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Audra McDonald honored by MIT

Actress/singer took part in on-stage interview

Susan Saccoccia

A recipient of NEA Arts Journalism fellowships in dance, theater and music, Susan reviews visual and performing arts in the U.S. and overseas.

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Audra McDonald honored by MIT
Audra McDonald (Photo: Autumn DeWilde)

“If something scares me, I have to do it,” says renowned actress and singer Audra McDonald in a short video that preceded her on-stage interview on Saturday at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which has chosen McDonald as the recipient of its 2018 Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts.

The video included a glimpse at McDonald’s chill-inducing rendering of Billie Holiday in “Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill” as she channeled the late jazz singer’s voice and anguished facial and body language.

After the video ended, McDonald entered the 300-seat lecture hall accompanied by her friend and fellow conversationalist Oskar Eustis, artistic director of the Public Theater in New York, whose award-winning productions include the world premiere of “Hamilton.”

Sleek in a black sheath with billowing white-trimmed sleeves, McDonald took a seat next to Eustis, a burly man with a leonine mane, attired in a black suit with a red bow tie.

MIT Associate Provost Philip S. Khoury spoke first, congratulating McDonald and describing her as “a serial award winner” who embodies the values of MIT: risk taking, versatility, and creativity across disciplines.

Then Eustis launched a low-key but penetrating interview with McDonald, who is known for the stirring emotional truth of her performances as well as her unaffected warmth and naturalness both on the concert stage and in conversation. Eustis guided the actress through a closer look at the resources she brings to her award-winning performances and multifaceted life.

The recipient of six Tony Awards, more than any other actor, McDonald, 47, has amassed a host of honors that also include two Grammy Awards, an Emmy Award and a 2015 National Medal of Arts from President Barack Obama. While performing lead roles in musical theater and drama productions, McDonald also maintains a major career as a concert artist and is currently on a North American concert tour that included her Friday night Celebrity Series concert in Symphony Hall. McDonald has often said that her favorite pursuits are offstage, as an advocate for equal rights and homeless youth, the wife of actor Will Swenson, and mother of four children, including a 17-month old girl.

Concise and to the point from the start, Eustis began by saying, “Let’s get the formalities out of the way, Audra. You are the greatest singing actress in the history of the world.”

After audience laughter subsided, he asked, “How do you do it?”

“I was a terrible student,” McDonald replied, “but I’m good at researching my roles. I researched Billie Holiday into oblivion.” She read every book, listened to every audio interview, talked with recovered heroin addicts and their doctors and any people she could find who had known Holiday. “People came backstage after performances and told stories,” said McDonald. “One woman picked up Holiday for shows in her father’s club. They always stopped to get a bottle of gin. It was half full at the end of a 20-minute ride.”

But the turning point, said McDonald, was when she recognized that Holiday spoke in the same cadence as her paternal grandmother, whose voice she had ceaselessly imitated as a child. “She spoke like Nana. That’s how I found Billie.”

She also discovered how much Holiday wanted children. “She tried adopting twice and understandably, was turned down,” said McDonald. “This was a key to understanding the bottom of her sadness.”

Preparing to play another tormented character, Bess, in “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess,” McDonald said, “I went back to the original novel. Bess had a huge scar on her face. I wanted to find out what life was like for an African-American woman at that time. I visited Catfish Row in Charlestown, and the cabin in which Gershwin wrote the musical.”

Resisting the production’s initial attempt to allow Bess a happy ending after she finds love with street beggar Porgy, McDonald’s Beth does not escape the clutches of Sportin’ Life, her drug dealer. She and Eustis noted that in his critique of the 1959 movie, author James Baldwin observed that Billie Holiday should have played Bess.

As Julie in the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, “Carousel,” McDonald expressed the anger and resignation in her character, whose husband beats her.

“She still loves the man, but can’t figure out why,” said McDonald.

She and Eustis agreed that truth-telling is the source of a play’s power, whether it is a tragedy or comedy.

“The Greeks got it right,” McDonald said. “By understanding ourselves, we get to catharsis.”

Eustis closed the 45-minute conversation by asking McDonald, “What do you want to do next? What scares you now?”

“I want to keep evolving as an artist and as a person,” said McDonald. “We need to make good use of the time we’re given. I’m grateful for my success. I want to keep growing as an artist, wife and mother and citizen of the world. Maybe I’ll run for office.” Whether she was joking or not, the audience roared in approval.