[Dixielandjazz] Molly Ringwald interviewed - Jazz Times, April 2013
Robert Ringwald
rsr at ringwald.com
Wed Apr 24 08:14:23 PDT 2013
Molly Ringwald: A Star, Reborn
by Christopher Loudon
Jazz Times, April 2013
Those who know Molly Ringwald only as the teenaged star of Sixteen Candles, Pretty
in Pink and other John Hughes-helmed films are likely unaware that the pert redhead's
post-adolescent career has included a significant amount of musical theatre, including
a Broadway revival of Cabaret. The girl—now 45 and a mother of three—can sing. But
long before she strutted her stuff to "Mein Herr," the former Brat Packer, who recently
debuted with Except... Sometimes, was indelibly connected to jazz.
Born and raised in Northern California, she is the daughter of jazz pianist Bob Ringwald,
noted for his work with the Fulton Street and Great Pacific jazz bands and as a founder
of the Sacramento Traditional Jazz Festival. "Our house was filled with jazz," she
recalls, "and I started singing with my dad at age 3. It was part of my upbringing.
I'd come home from school and spend an hour and a half rehearsing with my dad. It
was special time I got to spend with him, and we've had this really strong jazz connection
ever since."
Though Ringwald says she "never really stopped singing," her rapid rise to screen
stardom in the 1980s meant jettisoning potential plans for a music career. Then,
a little under a decade ago, she "began thinking about getting a group together.
I'd been spoiled working with my father, who knew my voice so well. He would transpose
everything for me and always knew my key. I couldn't imagine having the same synchronicity
with anyone else. Then I met Peter Smith."
It was 2005. Ringwald was headlining a James Lapine-directed production of the non-musical
play Modern Orthodox in New York. Pianist, composer and arranger Smith, then pursuing
both music and acting, was also in the cast. It wasn't until the very end of the
run that the pair discovered their mutual passion for jazz. "I was at the wrap party,"
says Ringwald, "and he sat down at this big Steinway and started to play, and I immediately
said, 'Oh my God, you're the guy I've been looking for.'" At that party, Smith got
to hear her sing for the first time, and was taken by her "incredibly clear, pretty
voice. She's the real deal. She's not the most experienced jazz singer in the world,
but the music is deeply in her and her taste is exquisite."
After the play closed, Smith returned to Los Angeles. Ringwald migrated west three
years later and, she says, "Peter was the first person I called." To work with her,
Smith assembled a first-rate group comprising bassist Trevor Ware, drummer Clayton
Cameron, who'd spent a dozen years with Tony Bennett, and alto saxophonist Allen
Mezquida, an alumnus of Bill Charlap and Peter Smith's bands.
They booked a few club dates in and around L.A., though, as Smith notes, "It was
difficult to casually gig around town and try and find our sea legs, because inevitably
the club owner wanted to shout it from the mountaintop that Molly Ringwald was there."
In 2009, Ringwald added vocals to two tracks on Smith's album Here It Comes. Then,
co-financing the project, and with Smith writing all the arrangements, they recorded
what would become Except... Sometimes over two days in 2010, with Ringwald subsequently
rerecording a few of the vocals. (The album title is borrowed from the poem that
inspired Hoagy Carmichael to write "I Get Along Without You Very Well," one of the
disc's 10 tracks.) "We decided to produce it ourselves," Ringwald explains, "because
I didn't want to go to a record label and have them tell me what to do. Peter and
I were able to do exactly what we wanted." Once the package was complete, Concord
picked it up.
Working through nine standards, Ringwald has the smarts to fully exercise her acting
chops, treating each tune as a miniature character study. Consistently exhibiting
an impressive sense of time (another lesson well learned on stage and screen), she
captures the sultry coquettishness of "Sooner or Later," the bathetic wistfulness
of "Ballad of the Sad Young Men" and the dreamy romanticism of "The Very Thought
of You." Only once does she stray from the Great American Songbook, closing with
a softly balladic reading of "Don't You (Forget About Me)," the Simple Minds chart-topper
featured in 1985's The Breakfast Club. "We recorded the album soon after John Hughes
passed away," she says. "He was very much in my mind, [and] I wanted to pay tribute
to him and connect everything in a way. People don't think of me as a jazz singer,
they think of me as an actress in those movies, and this was a way to bring it all
together."
Adds Smith, "It is a wonderful kind of reclaiming for Molly. She's proud of those
movies, but she's very much locked in with the public to that period. Those films,
and that song, just follow her. It was a chance for her to reclaim the song on her
terms as a jazz singer."
-30-
-Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Amateur (ham) Radio Operator K6YBV
916/ 806-9551
Having more money doesn't make you happier. I have 50 million dollars but I'm just
as happy as when I had 48 million. ~ Arnold Schwarzenegger.
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