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Jenn Colella

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Jenn Colella
New York City, January 2022
Education
Occupation(s)Singer, actor
Years active1999–present

Jennifer Lin Colella[1] is an American actress and singer. She is best known for her work in musical theatre.

She received a Tony Award nomination and won the Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, and three regional theater awards for her portrayal of Annette/Beverley Bass in Come from Away. She reprised her roles in the 2021 filmed recording of the musical.

Colella was in the original Broadway casts of Urban Cowboy, High Fidelity (2006), Chaplin: The Musical (2012), and If/Then (2014), and Off-Broadway original productions of Slut (2005) and Lucky Guy (2011). Her Off-Broadway work includes the title character in the Beebo Brinker Chronicles (2008), Closer Than Ever (2012), and a staged reading of Twelve Angry Men (2018) with an all-female cast. Colella received a Grammy Award in January 2018 for featuring on the Dear Evan Hansen original cast album.

In 2008, Colella performed in abridged versions of Girl Crazy and Side Show, two of the parts of Broadway: Three Generations at the Kennedy Center. The production celebrated the reopening of the renovated Eisenhower Theater. She also appeared in The Full Monty (2009) at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey, and the American premiere of Take Flight (2010), her first pilot role, at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey.

Colella has performed in over a half-dozen world premiere musicals in the United States, including three at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego. She has appeared in four productions of Peter Pan. Additionally, she has been in multiple productions at the New York Musical Theatre Festival.

Colella has also done some television work; she appeared on the game show Can You Tell? in 2003 and An Evening with Lerner and Loewe, the initial Broadway in Concert Series installment on PBS in 2022.

Early life

[edit]

Colella was born to Lindy Crawford and Mick Colella, and grew up in Summerville, South Carolina[2] Starting at eight, she sang in church and school concert and show choirs, which were where she learned to harmonize. In church, she also played handbells.[3] She refers to herself as a choir nerd.[4] Her mother has said of the eight year old, singing as an auctioneer in a school play, "She took the microphone in her hand, looked right at the audience, and this voice came out." People wondered where all the sound came from.[5]

A local woman gave theatre lessons in her garage, and to earn money to take the classes, Colella did odd jobs about the woman's house, including painting the exterior. Her first role was Gertie in Oklahoma!.[6] In seventh grade, she had a hunter education class,[7] which she says helped make it comfortable to handle guns when she performed in Annie Get Your Gun. When, as part of a school group, she saw Phantom of the Opera in New York, she decided that she was going to be on stage.[8]

While an undergraduate at Columbia College, she played basketball, tennis and flag football. During her senior year, she quarterbacked.[7] She graduated in 1996 with a dual degree in speech and drama. Her family had moved to Hilton Head Island and had a golf store there. While working at the shop one summer during college, she taught herself to juggle.[9] She stayed in the area for three years and worked at an insurance company call center.[10] In April 1997, she attended a Comet Carnival in Aiken, SC to observe Comet Hale–Bopp through a telescope.[11] From 1997 to 1999 she was a member of The Sol Divers (initially The Gib Cats) rock 'n' roll band.[12][13]

Colella served as a company member of the Trustus Theatre beginning in her senior year.[14] At Trustus, starting in the fall of 1995 and running through the spring of 1999, she played Kitty in Taking Steps,[15] The Angel in Angels in America (both parts),[16] the title role in Sylvia (twice),[17] Launcelot Gobbo in The Merchant of Venice,[18] Amy in Company,[19] Marta in Kiss of the Spider Woman,[20] Teenage Greek Chorus in How I Learned to Drive,[21] and Vivian in Free Will and Wanton Lust.[22]

Colella went on to attend the University of California, Irvine, where she earned a Master of Fine Arts in Acting in 2002.[23] While at UCI, she played Miss Jane in Floyd Collins, Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Caterpillar in Alice in Wonderland, Princess Ninetta in The Love of Three Oranges, and Victoria Grant in Victor/Victoria [24] at the Barclay Theatre.[25] In 2000 and 2001, she did summer stock at the Santa Rosa Summer Repertory Theatre, playing Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz,[26] Peter in Peter Pan, and Val in A Chorus Line.[27][28]

Career

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Theatre

[edit]

As a UCI graduate, Colella participated in a showcase in New York, along with NYU and Yale, and auditioned for a part.[29] After going back to California for a few months, she got a call to come back to New York to audition for Sissy in the original production of Urban Cowboy, and was cast in her Broadway debut role. She had not yet gotten her Equity card.[30] The world premiere was at the Coconut Grove Playhouse, in Miami, Florida.[31] Then it moved to the Broadhurst Theatre for its seven and a half week New York run.[32] When the show closed, she returned to California and co-hosted a game show.[citation needed]

Her Off-Broadway original cast credits include a six-week run as Delia in Slut in 2005,[33] two weeks in 2011 as Chicky Lay in Lucky Guy at the Little Shubert Theater,[34] and a seven week long engagement in the 2022 world premiere of Suffs at the Public Theater.[35] Colella's Off-Broadway work also includes the butch title character in the Beebo Brinker Chronicles for seven weeks in early 2008,[36] a four-week review, Closer Than Ever, during the summer of 2012,[37] and a single performance, all-female cast staged reading of Twelve Angry Men in September 2018.[38]

After being in the original staged reading in Connecticut in 2006,[39] she appeared in Kiki Baby, as an "utterly believable"[40] four year old singer "you will fall in love with,"[41] who becomes a celebrity—and a spoiled brat. This titular characterization won Colella a 2011 NYMF Award for Outstanding Individual Performance.[42] Other New York Musical Theatre Festival appearances include The Great American Trailer Park Musical in 2004[43] and 2009's All Fall Down.[44] In 2006 she starred in the world premiere of Twyla Tharp's The Times They Are A-Changin' at the Old Globe Theatre.[45] An additional role was as Laura in High Fidelity. Colella played the world premiere in Boston in October 2006,[46] and the original Broadway production in December of that year.[47]

For her New York debut in Urban Cowboy, she earned a 2003 Outer Critics Circle Award nomination.

In Fall 2010, she also originated the role of Hedda Hopper in the world premiere of Limelight: The Story of Charlie Chaplin at the La Jolla Playhouse.[48] It was renamed Chaplin: The Musical and she performed the role on Broadway from September 2012 to January 2013.[49][9]

After the December 2013 world premiere run at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C.,[50] in March 2014, she started a year-long appearance in If/Then at the Richard Rodgers Theatre. Colella played Anne, a woman in a same-sex relationship with Kate.[51] She had worked with the Kate role through development, but it was decided to cast LaChanze for the part. The role of Anne was then written in for her.[52]

Among original Broadway productions, her longest run, starting in March 2017, was two and a half years in Come from Away. In the summer of 2015 Colella originated the role of Annette/Beverley Bass in the La Jolla Playhouse's world premiere production,[53] which transferred later in the year to the Seattle Repertory Theatre.[54] It then played Washington D.C. at Ford's Theatre,[55] a concert presentation in Gander, Newfoundland,[56] and at the Royal Alex in Toronto in 2016[57] before transferring to Broadway at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre.[58] The show received positive reviews and she was nominated for a Tony Award, along with winning both a Drama Desk Award and an Outer Critics Circle Award for her performance. After three years of performing the role over a 4+12 year span, she left the production on November 10, 2019.[59] During the summer of 2022, she returned as a replacement for seven weeks.[60] She also returned for the final weeks of the production, in late September 2022, and performed in the last Broadway showing on October 2, 2022, to a sold out crowd.[61]

New York City, December 2012

Regional theatre

[edit]

Colella has had multiple regional theater appearances. In addition to those listed above that moved on to New York, they have included her favorite role, Peter Pan,[62] which she has done four times. Along with the 2001 California summer stock appearance, she has been cast in 2008 at the Sondheim Center in Fairfield, IA,[63] the Music Circus in Sacramento, CA in 2015,[64] and a 2019 Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera in Pennsylvania.[65]

Also in Pittsburgh, she played Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun in 2008.[66] In 2009 she appeared, along with Elaine Stritch, in Paper Mill Playhouse's The Full Monty in Millburn, NJ.[67] 2010 found her in Princeton, NJ at the McCarter Theatre in the American premiere of Take Flight as aviator Amelia Earhart.[68] Another world premiere occurred in December 2003 for Madison Repertory in Wisconsin as Jenny in Heartland: The Musical,[69] followed by a January 2004 appearance in the show for the Broadway Contemporary Series in Dallas, TX.[70]

Comedy, film, and television

[edit]

In the hopes of breaking into television, Colella began her career as a comedian as a way to get noticed. That, as well as the rock band, helped build her on stage confidence. She started doing observational humor stand-up in Southern California while pursuing her MFA. During that time, she performed in places such as the Laugh Factory and The Comedy Store in Hollywood. She has said that success and failure are equally valuable instructors.[71][28]

She had her television debut in 2003 co-hosting the game show Can You Tell? with Tony Rock on Oxygen.[72] Her next appearance was on the ABC series Cashmere Mafia, where she was in a same-sex relationship and discussed their starting a family. That show aired January 2008, six weeks before she opened in Beebo Brinker. Since then she has guest starred in several other television shows. In 2019, the year she left Come From Away, there were three for CBS, The Code, Madam Secretary, and Evil. Colella was also part of the PBS Tribute to Stephen Sondheim with the New York Philharmonic at Lincoln Center in 2010,[73] and the initial Broadway in Concert: An Evening with Lerner and Loewe, again for PBS, in March 2022.[74]

Her film credits are found in Uncertainty, Lay It Down for Good, the live filmed version of Come From Away,[75] and Chocolate Milk.[76]

Additional work

[edit]

Colella has performed for online web shows. These include 2012's Pzazz 101 in the "Jenn Colella" episode and Hedda's Headlines: Backstage at 'Chaplin' with Jenn Colella where she reported from backstage over eight episodes of the Broadway.com Series. In 2014 she played Sarah Jeffreys in Submissions Only for two episodes titled "Chapter 2" and "Reason to Stay." 2017 saw her in another Broadway.com series over the eight episodes of Welcome to the Rock: Backstage at COME FROM AWAY with Jenn Colella. In 2021 she played Jo in all eight episodes of The Flame: A Podcast Musical.[77]

In between other appearances, she teaches master classes,[78][79] has a cabaret act,[80] and does benefit performances.[81][82] She sang the National Anthem at a New York Yankees game in October 2021.[83] Colella has also co-written a song with Tom Kitt that was included in his album Reflect: Tom Kitt & The Collective.[84][85]

Process

[edit]

When Colella works on a project, she says she treats it as a hit and believes in it completely. But whether it is a hit is not the point, for her as an actor, it is to do her best work for as long as the show runs. She believes actors get hired not only because of talent, but because of their energy. She feels the energy that an actor brings into the room must be practiced throughout the day, working toward the foundation of present moment awareness. To her, "acting is the easy part, staying in the present moment in her work is harder and requires focus."[86] She believes that acting is the same whether on Broadway or in a local theater.[87]

She says there are only two things over which an actor has control—preparation and attitude. Her work ethic is to arrive at rehearsal with lines memorized and music learned. She works to understand what is going on and to develop ideas about her character. She thinks a production staff wants to trust that the actor will do the work and not appear for rehearsal unprepared. They also want to know the actor will be a team player, someone they will want to work with during a development cycle that may take several years.[88]

Colella says she enjoys rehearsing more than performing. She has indicated she feels sad after opening night, when the creative team is not there anymore, as it is like mom and dad are gone. They are no longer there to guide and approve the work being done. She loves the energy and approval received from an audience, but the safety, community, and feeling of family within rehearsal is not the same.[89]

She treats signing-in at the theater as a contract between herself and the others in the company to be her best self while there, and knows practicing kindness requires attention.[90] She does not mark[a] in rehearsal, and has spent her career singing like it's the last time she'll sing.[92]

Personal life

[edit]

Colella refers to kindness as her religion and believes in its practice.[78][93] She tries to be respectful and pleasant to each person she meets.[94] A podcast host has said, "(she) might literally be the nicest person I've ever met,"[95] a former artistic director, "I've never seen her be cruel,"[96] and a composer/lyricist, "the most fun-loving, open-hearted, life-affirming person working in the theatre."[97]

She identifies as mostly gay.[98] Colella became engaged to Mo Mullen in June 2022[99] and they married October 4, 2022.[100][101] On October 30, 2023, the couple announced that they were expecting their first child together. Their daughter, Morrison Caroline Colella, was born on February 14, 2024. [102]

Coming to New York, she was told by people she respected to stay in the closet, as it might cause casting problems.[103][94][9] After playing a lesbian in Beebo Brinker, though, she was getting more attention and media questions, and finally felt it was time to come out. Colella has said, "being a queer woman in the Broadway community is something I'm very proud of."[104]

Manoel Felciano, a co-star of Colella's in the movie Uncertainty, wrote the song "Jenn Colella" about her. The second line reads, "But I suspect, Jenn Colella, if my name were Isabella, then my clumsy overtures might stand a chance."[105]

After having seen Phantom of the Opera on Broadway, she got a mask tattooed on her right arm to show her dedication to the craft. Her first Broadway show, Urban Cowboy, was in the theater next to the Phantom theater.[106] Colella then got a star tattooed to represent Urban Cowboy and to cover the mask.[b] A star represented guidance and light to her.[8] Two other visible tattoos, on the backs of her upper arms, are "Kindness" and "Gratitude," which she got while in Come From Away.[107]

While working on Come From Away, Colella became friends with Beverley Bass, the airline captain she portrayed in the show. They first met in San Diego at James' Place, a restaurant across from the La Jolla Playhouse, after the last preview performance. They had an immediate kinship.[108] At closing night for the Seattle tryout run, Bass presented her with the flight jacket, wings, and service pin that she wore on September 11, to be worn on Broadway.[109]

Credits

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Stage

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   [top]

Television

[edit]

Film

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Webcast

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Partial discography

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These include cast albums and collections with a Colella solo track.

Awards and nominations

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Marking is a singing technique employed to help save the voice from overwork.[91]
  2. ^ The Phantom mask tattoo can be seen, although not clearly, in the photograph accompanying a 1999 article[12] in The State newspaper showing the Sol Divers rock band, of which she was a member.
  3. ^ For Sondheim concert, singsYou're Gonna Love Tomorrow/Love Will See Us Through (at 28:35 min on DVD) with Cavenaugh, Osnes, and Steggert
   [top]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (February 20, 2008). "PLAYBILL.COM'S CUE & A: Jenn Colella". Playbill.
  2. ^ Wontorek 2017, at 9:30 min.
  3. ^ Novak, Julie (2021-04-06). FPP Live - Jenn Colella. The Future Perfect Project. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
  4. ^ Wontorek 2017, at 10:30 min.
  5. ^ Day, Jeffrey (2003-04-06). "Thrown for a loop". The State. Columbia, SC. p. E1,2.
  6. ^ Wontorek 2017, at 10:55 min.
  7. ^ a b Rawson, Christopher (2008-07-20). "Stage Preview: CLO hooks a spunky Annie Oakley". post-gazette.com. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  8. ^ a b Eisenberg, Ophira (2018-05-04). "Jenn Colella And The Phantom Broadway Tattoo". gale.com. NPR. Retrieved 2022-02-12.
  9. ^ a b c Intern (2012-09-19). "Jenn Colella speaks about returning to Broadway in If/Then, Chaplin's leading man Rob McClure, and finding her place in the Broadway community". stagedoordish.com. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  10. ^ Paulson, Michael (2017-04-16). "A Pioneering Pilot, a Broadway Show and a Life-Changing Bond". The New York Times. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  11. ^ Smith, Thomas (1997-04-14). "Huge crowd gathers for Comet Carnival". Aiken Standard. Aiken, SC. p. 3A. Wow...the view is amazing.
  12. ^ a b c "Sol Divers provide ragged rock". The State. Columbia, SC. 1999-01-29. p. Weekend 9. eye-popper...Colella, who stalks the stage like a she-Jagger while undulating all hips, bangs and glitter.
  13. ^ a b Miller, Michael (1999-05-28). "Sol Divers surface with new CD, captivating performance". The State. Columbia, SC. p. Weekend 8. the alluring Colella, who brings a bit of performance art to the stage.
  14. ^ Smith, Gina (2004-09-16). "New York actress recalls friendliness". The State. Columbia, SC. p. A10.
  15. ^ Jones, Gene (1995-11-12). "Trustus tramps on funny bone in 'Steps'". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B3.
  16. ^ Day, Jeffrey (1996-01-28). "'Angels' landing". The State. Columbia, SC. p. F1,2.
    "'Angels' makes return trip to Trustus". The State. Columbia, SC. 1996-05-19. p. F4.
    "'Angels in America,' part two, gets extended run at Trustus". The State. Columbia, SC. 1996-09-01. p. F1,3.
  17. ^ Jones, Gene (1996-11-03). "'Sylvia' barks up the right tree". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B3. Sylvia is played with wildly amazing grace and fetching canine femininity
    "Revving Up, Friday: Theater". The State. Columbia, SC. 1997-12-04. p. D2.
  18. ^ Jones, Gene (1997-02-03). "Trustus' 'Merchant' shows tragedy's depth". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B3. This tricky role gives several bright spots...as Colella gives a lively performance with a wiry, spidery look.
  19. ^ Jones, Gene (1997-06-29). "Trustus performance does Sondheim justice". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B2.
  20. ^ Jones, Gene (1998-06-21). "Trustus show arrests audience". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B2.
  21. ^ Hinshaw, Dawn (1999-03-14). "Trustus addresses incest with prize-winning play". The State. Columbia, SC. p. F5.
  22. ^ Duperre, Maurice R. (1999-05-30). "'Free Will' is free with racy topics". The State. Columbia, SC. p. B2. Colella's fans will be pleased with her final role at Trustus before moving to California to study.
  23. ^ "Jenn Colella Playing the Title Role in "Peter Pan"". arts.uci.edu. 2015-07-24. Retrieved 2022-02-13.
  24. ^ "Looking Ahead". The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, CA. 2000-11-16. p. Calendar Weekend 60.
    Rydzynski, Michael (2003-07-03). "UCI Grads plying their trade as actors in New York, London". Irvine World News. Irvine, CA. p. B6.
  25. ^ BWW News Desk (2006-03-22). "Jenn Colella to Join Jason Robert Brown for April 4 Birdland Concert". broadwayworld.com. Retrieved 2002-02-07.
  26. ^ "Magical Oz Santa Rosa's SRT Kicks Off Season with an Enchanting Classic". The Press Democrat. 23 June 2000. p. D1. ProQuest 280767057.
  27. ^ "advertisement for summer rep theatre". Petaluma Argus-Courier. Petaluma, CA. 2001-06-27. p. 44.
  28. ^ a b Gilbert, Andrew (2020-02-25). "Jenn Colella ready for next destination in high-flying career". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  29. ^ Ferrao 2021, at 7:11 min.
  30. ^ Ferrao 2021, at 9:28 min.
  31. ^ Zink, Jack (2002-11-18). "Urban Cowboy". Variety. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  32. ^ Willis, John; Hodges, Ben (2005-06-01). Theatre World 2002–2003. Vol. 59. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books. p. 49. ISBN 1-55783-634-5. (hardcover)
  33. ^ Gans, Andrew (2005-10-01). "Slut — Starring Altar Boyz' Andy Karl — Opens Off-Broadway Oct. 1". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
  34. ^ Blank, Matthew (2011-02-07). "Marquee Value: Lucky Guy at the Little Shubert Theatre". Playbill. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  35. ^ "Suffs". New York Theatre Guide. 2022. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
    Putnam, Leah (2022-04-06). "Reviews: What Did Critics Think of Shaina Taub's Suffs at The Public Theater?". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  36. ^ Blank, Matthew (2008-03-08). "Photo Call: The Beebo Brinker Chronicles at Off-Broadway's 37 Arts". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  37. ^ Dziemianowicz, Joe (2012-07-06). "Cute review deserves Closer look". New York Daily News. p. 50.
  38. ^ Clement, Olivia (2018-08-29). "Jenn Colella, Ariana DeBose, Cady Huffman, More to Take Part in All-Female 12 Angry Men Reading". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  39. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (2006-07-15). "New Musical Kiki Baby with Collela, Veanne Cox and Nathan Launches O'Neill Fest, July 15". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  40. ^ Sagolla, Lisa Jo (2012-08-14). "Kiki Baby". Backstage. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  41. ^ Chadwick, Bruce. "Child Star Kiki Shoots to Fame in Ravished 1931 Germany and Everybody Cashes In". historynewsnetwork.org. Retrieved 2022-03-15. She is so good at the impersonation that you really think she's young
  42. ^ Hetrick, Adam (2011-09-06). "NYMF's Kiki Baby to Star Jenn Colella, Jim Walton, Jill Paice, Louis Hobson and More". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  43. ^ Jones, Kenneth (2004-09-30). "Great American Trailer Park Musical Celebrates the Jerry Springer Generation, to Oct. 3 in NY Musical Fest". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  44. ^ Tuttle, Hilary (2012-08-15) [2009]. "All Fall Down". Backstage. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
    O'Connor, Kevin (2018-10-30) [2009-09-20]. "Can you spare $23,000?". Rutland Herald. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  45. ^ Braunagel, Don (2006-02-01). "Staging of a Generation". San Diego Magazine. Vol. 58, no. 4. CurtCo/SDM LLC. p. 142.
  46. ^ Anderman, Joan (2006-10-06). "Genial Fidelity can't be both Broadway and indie". The Boston Globe. Boston, MA. p. Weekend D5,7.
  47. ^ Willis, John; Hodges, Ben (2009-06-01). Theatre World 2006–2007. Vol. 63. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books/imprint of Hal Leonard. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-55783-728-8. (hardcover)
  48. ^ Saenger, Diana (2010-09-23). "At the Playhouse, The Little Tramp is a star once again". La Jolla Light. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  49. ^ "Chaplin to Go Silent on Broadway; Closing Date Set for Musical". Broadway.com. 2012-12-03. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  50. ^ Stoltenberg, John (2013-11-25). "If/Then at The National Theatre by John Stoltenberg". dcmetrotheaterarts.com. Retrieved 2022-02-16. It's a full-on, full-hearted "feel alive" experience.
    Gans, Andrew (2013-07-17). "New Musical If/Then, Starring Tony Winner Idina Menzel, Will Arrive at Broadway's Richard Rodgers Theatre in March 2014". Playbill. Archived from the original on 2016-02-10. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  51. ^ "If/Then". Playbill. 2015. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
    Stoltenberg, John (2014-03-30). "If/Then at The Richard Rodgers Theatre". DC Metro Theater Arts. Retrieved 2022-02-16. Anne (the enjoyably ardent Jenn Colella)
  52. ^ Stage Door Medium 2021, at 9:58 min.
  53. ^ Verini, Bob (2015-06-15). "Regional Theater Review: Come from Away at La Jolla Playhouse". Variety. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  54. ^ Berson, Misha (2015-11-20). "A heartfelt welcome in Come from Away at Seattle Rep". Seattle Times. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  55. ^ "Come from Away". Ford's Theatre. 2016. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  56. ^ Pendergrass, RK (2016-11-03). "Reactions from Gander as Come from Away cast perform their 9/11 story". DC Theatre Scene. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  57. ^ Yeo, Debra (2016-11-28). "Come from Away ticket sales set record". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  58. ^ "Come from Away". Playbill. 2017. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  59. ^ Rosky, Nicole (2019-10-17). "Tony Nominee Jenn Colella Will Depart COME FROM AWAY in November". broadwayworld.com. Retrieved 2022-08-13.
  60. ^ Culwell-Block, Logan (2022-06-02). "Jenn Colella to Return to Broadway's Come From Away". Playbill. Retrieved 2022-08-13.
  61. ^ "JENN COLELLA & FELLOW ORIGINAL CAST MEMBERS TO RETURN TO COME FROM AWAY". Broadway Direct. September 15, 2022.
  62. ^ Stage Door Medium 2021, at 38:54 min.
  63. ^ Chipman, Tracy (2008-10-16). "Sondheim: Breaking Down the Fourth Wall / Way Off Broadway Presents Broadway Stars November 6-16, 2008". iowasource.com. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  64. ^ "Peter Pan". broadwaysacramento.com. 2015. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  65. ^ "Broadway's Jenn Colella and Charles Shaughnessy Star in Pittsburgh CLO's PETER PAN" (PDF). pittsburghclo.org. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  66. ^ Miner, Ann (2008). "Annie Get Your Gun". talkinbroadway.com. Retrieved 2022-02-04.
  67. ^ Blank, Matthew (2009-06-12). "PHOTO CALL: Paper Mill Playhouse Goes The Full Monty". playbill.com. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  68. ^ Keill, Liz (2010-05-25). "'Take Flight' lifts off at McCarter Theatre, Princeton". nj.com. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  69. ^ "Heartland: A Musical". madstage.com. 2003. Archived from the original on 2022-08-16. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
    Rueckert, Veronica (2003-12-10). "'Heartland' plows familiar ground". Wisconsin State Journal. Madison, WI. Retrieved 2022-02-10.
  70. ^ Jones, Kenneth (2004-01-16). "Three Sisters Inspires Musical, Heartland; Seeds Are Sown in Dallas Jan. 16-25". playbill.com. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  71. ^ Ferrao 2021, at 4:55 min.
  72. ^ BWW News Desk (2004-10-26). "Jenn Colella: The Girl Behind the Bull, Nov. 7". broadwayworld.com. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
    Tony Rock, host. Dave LaBarge, safecracker on a game show "Can You Tell?" back in 2003. Retrieved 2022-02-23.
  73. ^ "Sondheim: The Birthday Concert > Various Artists". castalbums.org. Retrieved 2022-03-27.
  74. ^ Gans, Andrew (2022-01-20). "Jenn Colella, Jose Llana, Aisha Jackson, More Will Sing in PBS Celebration of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe". playbill.com. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  75. ^ Lemire, Christy (2021-09-10). "Review: Come From Away". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 2022-03-21. Colella the...standout amid the talented...cast and...among her many parts is...Beverley Bass, the first woman captain of an American Airlines commercial flight; Colella's performance of "Me and the Sky," a song detailing...how her worldview changed that day, is a highlight.
  76. ^ "Chocolate Milk". letsmakechocolatemilk.com. 2021. Retrieved 2022-03-14.[permanent dead link]
  77. ^ "THE FLAME – A Podcast Musical". broadwaypodcastnetwork.com. 2021. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  78. ^ a b Gordon, David (2019-11-08). "Why Jenn Colella Decided to Leave Come From Away". theatermania.com. Retrieved 2022-03-06.
  79. ^ Stage Door Medium 2021, at 3:07 min.
  80. ^ "Jenn Colella: You Are Here". 54below.com. 2022-01-22. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
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