Darren Criss and the Service Industry of Performance

Mixed Asian Media - October 15, 2024

By Bri Ng Schwartz

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Darren Criss standing in front of a bar.

Photo credit: Michaelah Reynolds, courtesy of Polk and Co.

 

Late last month, I spoke with Darren about his upcoming return to Broadway in Maybe Happy Ending, in which he plays a robot (a Helperbot to be specific) named Oliver who’s been deemed obsolete by technological standards. Another Helperbot, Claire, asks to borrow his charger, and thus begins a unique friendship between the two.

Maybe Happy Ending was written and produced in both Korean and English and has had performances all over the world. The upcoming Broadway premiere features Asian American creatives both on stage and behind the scenes. Criss himself identifies as half-Filipino on his mother’s side. In regards to his mixed identity in 2020, Darren told People:

“It’s a tricky cocktail in America ... Anyone who is biracial can attest to this: No matter how much or how little they look like their respective mix, it’s a constant work in progress … I’ve always been proud of my heritage, of being Filipino. Just because people don’t see it, doesn’t make it any less real to me.”

I got the chance to speak with Darren not just about identity, but about his career at large, how he relates to the character of Oliver, and what audiences will take from Maybe Happy Ending. 

*THIS INTERVIEW HAS BEEN EDITED FOR CLARITY AND LENGTH.


Interview


As a biracial person with Asian identity, how does it feel to be working on a show that’s been produced and written in both Korean and American?

This show isn’t categorically an Asian show. It is very much a universal human’s show, but it happens to celebrate and represent a large degree of Asian-ness. Anytime you can show up for your cultural identity, that’s always a very exciting thing. It’s very exciting that the vast majority of people working on the show, on stage and off, are of Asian American mix and descent. The Asian experience is not a singular experience. It’s a very large breadth of backgrounds, so it’s been fun for all of us to bring our own experiences and stories to the table.

 
The cast and creative team of Maybe Happy Ending.

Photo credit: Michaelah Reynolds, courtesy of Polk and Co.

 

I saw you about 10 years ago at the Belasco when you were starring as Hedwig in Hedwig and the Angry Inch.

Oh boy. This will be a little different. 

Yeah, definitely different. As you return to the Belasco for Maybe Happy Ending, how do you think you’ve evolved as a performer in the last 10 years?

I hopefully have evolved as a person. If I’m the same person that was 10 years ago, then we have a serious problem. I’m just still trying to learn, still trying to connect as many dots as I can. Hopefully I never know the answer to that.

We are forever learning as humans.

Exactly. 

I spoke to your former on-screen father, Jon Jon Briones, a couple of months ago.

He’s the best, and he was part of this production! This show has been around in many iterations for a long time, and he actually was part of a reading several years ago. We find ourselves connected yet again, me and Jon Jon. He’s awesome. He’s the best.

Do you take any advice or inspiration from people like Jon Jon or other seasoned Broadway vets in your work? 

There are these goalposts that artists may think are the be-all and end-all of what makes a successful career. Jon Jon’s consistency and longevity are the goalposts. He’s one of these guys, if I mention his name, half of the room knows him or has worked with him. There are a lot of guys like Jon Jon who just are constantly a part of things. And that’s the goal. Success in devoting yourself long form to the craft, which he has done in spades.

 
Darren Criss at the press day for Maybe Happy Ending..

Photo credit: Michaelah Reynolds, courtesy of Polk and Co.

 

In Maybe Happy Ending you play Oliver, a Helperbot 3. Do you think there are any parallels between you and how Oliver perceives the world?

I am endlessly curious and endlessly trying to download and learn as much as I can from the world around me, whether consciously or unconsciously. I happen to be a human being, and Oliver is not. 

I’m still getting under the skin of this guy, of this robot. I’m finding a lot of parallels as far as the desire to please. I always say I’m in the service industry. I service ideas and emotions and people. That is my vocation. My programming. 

Do you think that audiences are going to walk away from this show feeling differently about their technology? 

Technology becomes more human in the way we treat it. When people put away their phones, they get sad. They’re like an appendage. We’ve already started to ascribe emotional connectivity to our non-human components. People will walk away with perhaps a more emotional experience with the human components they have in their life.

The battery life that our devices have are a microcosm metaphor for our own battery life, our own shelf life, and our own energy. The finite amount of time that we have, and really coming to peace with the idea that we are a transient technology ourselves, considering that, and hopefully, making sure that your battery life is spent on the right things, I think is the thing I hope people walk away with this show.

On top of hopefully singing the songs, because they’re beautiful. 

They really are. Thank you so much for taking the time today. On behalf of mixed theater kids everywhere, thank you. I don’t think I would be who I am without having you to look up to.

Thank you for letting me be a part of it.

 
A selfie of writer Bri Ng Schwartz and Darren Criss.

Photo credit: Bri Ng Schwartz

 

End of Interview


Maybe Happy Ending begins previews at the Belasco Theater on Oct. 16 and officially opens on Nov. 12. Tickets can be purchased at the official website

 

Bri (she/her/hers) is a writer, facilitator, event producer and arts administrator based in Brooklyn, NY. She is committed to the dismantling of gatekeeping in arts & culture and uses her experience in community engagement and education to develop meaningful partnerships. She has served in various artistic administrative capacities and has written for publications including HowlRound and American Theater Magazine.

 

JoySauce is a multimedia network dedicated to celebrating the full spectrum of Asian American and Pacific Islander narratives. The site boasts a vibrant library of content around entertainment, lifestyle, food, travel, culture, relationships, art, and education in the form of exciting new streaming shows, movies, standup comedy, provocative podcasts, and a suite of editorial updated daily.