It was the summer of 2023, and actors were assembling for the very first table read of “The Queen of Versailles,” a new Broadway musical starring Kristin Chenoweth and F. Murray Abraham. The real-life counterpart of Chenoweth’s character had come to sit in, and the star had jitters. Or, as the Southern-inflected Chenoweth puts it, “I was nervous as a whore in church!”
Jackie Siegel, the billionairess subject of the 2012 documentary of the same name, was curious to see what the musical had made of her life. And Chenoweth was determined that Siegel know what she was getting into. “Finally, I just went up to her, because I think the truth sets you free,” she tells Alexa. “I said, ‘Jackie, we’ve been very authentic in telling your story, and some of it’s going to hurt you, and I’m sorry about that.’”
Long story short: Siegel wasn’t upset. In fact, she and Chenoweth became fast friends. But then, it’s hard to imagine anyone being mad at the ridiculously charming Chenoweth, that pixie-esque actor with the massive singing voice. Today, the Emmy- and Tony-winning star is Zooming from her home in New York. She’s got oversized pale-pink glasses perched on her nose and a cozy cardigan draped on her petite shoulders. It’s been a nonstop summer, with “The Queen of Versailles” moving to the St. James Theatre in Manhattan. Opening night is slated for Nov. 9 … though perhaps we shouldn’t have brought that up?
“Don’t even say that to me right now, I will literally die!” swoons Chenoweth, with all the melodrama befitting one of Broadway’s greats. “Versailles” is her second major collaboration with composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz, whose 2003 “Wicked” featured Chenoweth as the original Glinda (the role Ariana Grande went on to portray in last year’s film, in which Chenoweth made a memorable cameo). “Versailles” is a different animal, a musical that was written specifically for Chenoweth.
