the-feet prisoner dance that was done on the Tonys, also earned him the Astaire Award—the same year Ashford won for Best Broadway Choreographer. Liff had assisted Ashford on Cry-Baby and was going to be both assistant director and assistant choreographer on Ashford’s next Broadway production, Brigadoon. Several workshops were done, and a spring 2009 opening announced for the revival, but it was shelved prior to its Boston tryout (which would have been taking place right now).

Liff was already involved in Brigadoon when he auditioned for Equus. “My heart was still in Brigadoon, but I realized this was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be in this play, to work with these incredible actors and to do something that was very, very out of my comfort zone,” he says. “I had been assisting Rob for two years, I’d been working with Rob almost three and a half years, and it was definitely time—as much as I think he’s the genius of Broadway and love working with him—to go and experience something else.” Liff found out Brigadoon was postponed just as Equus rehearsals were getting under way.

He also found himself working for another choreographer he adored. Liff says he “fell in love” with Fin Walker during the rigorous Equus auditions, which entailed “almost two hours of improvising and just pushing yourself to the physical limit.” Before having the prospective horses dance, Walker gave them words—some horse-related like “kick,” others more abstract like “smooth”—that they had to interpret with their body. “We spent a good two weeks at the beginning in rehearsal, as we had at the auditions, improvising,” Liff explains. “It was fantastic, ’cause Fin didn’t sit there and say ‘Dance for me.’ She’d put herself in the rotation. I’m sure a lot of us started copying her movement, because she moves in such a unique way and she’s fascinating to watch. We started very, very free, where you can move everything, and then we’d do it with our hands behind our back, and then we’d put on the shoes and see what we could do.”

Not too much, it turned out. “When we first put them on, we were like Bambi learning to walk,” Liff says of the platform “hooves” the horse actors wear. “That first day, all of us took a spill. You can’t just stand and relax in them—the way that the weight is, you’d fall backward. You have to push into the ground, you have to lean forward just slightly to balance. That took some getting used to. Now, we don’t feel them at all.”

The horse costume includes a head made of leather and metal, which too can limit range of movement but is lightweight (so lightweight, some have even broken during the blinding scene). During rehearsals, Liff says, “we were never allowed to look in a mirror when we had our horse gear on. I think that would take away from just feeling it and being it.”

There was also a field trip to aid in their equine transformation. “One of the producers owns a horse farm in Connecticut, and they took the entire cast up for a day,” Liff says. “We took turns grooming the horses and watching them in their natural state—not being ridden. And then we watched jumping demonstrations. We really got a sense of how they act when there’s someone they’re comfortable with around them, and when there are strangers around them. We represent all those things in the show.” He adds, “Now when I see a cop on a horse or when I see a horse and buggy go by, I have to stop and just watch them.”

This kinship with horses isn’t brand-new for Liff. “I am an Arizona boy,” he says, “and when you’re in Arizona, there’s a horse every two feet. I spent my entire childhood riding, even when we lived in L.A.”

Born in Phoenix, Liff left his native state when he joined the Will Rogers tour. His mother and older brother accompanied him on the road, and after the tour they settled in Los Angeles. They relocated to NYC when he was cast in Big. Liff did commercials on both coasts—for, among other things, Rice-a-Roni, McDonald’s and Mattel.

Liff’s parents divorced when he was little, but both parents nurtured his passion for performing. “My father’s always loved theater, and he wanted to expose me to it at a very young age. We saw theater in Arizona, and when I was 4 my dad took me to New York to see Broadway shows. We saw Cats—and that was it: I went back home and would not stop dancing around the house. I begged my mother to put me in dance class, which she did.” She even moved the family to Yuma so he could attend top-notch dance and gymnastics studios.

“I watched musical movies and loved White Christmas and Singin’ in the Rain,” Liff recalls. “I thought the Chorus Line movie was fantastic. I didn’t know any better, I watched it every day.” The movie gave him his first audition song, “I Can Do That,” which he performed—complete with back handspring—on the stage of Broadway’s Palace Theatre at the open call for Will Rogers Follies kids.

A few years later, he played the part of an auditioning child in Gypsy, with Bette Midler on stage beside him. “She scared the crap out of me,” he confesses. “She came on that set and you knew she was there. She was in Mama Rose mode, so I think that heightened it.”

His own mother was no Mama Rose. “When I was about 15, my mom was ready to have her own life back,” he says. She no longer wanted to live in NYC, so once adults she knew and trusted agreed to be his guardians, she left. Liff was finishing high school at the time—he was able to graduate at 15 since he’d been homeschooled by his mother (who’d been teaching middle-school science when they lived in Arizona).

He enrolled in Manhattan’s New School university, but quit after taking writing and other liberal arts classes for a year. “I had never been in a classroom before, so going into college was a little jarring for me,” he says. Since he was already a professional, he didn’t see any point in majoring in performance, and eventually he realized he didn’t really want “to spend four of my prime dancing years studying something that was a backup plan and then come back to something that I knew in my heart was what I was gonna do.”

After his stint in college, Liff took the job with Royal Caribbean Cruises. “I got an insane amount of training from them,” he says. “It was the hardest I’ve danced in my life. They were revues, so you end up dancing 15, 20 styles in a night. It makes you very versatile because you have to do everything, including run off stage, strap a harness on and get flown in the air for an aerial number—all on a moving ship.”

Prior to Equus, the only non-musicals Liff had been in were workshop productions in L.A. and off-off-Broadway plays at Access Theater and Ensemble Studio Theatre when he was a kid. He’s the only horse in the show—besides Lorenzo Pisoni (who also has a speaking role as a human)—with past Broadway credits; the other horse portrayers have worked mostly in modern dance. Liff is the dance captain for Equus, just as he was for Cry-Baby.

He also is a Harry Potter fan from way back—the kind of rabid fan who sees the movies at midnight screenings the day they open and lines up outside a bookstore when a new title’s about to go on sale. But “I’ve never told Dan that,” Liff admits. Of Radcliffe, he adds: “The first day or two [of rehearsals], it was very strange, just ’cause you’ve watched this kid grow up. But he was instantly charming right from the get-go, knew everyone’s name by the end of the first day, ate lunch with us in the greenroom. So now he’s not Harry Potter anymore. And certainly when you see him do the material in the show, your perspective changes.” Radcliffe’s dressing room is several floors below the one Liff shares with the other horse actors, yet “every day he climbs the six flights to our dressing room, and we do a group warmup.”

The horses are off stage for a good chunk of Act 1, and they all go back up the six flights to do a hardcore workout of situps, pushups, planks and the like. “We have 45 minutes to kill and it’s a good way to keep our bodies warm,” Liff says. “Also, it’s less time we have to spend in the gym.” Yes, the hottest abs on Broadway doesn’t even like going to the gym. But he made sure he did on most days during Cry-Baby. “I had to worry about it a lot during Cry-Baby because I was shirtless for most of the first act,” he confides. “I’m less naked in this show.”

While Equus has been running, Liff has assisted choreographer Warren Carlyle in his preparations for the City Center Encores! production of On the Town, running Nov. 19-23. On a night off last month, he performed in the opener of the “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” benefit concert for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, which celebrated the Elton John album’s 35th anniversary and was headlined by Sir Elton himself. Liff was one of the dancers in an 11-minute dream ballet choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler and set to the album’s first track, “Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding” (sung in the concert by Patrick Wilson).

Though Liff’s been in show business practically his entire life, many of his closest friends are not—and “the most important thing to me is Sunday brunches with my friends,” he says. “I have a very tight core group of friends that I’ve grown up in the city with, and I am the king of brunch on the Upper West Side. I know every spot.” Some of his recommendations: Crêpes on Columbus, Citrus, French Roast and Good Enough to Eat.

Photos of Spencer, from top: outside the Broadhurst box office last month; with his Wedding Singer bride and real-life best friend Ashley Amber, flanked by castmates Cara Cooper and T. Oliver Reid (both a previous Gypsy of the Month); at the prom with Evan Rachel Wood in Across the Universe; in the Hairspray movie, with Brittany Snow as Amber; high kicking in Cry-Baby; in costume for Equus; with choreographer Susan Stroman in rehearsals for Big in 1996; in a headshot from his childhood modeling days; backstage with Equus star Daniel Radcliffe (center) and Lorenzo Pisoni. [Cry-Baby photo by Joan Marcus; Equus in costume photo by Carol Rosegg]

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Adrienne Onofri, one of BroadwayWorld's original columnists, created and writes the Gypsy of the Month feature on the website. She also does interviews and event coverage for BroadwayWorld, and is a member of the Drama Desk. Adrienne is also a travel writer and the author of Walking Brooklyn: 30 Tours Exploring Historical Legacies, Neighborhood Culture, Side Streets, and Waterways, published by Wilderness Press.
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