Creating the title role at the U.S.premiere of the Broadway-bound ZORRO The Musical has been rewarding and exhilarating for Derek Smith.
But the experience has paid off in reaction from reviewers. “The talent assembled on stage for the opening-night gala electrifies, led by a dashing Derek Smith as Diego-Zorro,” wrote The Deseret News, Salt Lake’s oldest daily newspaper. “Smith, showing tremendous energy, takes on a range of guises and negotiates each with great aplomb.”
A national tour of ZORRO The Musical, which premiered in London’s West End in 2008 to universal rave reviews and an armload of British Olivier award nominations, will play the Alliance Theater in Atlanta and at the Ahmanson in Los Angeles producers report. Under the direction of the London team headed by the Tony-winning Christopher Renshaw, the show is scheduled for a 90-week tour beginning in 2013, including a three-month stay on Broadway, The musical made its U.S. debut on Feb. 15 in a production by the Hale Centre Theatre, in West Valley, Utah, after productions in a number of international capitols.
I tried to compare Diego to myself. Diego is just a guy who has been thrown into an experience that he didn't necessarily want, but in the end, he needed. I compared this to some of my experiences with the Marine Corps. Going through boot camp isn't necessarily something that anyone wants. But in the end, it's something that made me the man I am today. I also am a goofball, and the childish aspect of Diego came kind of easy... A little too easy, now that I think of it.
The hardest thing about Zorro, is it's a part of pop culture. Most people I talk to have their ideas of Zorro based of the Disney television series, or the Antonio Banderas movies. It's hard to please everyone, and I never will. You have to try to find a happy medium of trying to include what you think Zorro is, but also trying to include enough of what you think people are expecting him to have. It's like walking a tightrope, but I wouldn't have it any other way. What is your favorite part of the show?The sword fighting. I grew up playing football, baseball and was in Taekwondo for three years. I also spent five years in the Marine Corps. I love the athleticism of this show. Being able to combine the creative side of acting, with the athletic side of my personality is definitely an enjoyable process. This is also the first time my wife, Keolani Smith, and I have done a show together since my daughter was born in 2010. It has been fun to share the stage with her again. She's in the ensemble and we have had fun performing together. It's hard being away from our daughter Kenzie, but if we're going to be away from her, the stage helps make it bearable.What was the moment told you “I want to be an actor”? I actually got into acting by accident. I signed up for a Musical Theater class in high school because I thought it was a class where you watched old musicals and wrote reports. Much to my surprise when I showed up to the first day of class and discovered the word "performance" was used quite literally, I almost dropped out of the class. The first time I realized it might be something that I could enjoy was my first role Moonface Martin in ANYTHING GOES. I found out I was kind of good at it, so I stuck with it. I found the thrill from being on stage exhilarating, and I couldn't get enough of it. Luckily I stayed with it because I met my wife at Hale Centre Theatre in 2002 while doing THE MUSIC MAN.Videos