arts & life theate r Digg It Alice Burdick Schweiger | Special to the Jewish News The electrifying Hamilton star chats with the JN. details The Tony Awards will air Sunday, June 12, at 8 pm on CBS. For more about the awards, see “ Tony Time ” on the next page. W hen Daveed Diggs first heard the hip- hop music written for Hamilton, he knew this was going to be something special. Turns out, he was right. It just earned 16 Tony nominations — the most ever for any show on the New York stage. And Diggs, 34, who plays both Thomas Jefferson and the Marquis de Lafayette, is nominated for Best Featured Actor in a Musical. It’s a perfect fit for the actor, who grew up writing rap and performing warp-speed rhymes as a hip-hop artist in his home- town of Oakland, Calif., before studying theater at Brown University. Following graduation, Diggs returned home to Oakland to teach middle school, develop- ing a rap curriculum for seventh- graders in the Bay Area. The prolific musician also performed with his hip-hop group, Clipping. His dad, Dountes Diggs, is African American and his mom, Barbara Needell, is white and Jewish. Diggs was raised Jewish and went to Hebrew School; his name, Daveed, means “beloved” in Hebrew. In a recent interview with the Jewish News, Diggs dishes on his Tony nomination, what it’s like to be a part of Hamilton history and his Jewish roots. JN: Where were you when they announced your name as a Tony nominee? DD: I was in my bed asleep. My brother [Malcolm] and my best friend broke into my house and came running in with a bottle of champagne and jumped on my bed. I knew they were announcing the nominees, but I thought someone would text me. JN: You had a longtime friendship with Lin-Manuel Miranda, the show’s creator, but how did you wind up get- ting these plum roles in the show? DD: I was doing a freestyle show with another group and the director, Tommy [Kail], said they were writing a new musical and asked if I would be inter- ested. I had never done a musical before — or been in a show in New York. They kept calling me to come back. I never auditioned, but I assumed I would do this and they would replace me at some point — but they didn’t! It opened Off-Broadway and when it transferred to Broadway, they kept me in the show. JN: At the very beginning, when Hamilton first opened Off-Broadway, did you ever anticipate it would turn out to be such a phenomenon — or cause such a frenzy to get tick- ets? DD: No, we really didn’t think about it. It was never about ticket sales for us — although I am sure the producers thought about it. We were all just dedi- cated to making the best show we could and honoring the works of Lin-Manuel. We fell in love with the music even before it became a show. Soon after it opened downtown it sold out and people couldn’t get in, but I just remember going to work every day and trying to make it better and better. JN: Do you have long-lost relatives and friends contacting you for tickets? DD: People contact me on social media — if I don’t remem- ber them, I don’t respond if they Daveed Diggs is nominated for a Tony for his roles in Hamilton, produced by native Oak Parker Jeffrey Seller. are requesting a ticket. But I am happy to reply to fans and aspir- ing actors about the show. JN: What has been the most surreal moment? DD: Probably meeting the president the third time, when we [the entire cast] went to the White House and he let us hang out and run all over making crazy videos and performing with the Marine Corps Band. That speaks a lot to the wild journey of this show, but also it speaks a lot about this president and family in the White House and the environment they cre- ated for us. JN: What was it like seeing President Obama in the audi- ence in New York? DD: That was nerve-wracking. The Secret Service had been sweeping the theater for two weeks; there was press every- where outside and we knew which seat he was sitting in. We wanted everything to go well. JN: Aside from Obama, has there been anyone in the audi- ence who has made you star struck? DD: Tina Fey. She came to see the show when we were still Downtown. She is kind of the funniest person alive and when she came back stage, I didn’t know what to say. JN: Your mom is Jewish. When you were growing up, did you identify as being Jewish? DD: Yes, and I still do. I cel- ebrated all the Jewish holidays, and we lit the Shabbat candles every Friday night when I was young. My mom wanted to make sure I felt a connection to my religious heritage. If I remember, I still light Shabbat candles. My mom has a lot of family in New York, and she came here for Passover and we went to a seder. JN: How often do you get to see your parents? DD: My mom comes here a fair amount. She retired about a year and a half ago. My dad drives a bus in San Francisco. My mom ran a child-welfare research center out of UC Berkeley. She is dedicated to the foster-care sys- tem and researching data about race issues and how race plays out in the foster-care system. Both my parents will be coming out for the Tony’s. JN: Did you write an accep- tance speech for the Tony’s? DD: Everybody is talking about the Tony’s but I don’t have time to really think about it — I just go from one event to anoth- er. So I didn’t write a speech and I’m not worrying about Tony Awards — which is probably the best way to go! * June 9 • 2016 51