THE LEADING MEN: Making his Mark
By Wayman Wong
02 Nov 2004
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Drew Lachey
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photo by Ben Strothmann
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Thanksgiving is on the way, and here are three "Leading Men"
we’re especially grateful for: Drew Lachey (Rent), Gary Beach (La
Cage aux Folles) and Tim Di Pasqua ("Purpose of Love").
WHY DREW IS DRAWN TO B’WAY
Drew Lachey is best known as one-quarter of the sizzling vocal quartet of 98
Degrees, but now he’s burning up the stage in his Broadway debut. Thanks to
playing the part of Mark, Rent has given this graduate from
Cincinnati’s The School for Creative and Performing Arts (SCPA) a whole new
lease on a theatrical career. Jeremy Kushnier, who co stars as Roger, says,
"Drew was really up for the challenge, and he’s worked his ass off.
He’s been doing great!"
Before he became a platinum pop star, Lachey drove an ambulance in New York.
But in 1995, his mother and his brother, Nick, visited him and they saw Miss
Saigon. Drew recalls, "Wow, that’s when I realized I missed
performing. It lit that spark in me, and two weeks later, Nick called me and
said he was starting this group [with Jeff Timmons and Justin Jeffre]."
That became 98 Degrees, which scored such heat-seeking hits as "Because of
You," "I Do (Cherish You)," "Invisible Man" and
"True to Your Heart" (with Stevie Wonder). In 2002 the
Grammy-nominated group decided to take a break, but Drew confirms, "We’ve
been talking more about a reunion."
Drew, 28, is a genuine and good-hearted guy who’s married to his childhood
sweetheart, Lea Dellecave, and they have a German shepherd named Luka. He also
has appeared on MTV’s "Newlyweds," starring Nick and his wife,
Jessica Simpson. According to their grandmother, the Lachey lads are distantly
related to Napoleon. Drew quips, "That would explain my Napoleon complex.
I’m 5-foot-6; 5-foot-7 with my hair."
Question: Congrats, Drew! How’d you land the role of Mark?
Drew Lachey: Back when Hairspray was about to go to Broadway,
[casting director] Bernie Telsey called my manager and said they were having
problems finding a Link Larkin. So I flew to New York, auditioned and worked
with Marc Shaiman. I guess Bernie remembered my audition. He asked me about Rent,
and the role of Mark was a natural fit. I really like his vulnerability. He
tries to have this happy-go-lucky artistic vibe, but he’s really this lost
soul looking for acceptance. Mark’s also been the caregiver for Roger [who has
AIDS] and his nurse and his friend. I have a lot of respect for people who put
their lives on hold to care for people they love.
Q: Since you once were an emergency medical technician, being a
caregiver is probably part of your personality, too.
Lachey: Yeah. Mark has all these layers. It’s a role you can sink your
teeth into. And vocally, Mark was much more in my range than Roger.
Q: How’s it working with Jeremy and the rest of the cast?
Lachey: Jeremy is a gentleman and a scholar. He’s taught me a lot about
the business and made me feel so comfortable. We’ve goofed around and gone out
for beers, and we have good chemistry. Everyone in the cast has been so great to
me: Krystal [Washington], Kelly [Karbacz], Merle [Dandridge], Destan [Owens].
Q: You’re in Rent until March 11, 2005, but Nick and Jessica
came to your first performance on Sept. 10. How’d they react?
Lachey: I was a little nervous, but after the show, Nick was crying. And
so was Jessica. They were so proud of me. They’d never seen Rent, and
they were surprised by how much passion and soul are in the show.
Q: Did you ever dream of being on Broadway?
Lachey: Oh, yeah. I went to SCPA, starting in fifth grade. It was this
vocational school for the arts where you had drama, music, visual arts, creative
writing, dance, the whole gamut. It was like LaGuardia [the school immortalized
in "Fame"], except we didn’t dance on the tables. But I was always
the class clown. Nick went there, and so did Carmen Electra. We did everything
from Oliver! to Annie.
Q: What do you think of Jonathan Larson’s score to Rent?
Lachey: It’s the perfect combination of pop-rock and musical theatre.
The melodies are great, and there’s so much power in the storytelling that he
incorporated into every song. I wish I could’ve met Larson.
Q: Have you seen any other Broadway shows lately?
Lachey: Little Shop of Horrors closed before I could see Joey
Fatone in it, but I caught Hugh Jackman in The Boy From Oz. He was
amazing. And I haven’t seen Avenue Q yet, but I’d love to do that
show. I saw John Tartaglia at the "Broadway on Broadway" concert, and
he made it sound so fun.
Q: What do you enjoy listening to these days?
Lachey: I listen to everything: Nina Simone. Elton John, Billy Joel,
Frank Sinatra, Guns N’ Roses, Metallica, Rush and Maroon 5.
Q: Do you ever wonder how different your life would be if you were
still driving an ambulance?
Lachey: I do think about it. We handled heart attacks and strokes, as
opposed to gunshot wounds. Actually, I saw a couple of gorier things when I was
in 98 Degrees. We’d be driving down the road and there’d be a terrible
accident. Once, a guy in a BMW hit a guardrail, smashed into a tree and was
thrown from the car at 70 mph. Compound fracture, both his legs, ruptured his
pelvis. We pulled the tree off him, and then the car caught on fire. We all had
nightmares for weeks because it was so vivid.
Q: Finally, how’d you meet your lovely wife, Lea?
Lachey: It’s been a fairytale. I met Lea in fifth grade, and we’ve
been together since the 11th grade. We went to the same classes, and our musical
theatre group traveled to Europe, and we did medleys from Fame and Once
on This Island. Lea’s a beautiful girl who’s very loving. When 98
Degrees was getting started, she was our biggest fan. And she became our
choreographer, too. She’s never let me down, and she puts up with me, and
I’m a sarcastic bastard. The first song I wrote, "The Way You Do"
("The way you laugh at what I say/ The way you look at each new day"),
was all about her. When Lea heard it, she cried. She’s amazing! |