

“I’m just kind of dipping my toes into the waters in one of the biggest male roles in the business right now, and it’s kind of surreal.”īroadway's “Aladdin” is a musical adaptation of the 1992 movie starring Robin Williams. “I always dreamed that Broadway might happen someday,” he says, laughing. He played Porter and understudied Raoul in a national tour of “The Phantom of the Opera,” which ended its run in Toronto just before the pandemic hit. So it’s really hard to imagine yourself in those scenarios when you have no one to look up to as a role model or an example of how it could be done.” “There just wasn’t a whole lot of representation. “I didn’t really see a lot of people doing what I wanted to do in the world,” he says. He trained his voice to be flexible, waiting for the right window to open. Maliakel, a native of New Jersey, came from the world of opera, a baritone who studied at Johns Hopkins University and the 2014 winner at the National Musical Theatre Competition. She got the gig: “I went from a wicked witch to a Disney princess. Narayan was asked to read with different Aladdin potential actors. “It was a very unique experience,” she says, laughing.ĭisney producers flew her to New York to meet face-to-face and go through the material again. She sang “A Whole New World” over Zoom on gallery mode, pretending to be on a magic carpet. Her agent called in April with the prospect of auditioning for Jasmine.

She was in “Wicked” as Nessarose when the pandemic shut down Broadway in March 2020. Maliakel is making his Broadway debut, but Narayan is a musical theater veteran, having made her Broadway debut in “Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812” and touring with “Hamilton” as Eliza Hamilton. The pair arrived at “Aladdin” in very different ways. She was a huge role model to me as someone who was intelligent and strong and independent and beautifully curious, and that’s who I wanted to be,” says Narayan, who grew up in Pennsylvania. “Growing up, there was such little South Asian and Middle Eastern representation in the American media, and Princess Jasmine was really all I had. That shared love has gone full-circle this month as Narayan and Maliakel lead the Broadway company of the musical “Aladdin” out of the pandemic, playing Princess Jasmine and the hero from the title, respectively. NEW YORK (AP) - As kids growing up in different states, Shoba Narayan and Michael Maliakel shared a love of one favorite film - “Aladdin.” Both are of Indian descent, and in the animated movie, they saw people who looked like them.
