Proceeds from this special concert
benefit The Richmond/Ermet AIDS Foundation!

Call City Box Office at 415-392-4400 for tickets!

 

 

Born in New Zealand in 1968, Lucy Lawless grew up fifth in a family of seven children. With four older brothers as role models, her mother said she didn’t know she was a girl till she was eight. By this age, she and her best friend were adapting fairytales into plays that they would inflict on any possible audience. Apart from a brief flirtation with the idea of becoming a forensic pathologist, brought on by watching ‘Quincy, M.D.’, acting has always been her passion. As fate would have it, Lucy was the local kid on the spot when an American actress pulled out of the role of ‘Xena’ – at that time just a guest character on ‘Hercules, the Legendary Journeys’, which was filming in her hometown. The character struck a chord with audiences and spun off into her own series. Since then she has played 'Rizzo' in "Grease" on Broadway, hosted "Saturday Night Live," pulverized Callista Flockhart in claymation on "Celebrity Deathmatch," and saved Bart and Lisa on "The Simpsons." Roles on "X-Files" and "Battlestar Galactica" cemented her cult-tv status.

But it was "Celebrity Duets" in October of 2006 that propelled Lucy in a new creative direction. On the final night, when she got to sing a song of her own choice, "Tell Mama!," Lucy recounts that, “…something broke wide open inside me; a lifetime of self-consciousness burst. I have become a junkie for live performance. I can’t get enough and I can’t give enough.” Since then she has performed sold out shows at the famed Roxy in Los Angeles and the Canalroom in New York. “It’s a great way to meet your fans,” she notes.

She is grateful to all her fans including a sizeable gay contingent owing to 'Xena’s’ status as a lesbian icon. As such, she has been a supporter of REAF in San Francisco and The Trevor Project, a national hotline for gay and questioning youth. In Lucy’s own words, “gay teens are three times more likely to commit suicide than their straight peers. It’s a disgrace that in this country we are still shaming kids to death. Shame Kills!”

In her own country, she is a trustee for the National Children’s Starship Hospital and received an Order of Merit of New Zealand from the Queen for services to the community. Her proudest moment was being part of the push to set up Pua Waitahi multi-agency center against child abuse in Auckland, where social workers, police and medial specialists are under one roof, greatly improving communication and trust between departments devoted to the fight against the abuse of children. Lucy has three children, Daisy, Julius and Judah and has been married to Rob Tapert, her greatest fan, for ten years. She is a sucker for "Seinfeld" and "Court TV."