Jan.2, 2005 - Jan.9, 2005
Another Four Hands
Dykstra and Greenblatt are touring by the piano bench again
By Sarah B. Hood

Originally Published: 2003-09-14

Can't act. Can't sing. Can dance a little." Legend has it that these were the notes on Fred Astaire's original screen test. Multitalented Toronto performer Ted Dykstra similarly underrates his own music theatre abilities, probably very much to the surprise of anyone who's ever seen him on stage.
"I think there is such a thing as a musical theatre performer, who can dance, and who has a legitimate tenor voice. I don't have any of those things," Dykstra claims self-deprecatingly. "I'm an actor first, who can sing and who can't dance to save his life."
He admits, at least, that "I've been able to use my musicality in different ways," an understatement. Some of his performance credits include the role of Jerry Lee Lewis in Fire, Cousin Kevin in Tommy and the title role in Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Later this season he'll be directing the intriguingly named Tequila Vampire Matinee, loosely based on Pagliacci, at Theatre Passe Muraille. But before that, he and his costar Richard Greenblatt are just about to remount their sensationally successful two-man show Two Pianos, Four Hands, which has literally toured the world over the past few years.
The two original stars haven't played the parts they created since a run in London's West End about four years ago. Instead, says Dykstra, "I've directed it across the States and in Australia."
Is it strange to see other actors playing these semi-autobiographical roles? No, says Dykstra. "Although the character has my name, I don't think of it as me. It's odd only because Richard and I are the definitive version and we really play to our strengths."
The success of the show has changed his life, he says, allowing him to choose the projects he really wants to work on and to spend more time with his family. Some of the projects he has accepted include work on a screenplay and a new musical commissioned by the Mirvishes and a part in Shattered City, a movie about the Halifax Explosion starring Graham Greene and Peter Postlethwaite, which airs later this fall on CBC.

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