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Alysha Umphress                       Alysha  Umphress got it backwards. You’re supposed to appear in Broadway musicals first, then become a gay icon. But Umphress had her gay following  before she ever performed on Broadway. In 2005, still pretty new to New York  City, she won “XL Star,” an American Idol-style singing competition at  the now-closed Chelsea bar XL. Among her prizes: a monthlong engagement at XL  and the cover of gay men’s magazine Next. She then began performing at other gay  bars around town, including Splash, the Duplex, Vlada and Industry, as well as  the Tides and the Ice Palace on Fire Island, and went on to be one of the  original cohosts of the After Party, a weekly late-night show at the Laurie  Beechman Theatre for the theater crowd.

Currently Umphress is playing psychiatry student and  all-around mod gal Paula in the On a Clear Day You Can See Forever  revival, starring Harry Connick Jr.,  at the St. James  Theatre. A year ago she was performing at the same theatre in American  Idiot, the show in which she’d made her Broadway debut in the spring of  2010. For the past few months, while she’s been seen on stage in New York, she has been heard in theatres around the country in the new Bring It  On musical. Umphress sings “Legendary,” a song that plays during the big  cheerleading competition, in Bring It On—a film-to-stage musical scored  by Tony winners Tom Kitt  and Lin-Manuel  Miranda that’s in the midst of an eight-month national  tour. She also does some voiceover work in the show.

Umphress was already a well-regarded nightclub singer in NYC prior to her  Broadway debut in American Idiot. In addition to the gay bars, she’s  performed at such jazz clubs as Birdland and the Iridium and was nominated  several years running for a MAC Award as Best Female Jazz Vocalist. She’s also  been a Nightlife Award nominee in the category of Best Piano Bar  Entertainer.

She admits to being, in her words, “torn between two lovers” as far as jazz  singing and musical theatre are concerned. Jazz has been part of her repertoire  since her voice teacherOn A Clear Day introduced her to Dinah  Washington and Ella Fitzgerald when  she was a teenager. She sang with her high school’s jazz band—a gig that one  year included opening for Diana Krall at the  Fujitsu Jazz Festival in northern California (where Umphress is from)—and later,  as a student at the Boston Conservatory, she audited jazz classes at Boston’s  Berklee School of Music. But compared to theatre, “breaking onto the jazz scene  is even more difficult,” says Umphress, “because nobody buys records anymore,  and nobody makes money from jazz. That’s going to be my labor of love.”

Which is not to say she’s merely settling for musical  theatre. That’s been part of her repertoire even longer—since she was a  6-year-old cast member of Annie at Crazyatrics, a Bay Area troupe (now  named Belasco Theatre Company) in which children perform classic musicals.  Umphress, who was born in Concord, Calif., and grew up in nearby Martinez,  performed throughout her childhood at Crazyatrics and other local theatres, such  as Pittsburg Community, Piedmont Light Opera, Center REP and Willows Theatre.  She did such shows as Once Upon a Mattress, Into the Woods, Hello, Dolly!, Show Boat and The Wizard of Oz. And Annie—three times in all. After two go-rounds as an orphan, she played  Annie the third time (in that first Crazyatrics production, one of Umphress’ castmates was Sara Darneille, now a dresser for On a Clear Day).

Umphress had her first professional job while just a freshman in high school:  the principal role of Sue in Fab!, a musical about 1960s teenagers  (known as A Slice of Saturday Night in the U.K., where it originated)  that was presented at San Francisco’s Alcazar Theatre—next door to The  Phantom of the Opera at the Curran. Her performance as Sue, a plus-size  girl who longs to look like Twiggy, earned Umphress a Bay Area Theatre Critics  Circle award.

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