
North Carolina Theatre announced this morning that Cybill Shepherd has withdrawn from its upcoming production of Hello, Dolly! after suffering an injury at her residence. [See note below.]
According to Kristin Buie, spokesperson for the Raleigh-based theater company, Shepherd sustained her injury on a staircase last Wednesday morning. She soldiered on through the rest of the day, but on Thursday afternoon, a medical exam revealed that she had sustained a tibial plateau fracture and severe ankle sprain.
The decision to replace her was made Friday afternoon, Buie said. Although there is an understudy for the role, NC Theatre hired Jacquelyn Piro Donovan, who was flown in from the New York area on Saturday. Donovan is a seasoned musical veteran who will be familiar to NC Theatre audiences for her turns in productions of The Music Man (Marian the librarian) and Funny Girl (Fanny Brice).
Hello, Dolly! will be performed as scheduled, from May 7โ14 at Raleighโs Memorial Auditorium.
Two weeks ago, Zack Smith spoke with Cybill Shepherd for a planned story for the May 4 issue of the Independent Weekly. Smithโs story follows. โDavid Fellerath
From her roles in such acclaimed 1970s films as The Last Picture Show, The Heartbreak Kid and Taxi Driver, to half of one of TVโs most beloved couples in the 1980s series Moonlighting, to her recent appearances on The L Word, Cybill Shepherd has never been afraid of reinvention, or speaking her mind. This week, Shepherd begins a run with North Carolina Theatre as the title character in the classic musical Hello Dolly at Raleighโs Memorial Auditorium. We spoke to Shepherd over the phone in Los Angeles to discuss her journey to the stage, memories of Taxi Driver, her relationship with director (and UNC School of the Arts professor) Peter Bogdanovich and more.
INDEPENDENT WEEKLY: What made you want to do Hello, Dolly?
Cybill Shepherd: Iโve been a singer my whole life. I started formal training at 16, sang choir before that, and Iโve done albums and live shows. I always wanted to do a musical comedy, a really great one, and Iโve been offered a lot of things that I didnโt feel like Iโd love to do, because it takes a lot of dedication on my part. You know, you canโt just walk in and do two weeksโ rehearsalโit takes several months. With Dolly, though, every song is just so wonderful.
Itโs a wonderful step for me to get to play Dolly Gallagher Levi and to find my own Dollyโitโs been done by so many great people. I believe itโs a great show, and an uplifting show, and a funny show. Iโm viewing it as a tryoutโif I love it here, maybe Iโll do Dolly somewhere else as well.
Itโs a classic characterโwhat appealed to you most about Dolly?
Itโs a story of a woman who hasnโt felt alive in years. Thereโs a beautiful monologue where Dolly talks about this. I think, being 61 myself, you do have things in your life where you have things happen that make you feel alive again. Itโs about love, and no matter how old we are, love makes us young again. I can relate to that in my life tooโIโve been involved with someone since a year and a half ago.
So it feels very personal to me, this story, and sheโs a survivor as well, an Irish girl married to a Jewish man. That was pretty shocking to people! And she was widowed, and if you look at the time frame when this occurs, 1890s, there was nothing a woman could do! She has to become a master of all trades to keep things together. I relate to that as an actor, because every time I play a different part, Iโve got to learn a different skill.
You just did a new pilot for ABC, My Freakinโ Family, and youโve maintained a presence in different media ranging from film to TV to the theater in recent years. Whatโs been interesting about working in those different formats?
The L Word was a bit of a comeback for me; that got me a lot of new fans. I also did a one-woman show called Curvy Widow that I didnโt write, and that was an experienceโI did it in Atlanta and in San Francisco, and I really loved doing it. So I want to do more theater. Thatโs been my dreamโand part of that was doing a musical comedy.
On the new pilot, itโs a half-hour, and Iโm attracted to half-hours, and more important than that, itโs a comedy. I was thrilledโthis is a very funny pilot, and the cast is brilliant. I love ensemblesโI started with ensembles, with The Last Picture Show.
โฆwhich just had its 40th anniversary, obviouslyโand Peter Bogdanovich is in North Carolina.
I know! Heโs coming to see me! If I wanted to learn how to make a great film, I would find out where Peter Bogdanovich was teaching and sign up for his class. I canโt believe itโs an undergraduate class heโs teachingโhe should be teaching a doctoral program.
I say a prayer every day for Peter, what he has contributed to my life, to the films he made and the films he exposed me to, and to the great, great friendship and great love, which will last forever. Every time I see him, heโs so entertaining.
There was also the recent 35th anniversary of Taxi Driver โฆ
Taxi Driverโฆ my agent at the time got a phone call from Martin Scorsese saying, โDo you have a Cybill Shepherd type?โ and she said, โHow about the real thing?โ I had no lines in the original script, but I knew Scorsese was a brilliant director, and I wanted to be part of this any way I could. I went in and we bonded over our mutual worship of Hitchcock, and I got the part. There was a period of improvisation at the St. Regis Hotel with Marty and Bobby [De Niro], and then Marty rewrote the script, and thatโs how my part came about.
Itโs still a shocking film todayโeven if you see it edited on cable, 35 years old, it has this visceral power to it. What was your reaction when you saw it the first time?
I consider it one of the great performances of my career and one of the greatest movies I ever got to work on, but when I first saw it, I was very sensitive to violence in films. When it started to get violent, I had to leave the theater. It was the most terrifying thing Iโd ever seen! I had to miss the last scene, and Iโm in that.
De Niro and Scorsese have been talking about a sequel for years now. Would you want to appear in it?
Of course I would! Iโd love to be a part of that.
You had a lot of conflicts with Chuck Lorre while working on Cybill, which heโs publicly commented on many times, notably in his production company cards and in an episode of CSI he guest-wrote. Itโs topical again because of the conflict heโs had with Charlie Sheen, and Iโm curious if you have any commentary on that.
Ohhh, yeah. [laughs] Boy, did we have conflict. He created the show, and he did a brilliant job, and when it didnโt work between us, he did it brilliantly. Iโve never really said anything bad about him, and itโs very hurtful to have him say the things he said.
When you got into film, it was the 1970s, which is now looked at as a milestone decade for the medium, and when you did TV, it was the 1980s, which is similarly looked at as a groundbreaking period in that medium. What do you feel is emerging as the great entertainment media of right now, or what was particularly unique about your past experiences?
Well, Iโll have to refer to the Cybill show as the 1990s, and it was on television at a time when major networks had five to seven shows where a woman in her 40s or older were at the center of the story. And then it was like women disappeared! Theyโre back now, if you look at the number of series with women over 40 at the center. And weโre seeing a comeback for multi-camera sitcoms as well.
Out of everything youโve done in your career, what do you feel was the most underrated project?
Itโs one thatโs gotten a reputation through YouTube clipsโAt Long Last Love, which is also on Netflix streaming now. They didnโt appreciate me in thatโthey said I couldnโt walk or talk, let alone sing. But thereโs a new review of it that says, โThis is really worth watching.โ Itโs never been on any form you could watch at home, and now itโs available.
We were singing liveโPeter (Bogdanovich) was doing this in the tradition of Ernst Lubitsch, like The Love Parade or The Merry Widow. They donโt teach those in film schools any moreโbut I went to a different film school than anyone else, eight years with Peter Bogdanovich, three movies a night. At Long Last Love didnโt make sense until people realized that was what was going on, that homage to Lubitsch.
Iโm glad itโs been released in a format where people can get it. Iโm having a whole revival on Netflix Instant. [Laughs] Iโve lived long enough to see stuff come back around.
[Corrected at 2:40 p.m.: This post originally stated that the injury occurred during a rehearsal.]



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