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This may be basic, but Idina Menzel will always be Maureen Johnson to me. I was there in the beginning! However, most (non-Broadway) people had no idea who Idina was until her turn as Elsa in Frozen. Frozen put her on parents’ radar. And anyone who didn’t know who she was from hearing “Let It Go” playing everywhere became familiar with her after John Travolta’s whole “Adele Dazeem” intro mess at the Oscars. Because Idina had been kicking it around Broadway and Hollywood for years before she became a household name, she’s always recognized and appreciated just what Frozen has given to her.
On her new disco album: Broadway and Disney legend Idina Menzel is sitting onstage at Los Angeles’s Grammy Museum, chatting with Yahoo Entertainment music editor Lyndsey Parker about her cleverly titled new disco album, Drama Queen. The record is packed with bangers, not her usual ballads (“Hey, I can do ballads till I’m 90 — I’m going to be doing ‘Defying Gravity’ and ‘Let It Go’ when I’m in Vegas, when I’m in the B-lounge and nobody’s hiring me,” she quips), but it is not a total departure for Menzel. After all, the You Are So Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah star got her start covering hits by “amazing, huge, dynamic, big-personality” disco divas like Donna Summer and Gloria Gaynor at actual bat mitzvahs, and she remembers those pre-Rent/Wicked days fondly, as “a great stomping ground for me to learn all kinds of genres of music, to practice while nobody was listening and make mistakes.”
Not giving an F: But now Menzel is really letting it go, so to speak. After years of trying to cross over to pop with only modest chart success, she’s finally “made the album I really wanted to make — for me, not caring about what a lot of people in the industry thought I should be doing, not overly strategizing and not overly thinking about it… just really not giving a f***, honestly!”
She’s an East Coast Gal: Menzel stops herself and chucklingly apologizes for her F-bomb, aware that several tweens — who of course mainly know and love her as Frozen’s Elsa — are sitting in the Grammy Museum’s Clive Davis Theater audience. She admits, “When you’re a Disney queen… it does cause problems for me, being a 52-year-old woman who finds my husband really hot and likes to have a drink once in a while and not just talk to 12-year-old girls. … So, sometimes I have to curse! I have to let it out. I mean, I’m an East Coast girl. It’s really f***ing hard to be a role model.”
Frozen was one of her proudest moments: Menzel knows such concerns are “champagne problems,” and stresses that Frozen has been “the greatest thing that’s ever happened to me. I was a little girl that dreamt of this from the time I was 6 years old, and my dreams have come true. … I love performing and I couldn’t have even imagined all of these things. And to be able to connect with young people, especially since I’m a mom, to be able to see it from all sides of the spectrum, is just the greatest gift. But yes, if you’re singing about empowering little kids and you’re 52 and you can’t get up in the morning sometimes, there’s a little hypocrisy there. You’re forced to have these songs or scenes or things that make you better, walk the walk, talk the talk — or at least be a really good actress. It is hard to be a role model sometimes. But [“Let It Go”] is actually one of my proudest, proudest moments.”
That disastrous NYE performance: Menzel still ruefully remembers that time when she “completely botched notes” during her 2015 New Year’s Eve performance of “Let It Go,” when she sang the Oscar-winning Frozen smash in Times Square’s freezing elements and was bashed on the platform then known as Twitter. “Deciding not to lip-sync, to sing a song in its original key with little hand-warmers and extra layers so that I can sing at midnight. Zero-degree weather. And then I hit the last note and sounded like Bruce Springsteen or something,” she laughs.
Like most theater people, Idina has always struck me as someone who is a “performer” first and foremost. My family is from Idina’s hometown (which is also Natalie Portman’s, Judd Apatow’s, Crooked Media’s Jon Lovett’s, and Idina’s Rent co-star Adam Pascal’s hometown), so I actually completely get what she means when she says it’s “really f—cking hard to be a role model.” We grew up with a certain mentality and sometimes have a tough time turning the “TMI-swear-heavy-honesty” off and being more kid or tween friendly. But, Idina is right. Frozen opened so many doors to her that probably weren’t open beforehand.
Also, I’m not sure if this is a humble brag or not but I do have an Idina-on-Broadway story: Back on January 7, 2005, my friend and I took advantage of a NY snowstorm and got these really awesome, cheapish orchestra seats to see Wicked from the TKTS booth, which ended up being Idina’s last performance before she fell thru the trap door the next day. We didn’t get to meet her outside the stage door that night but we did meet Joey McIntyre. I’ve always wanted to see her on Broadway again, though. I bet she’s got dreams of playing Mama Rose in Gypsy, but I’ve always pictured her playing of the female leads in Chess, like fellow Broadway stars/Disney princesses (my all-time favorite) Lea Salonga and Jodi Benson. Idina really rocks those female duets.
Idina and Yahoo’s Lyndsey Parker, who conducted this interview
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Chess is my favorite musical ever. I still dream that they will stage it properly someday.
Love Idina. Who is her hot husband? I haven’t seen any gossip about her love life since she and Taye Diggs split.
I read a NYT article about her ages ago and all the racist hate she received when she was in Wicked because she was married to Taye Diggs and she was so brave and graceful about it, I’ve really liked her ever since and felt parasocially protective of her. My young daughters are super into Broadway now bc Elsa is also Elphaba and it opened their world to Broadway. As far as I’m concerned, she’s a class act.
Idina’s hot husband is Aaron Lohr! He had a small role in the film version of Rent and was a performer (film, stage, tv) for many years before retiring. I, however, know and love him best as the singing voice of Max Goof in The Goofy Movie, which is one of my favorite 90s Disney movies. (I discovered this on a wiki deep dive the other day that started with the TV show Step by Step and ended, somewhat improbably, with Aaron Lohr and Idina Menzel). Anyway, I think it is really funny that Max Goof ended up with Queen Elsa.
Check her out in the 2008 Chess in Concert videos on youtube. She is every bit as amazing as you want her to be.
Chess happens to be one of my favorite musicals and she’s fantastic in the 2008 Chess in Concert.
Was just about to add you can get this on DVD, not sure if it streams anywhere…it’s very good!
I saw Rent with the original Broadway cast in 1997and they were so great.
I saw the full original cast of Wicked in spring 2004 and it was one of the most special moments of my life — I was 18 and wept and wept for it all. They are truly special performers. It’s so thrilling to see Kristin and Idina thriving!!
Frozen is the greatest thing that has ever happened to my 4 year old daughter too so they have that in common.
My knowledge of her started with being the lucky duck that Taye Diggs used to go home to every night.