(© Eric Ryan Anderson, Matt Murphy)
Right now, Lindsay Mendez could be found in the dictionary under “U” for ubiquitous, but that’s no problem for the talented actress or her many fans. She will be at Joe’s Pub on Wednesday, May 15 for two special concerts to help celebrate the CD of the Off-Broadway musical Dogfight; on Saturday, May 18 she and pianist Marco Paguia will be on stage at Le Poisson Rouge to preview their soon-to-be-released CD, This Time; on Sunday, May 19 she’ll be at the Drama Desk Awards, where she is nominated as Outstanding Actress in a Musical for her work in Dogfight; and on Tuesday, May 28 she joins the Broadway company of Wicked in the leading role of Elphaba. “There’s no way I could have expected all of this to go down at the same time,” says Mendez with a laugh. “It’s a lot, but I’m ready!”
The actress is equally excited about the Dogfight CD (with an in-store release set for May 21), as well as a Drama Desk nomination for her portrayal of Rose, a young waitress in 1960s San Francisco who ends up on a date with a visiting soldier as the result of a cruel contest to find the ugliest girl in town. “When I first read the script, I immediately related to Rose. I am not a beauty queen and I was not the popular girl in high school,” she says. “But rehearsals were hard. Being called ugly every day is not easy on the psyche. But we’ve all been that person, who wants to believe the best about themselves as well as other people, and I wanted to be her enough to go through that process. I think it’s important to play real people.”

(© Joan Marcus)
Mantello is also the director of Wicked and he is one of the main reasons she is finally getting her chance to step into Elphaba’s pointy shoes. “I’m ready to step into the green haze,” says Mendez. “Joe has already told me to buy green sheets, green pillowcases, and green sheets. I hear the makeup really gets under your skin.”
(© courtesy of Lindsay Mendez and Marco Paguia)
However, Mendez mostly credits composer Stephen Schwartz with affording her the Wicked opportunity. “I did Godspell on Broadway with Stephen, and from what I hear, he’s the one who really wanted me to do Elphaba. I have to admit it wasn’t on my wish list, but now that I’m in rehearsals, I realize it’s a really great part. It’s a tough show to do eight times a week, and everybody keeps asking me if I’m going to be OK. But I felt that way about both Dogfight and Godspell. You can’t think about the fear; you just have to allow yourself to go on that ride and become that character. And at the end of the day, I’m an eight-shows-a-week kind of girl.”
Unlike her previous roles, Elphaba also carries a unique responsibility to the show’s ardent young fans, who traditionally line up after every show to meet the cast. “I’m ready for all the girls at the stage door. When I was younger, I used to wait to get autographs,” says Mendez. “It’s part of the job. But more than that, it’s cool that we’re inspiring people [who are] that young to love theater. I think that’s super important. Otherwise, we won’t have jobs in the future.”