The Tony Award-winning Kinky Boots kicks up its heels at Detroit's Fisher Theatre. Suzanne Chessler I Contributing Writer D aryl Roth saw the 2005 British- American film Kinky Boots at the Sundance Film Festival and knew she wanted it adapted into a Broadway musical. Hal Luftig saw the comedy-drama on a trip to England and had the same reac- tion. The storyline, based on actual events, resonated with both of them as producers and individuals, fitting in with their behind- the-scenes theater experiences independent of each another. The Roth-Luftig stage-production col- laboration for Kinky Boots initiated during a lunchtime conversation and resulted in a hit that brought six Tony Awards in 2013. Detroit audiences will get to see the tour- ing version Jan. 15-25 at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit. "I love the story that this show is telling and the fact that it gives people such joy when they see it" Roth says during a con- versation from her New York office. "It's a production accessible to all people" Kinky Boots spotlights two main char- acters: Charlie Price (Steven Booth), a man who inherits his father's shoe factory on the verge of its bankruptcy, and Lola (Kyle Taylor Parker), a drag performer who sug- gests a reinvention of the factory to provide shoes for cross-dressers. The script was written by Harvey Fierstein (Torch Song Trilogy, La Cage aux Polies), and the songs were developed by rock musician Cyndi Lauper ("True Colors"). "For me, the play delivers a multilevel message Roth says. "It talks about accept- ing people for who they are as well as accepting oneself. It's also about finding your passion in life and going for it. There's the additional element of family and friend- ship" Roth, who also has produced the LGBT- themed plays The Normal Heart and The Temperamentals, among many other successes, is interested in gender themes because her son is gay. Away from theater, she has Jewish "My son has brought such joy and love interests, including her family's establish- into my life says Roth, also the mother of ment of the Roth Center for Jewish Life at a daughter, is the grandmother of four and Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, wife of real estate developer Steven Roth. service on the board of the Albert Einstein "When my son came out, it also was my College of Medicine in New York and life that changed in a way that I needed to involvement with her synagogue. understand, and I needed to learn more "I'm drawn to theatrical works about peo- about the gay community. I believe in ple and their relationships" Roth says. "I'm unconditional love and supporting your especially interested in the outsider's story, children in every way possible. someone who has perhaps been marginal- "I want people to open ized and then thrives:' Although Roth has their minds, learn and be engaged. People have hired theater graduates to perhaps change their from the University of Michigan, she has not minds about their pre- conceived ideas. Kinky been to the state and so Boots has that in the song is contemplating a visit `Raise You Up/Just Be' as it during the run of Kinky expresses that we change Boots. the world when we change Luftig will be in town our minds:' for sure. Roth, who became a "Kinky Boots is an producer in her 40s, credits uplifting story about being passion, hard work and oneself;" Luftig says in a tenacity for her advance- phone conversation from ment that also has spot- New York "It's about lighted plays about strong accepting yourself and finding friendship in the women, including Wit, Producers Hal Luftig and Daryl Proof and Anna in the most unlikely places. Roth Tropics. "The message especially Although an art- comes through in the song history major who attended Syracuse `I'm Not My Father's Son: with the two main University before graduating from New York characters ultimately expressing that they University, she decided the performing arts have more in common than they thought. were for her. "I also like the lyrics at the end of the "I always wanted to figure out how people show when the whole cast sings about being made all this happen, and that became the who you want to be and living with dignity." defmition of producer" she says. "I didn't Looking for shows he believes will touch know that when I started:' audiences by reaching head or heart, Luftig While Kinky Boots has no element that is has worked on Legally Blonde and the first specifically Jewish, Roth suggests that it has revival of Evita among other hits. He was tenets of Judaism in its attention to caring introduced to theater as his parents bought about other people. family tickets for a variety of productions. Current Roth projects that present obvi- Although starting out in journalism, ous Jewish content include Wiesenthal, holding a degree from SUNY Oneonta about Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal; It and working as an assistant copy editor Should Have Been You, about an inter-reli- at Newsday, Luftig went on to study the- gious romance; and Stars of David, about ater management at Columbia University Jewish notables. and found production internships with Above: A scene from the National Tour of Kinky Boots Mame and Dreamgirls. "When I got out of school, I was hired by a company to help run their theaters, and I've been producing shows since 1984, says Luftig, now working on the first-ever revival of Children of a Lesser God and The Last Goodbye, the text of Romeo and Juliet enhanced with the sounds of musician Jeff Buckley. Luftig, who opened the tour of Movin' Out in Detroit, has related the theme of Kinky Boots to his Jewish identity. "After I was bar mitzvahed, I realized that I was gay but didn't come out until I was 19 or 20," he recalls. "I felt that Judaism and the temple I belonged to spoke to me on moral issues and values but not in terms of the struggle I had been going through. "In 1992, I was living in [New York City] as an out man but felt religion was leaving my life. A friend told me about Congregation Beit Simchat Torah, for the gay community, and I went. "It was Yom Kippur, a holiday I always observe, and I looked around with tears in my eyes. There were people like me, Jews who embrace their religion, and the rabbi explained how Judaism talks to us. At the end of the service, I met my husband, and we've been together nearly 23 years. We're not alone, and that idea becomes an important message for anyone watching Kinky Boots7 ❑ Kinky Boots runs Jan. 15-25 at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit. Performance times are at 8 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays. There also will be a 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15, matinee and a special open-captioned performance at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan.19. Tickets start at $35. (313) 872-1000; broadwayindetroit.com . 43