AARP Hearing Center
Idina Menzel, 53, is a Tony award–winning Broadway star, but she admits that she battles self-doubt and performance anxiety. As she prepares to hit the road on a musical tour, she told AARP, “I confide in my husband [Aaron Lohr] who’s my best friend, about all insecurities and neuroses, because I start to think, Oh, I don’t know, what am I offering the audience? And I don’t know, my voice isn’t as good anymore. And he says, ‘You do this every single time that you’re starting a new project.’ ” Her “Take Me or Leave Me” tour, kicking off July 19, will feature fan favorites from Wicked and Rent, plus newer songs from her recent dance album, Drama Queen. In our interview, she explains how she’s curating the new material, the challenges of parenting a teenager while on tour and how she’s coming to terms with the aging process.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
How do you start conceptualizing a tour?
I start imagining and thinking about new songs and talking to my music director about arrangements and thinking about the band and what kind of instrumentation I want to have. A lot of dreaming about things. And also what I want to divulge — what kind of stories I want to tell that underscore the music.
How do you prepare for the challenges of a solo concert?
I prepare vocally. I’m pretty regimented about that. I build up to being able to be on stage for two hours and sing 20 songs and have fun with it and not feel exhausted vocally and physically. I have a coach I’ve had for over 30 years. I start to look at all the music with her and any of the pitfalls or parts of the songs that are more challenging and can tire me out if I don’t think about them technically right.
How do you juggle touring and parenthood? [Menzel has a 14-year-old son, Walker Nathaniel, with ex-husband, actor Taye Diggs, 53.]
Each tour is a different stage of my son’s life. In the beginning, I had a little baby on the road and I was breastfeeding, and two years from that, I had a toddler and I was fitting in children’s museums and the proper park to coincide with the city. Now he’s a teenager and probably just wants to bring a friend or two on the bus because that’s cool to be on a tour bus. I have to figure in: How often can I run home in between shows so I can make a basketball game or a parent-teacher conference or something? So that juggling has a lot to do with it.
You Might Also Like
Chef Andrew Zimmern Offers Fresh Takes on Fishing
PBS show ‘Hope in the Water’ features innovative aqua farmers working to feed the planetEva Longoria’s New Bilingual Series Offers a Stunning Escape
Apple TV+’s ‘Land of Women’ highlights intergenerational relationshipsAndrew McCarthy Talks Brat Pack Documentary ‘Brats’
The actor reflects on why he didn’t like that nickname and how he went from being rejected for ‘Pretty in Pink’ to being cast
More Celebrity Interviews
Read exclusive Q&As with the biggest names in movies, music and television, best-selling authors and other high-profile personalities
Recommended for You