GYPSY OF THE MONTH: Kristen Beth Williams of 'Nice Work If You Can Get It'
Back to the Articleby Adrienne Onofri
For the third straight year Kristen Beth Williams is understudying a Tony Award-winning role in a Broadway musical. This year it’s Judy Kaye’s reformable Prohibitionist in Nice Work If You Can Get It; last year she understudied Sutton Foster as Reno Sweeney in Anything Goes, and in 2010 it was Katie Finneran’s boozy Marge MacDougall in Promises, Promises.
Williams, a.k.a. KB or KB Dubs, got to play Reno Sweeney for five performances last December when Foster was ill. Actually five and three-quarters, as Foster started feeling sick during a show and had to leave partway through the first act. After the first full performance where Williams played Reno—a part she’d had in high school—“I called my mother on my way home and I said, ‘Mom, I just took the final bow on a Broadway stage.’ That last bow, that was me.” Looking back on it, she adds, “Words can’t really describe how it feels to accomplish your dream.” Like Anything Goes, Nice Work If You Can Get It was directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall. “It’s really wonderful to be in her ‘camp’ now, to feel like I’ve made it into that club,” says Williams. The two shows also both have scores out of the great American songbook—Anything Goes by Cole Porter, Nice Work by George and Ira Gershwin. Much of Williams’ time on professional stages has been singing and dancing to the great American songbook. She’s been in four different productions of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas as well as the 2008 world premiere in Chicago of Turn of the Century, which featured a number of Berlin songs. In 2008 she was also in the world premiere in Houston of the stage version of the Gershwins’ An American in Paris (which in the wake of Nice Work’s success is now being bandied for a Broadway bow). Even Promises, Promises has music by a legend of American pop music, Burt Bacharach. While she wouldn’t mind getting to break out in a contemporary rock musical, Williams is unconcerned about being typecast. “I love my little niche that I’ve carved for myself,” she says. “It doesn’t get any better than Irving Berlin and Cole Porter and the Gershwins.”
In late 2009 the Texas native was on tour with 101 Dalmatians in Dallas when she found out she’d be making her Broadway debut the following spring in Promises. Since her family still lives in the Dallas area, she was able to break the news to them in person. Williams feels extra lucky that for her first Broadway show she was in an original cast, not a replacement. “To me it was a perfect experience from start to finish...I got to go to the first day of rehearsal and go all the way to the closing performance,” she remarks.
Her public schools in Mesquite had an excellent arts program, and Williams also performed in community theaters—sometimes alongside her father (by day a sales executive with Albertsons stores). Kristen and her dad played daughter and father in Bye Bye Birdie at Garland Summer Musicals. One of the shows she did at Garland Civic Theatre was The Wiz, where she portrayed the Yellow Brick Road wearing yellow scrubs and a construction helmet. Earlier this year backstage at Nice Work If You Can Get It, castmate Candice Marie Woods heard Williams telling someone about that costume and the production—which starred an Asian girl as Dorothy—and they realized they’d been in it together! Following her graduation from the University of Oklahoma, Williams came to New York with her Equity card, which she’d gotten after her third season at Music Theater of Wichita (where she worked with already Equity member Kristin Williams, the reason Kristen had to use her middle name when she joined the union). She did more than a dozen shows during three summers at Wichita, with such featured roles as Hedy La Rue in How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Evelyn Nesbitt in Ragtime, Hunyak in Chicago, Gertie in Oklahoma and Pat Bingham in Good News.
When Williams joined the 101 Dalmatians tour in mid-2009, she was returning to Disney employment. In 2004, after she’d already moved to NYC, she headed west to fulfill a childhood dream. “Something that I always wanted: to be in a show at Disney. We’d gone to Disney World every four years when I was a child, and I loved it.” For two years she played Snow White in Disneyland’s stage production of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
Now that she’s become a regular on Broadway stages, Williams can dole out advice to newcomers. “Go to everything,” she counsels. “Don’t type yourself out of anything. You can’t be afraid of the work. There seems to be a sense of entitlement in a lot of younger kids, and it may be because of American Idol and all of these reality TV shows, where they see people shoot straight to stardom. If you expect that, you’re going to be miserable. If you’re going to expect to do the work, you’ll have a great time doing it.” Williams has also advocated for her profession by working on Actors’ Equity committees, and just recently she was elected to Equity’s National Council. “In our political climate,” Williams says, “I think it’s good for as many union members as possible to understand how their union works.” Photos of Kristen Beth, from top after her headshot: second from right, holding up Matthew Broderick with the rest of the female ensemble in Nice Work If You Can Get It; on the piano, with Jeff Daniels (left) and cast of Turn of the Century; playing Betty Haynes in White Christmas, with Mara Davi; playing Judy Haynes in White Christmas, with Jeffrey Denman; right, performing “Buddy’s Blues” in the Encores! Follies with Emily Fletcher and Michael McGrath (also a Nice Work castmate). [Nice Work If You Can Get It photo by Joan Marcus]
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