You know George Costanza — the bald, neurotic best friend on the long-running NBC series "Seinfeld" — but you might not be familiar with Jason Alexander, the award-winning actor and comedian behind that role. The 54-year-old New Jersey native has been making audiences laugh from Broadway to Hollywood for decades and is an accomplished singer, dancer and magician.
"An Evening With Jason Alexander and His Hair" is a 90-minute show that incorporates stand-up, song, audience interaction and improv. Alexander brings it to the Twin Cities on Monday night to benefit the family of Carl Lee, the former director of marketing and theatrical programming at Hennepin Theatre Trust. Lee, a longtime sufferer of Hodgkin's disease, died last November, leaving a wife and two daughters with a large medical debt.
Alexander spoke recently about everything from silly to serious issues.
Q: First things first: Why does your hair merit double-billing?
A: That's in the hair's contract. I have no say on that. Yeah, the hair features prominently in the show. I never thought I was going to be a stand-up comic. It still scares the bejesus out of me, so I play another character when I come out on that stage, and the hair helps me do it. My concern was, "I wonder if they expect me to be George?" And I thought, "There's one way to get rid of that notion — to not look like George." Once I started playing around with it, it actually became a great entry point into talking about all kinds of things that we have in common that are funny, like what we do to ourselves to try to look presentable while our bodies fall apart.
Q: Do you have any weather humor in your act? Minnesotans love to complain about the weather.
A: I have not typically had weather humor in my act, but I'm sure I can come up with something spontaneously. You have been setting records already this winter for weather! I'm actually going to Las Vegas, then Minnesota, and then the Dominican Republic. I don't even know how to pack for this trip!
Q: You told an interviewer that you got into acting so you could hide from people. Explain how that's possible when you're performing in front of large audiences.