Quantcast

Sandra Marvin at the press launch at the Lowry
Sandra Marvin at the press launch at the Lowry

Sandra Marvin On ... going back to Hairspray

Date: 10 December 2012

Sandra Marvin is no stranger to the role of Motormouth Mabelle in the hit musical Hairspray as she has played her before in the West End. With the show returning on tour next year, launching in Salford - we caught up with her to find out why she refuses to stop the beat.



Tell us a bit about your character.
I play Motormouth Maybelle. She runs a record shop in Baltimore, which in the pinnacle place where all the cool kids go and hang out. I also appear once a month of the main TV station on a show which they call negro day, basically dropping all the hits that everyone needs to get down to. She’s motherly, she’s funky, she’s fun and she’s a confident lady.

You have played the part before, what drew you back to the production?
I love it, it’s a lovely role. The show itself has amazing songs, the energy and joy that radiates from the show is genuine and you can’t help but feel it. It’s contagious, it’s from the cast members, we get moved by it and it does go out to the audience members, which is why they jump up at the end and they are dancing, it comes out. It’s not a fake thing, with people wondering whether they should stand up, everyone just wants to get up and join in. It’s so nice today to have something that they can genuinely, excuse the pun, let their hair down and just enjoy themselves. It’s a brilliant night out and everyone is always saying about the message, there is a strong message in the show and the show also has a heart, it’s a lovely story, it’s still current.

Is there anything that you want to bring to the role this time round?
Yes the character is fearless, her fearlessness and her strength, the love that she has, she’s a very loving character. Everything that she has comes from love, how much love she has for herself, for her children, for her community. She tries to teach that to other people as well.

What is your favourite song in the show and why?
There are two actually. I love "Welcome to the 60’s" because it is so colourful and fun and glamorous, the Dynamites when they come out, I would remember seeing performances when the Dynamites would sing at the end and the audience would be like woah at the end, the glamour of "Welcome to the 60’s". Then I also love "Run and tell that!" because throughout the show everything is tailored , it’s a different sound, up until that moment Run and tell that! when the doors are opened to the black community, you’ve seen them in the school gym, you’ve seen them in detention, but this is the first time you see them in their home place and the music is amazing. All the songs anyway are very much 60’s / 70’s soul and motown tracks, but that song takes off for me. It really takes off, I really like that song.

Why do you think the show is so successful?
Because it’s relevant, and if I say it’s honest, I mean it makes people feel for the characters, people understand Edna and follow her transition, they follow Tracy’s transition and they want these characters to do well, they’re routing for them. The way the books been written, the way the music has been written you really care about those characters and I think that’s why, 1) because you really care about them and 2) it brings that much joy to people.

What are you looking forward to the most about touring?
I love going to the different cities and bringing it to the different cities and seeing how different audiences react. Different jokes land in different places, they all laugh at different things. It’s quite a surprise sometimes you’ll say something and people will absolutely burst out laughing in one place and somewhere else they will laugh at something completely different.

Do you find it hard touring around different places?
As long as I can keep coming back home, I’m quite a home girl, so I need to go home now and then, but apart from that, no it’s fine. With touring as well you are such a family, it becomes such a close knit thing and you become reliant on each other because you wake up and you are somewhere different, so those people becomes the same people you see every day, like when you are in London you are doing your own thing with your own people during the day and then you see them at work, but work is your whole life when you are on tour.

If you could play any other character apart from your own in the show, who would it be?
VELMA! I love her, I love her drama, I love that she’s camp, I love Velma - I find her hilarious, I haven’t actually played a baddie before.

Is that something you would like to do?
Yeah possibly! Yeah, I would actually! I can’t see them possibly ever offering me Velma, for obvious reasons but I’d love that character.

Sandra Marvin was speaking to Kathryn Phillips.


Hairspray is at the Lowry from 11 - 23 February, 2013.
 

Related Content

Internal Links
Hairspray promises to hold on to its appeal at the Lowry - 21st Oct 2012 Blog
X Factor's Marcus Collins joins touring cast of Hairspray - 12th Oct 2012 News
Hairspray (Tour – Liverpool) starstarstarstarstar - 19th Aug 2010 Reviews
Michael Starke All Set for Edna in Hairspray - 29th Jul 2010 News
Hairspray starstarstarstarstar - 16th Jul 2010 Reviews



Write a Comment
Give us your opinion on this entry
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

Free Newsletter

Subscribe to our free newsletter


Featured Video

Twitter

Featured Editor's Picks

Infographic: The economic impact of Arts & Culture in the UK
When Culture Secretary Maria Miller called for the arts to make their "economic case" for subsidy, t...

Live Tweeting: West End Eurovision 2013
West End Eurovision 2013 takes place tonight (23 May 2013) from 11.30pm at the West End's Dominion...

Robert Sean Leonard as Atticus FinchRobert Sean Leonard: 'I carry the ghost of Gregory Peck on my shoulders'
Actor Robert Sean Leonard is currently playing Atticus Finch in Timothy Sheader's production of To K...

Robert Sean Leonard & Eleanor Worthing-CoxTo Kill A Mockingbird
starstarstarstar
Twenty years ago, a young Robert Sean Leonard appeared on the London stage with Alan Alda in...

West End Live in actionWest End Live returns to Trafalgar Square next month
West End Live, a weekend of free entertainment from top London shows, will return to Trafalgar Squar...

Robert Sean Leonard. Photo: Dan Wooller1st Night Photos: Robert Sean Leonard leaves House for the Open Air
Timothy Sheader's production of To Kill A Mockingbird opened at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre last ...

Disgraced
starstarstarstar
The timing of this UK premiere of Ayad Akhtar's Disgraced is eerily apposite in light of yesterd...

X Factor musical titled I Can't Sing!, opens Palladium March 2014
The forthcoming X Factor musical will be called I Can't Sing! The Musical and will premiere at the L...

Oscar winner: Clint EastwoodClint Eastwood on board to direct Jersey Boys film?
Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood has reportedly been signed up to direct the film version of Jersey B...

Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus
The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...
>> More Editor's Picks
>> Most Recent Stories
>> Most Popular Stories

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube