NEW YORK — The shift from Jennifer Damiano's last workplace to her new one is striking.
The old one was the biggest theater in Times Square, with 2,000 or so seats. The new one is downtown and has room for just 275. The old stage — the setting for the most expensive musical on Broadway — had pyrotechnics and aerial stunts. Her new stage has just a bare scaffolding and a chair.
"It's such a shift but I'm happy for that," Damiano said during a recent interview at The Public Theater. "It feels very different, very intimate, which is what I needed."
Damiano is following up her role as Mary Jane Watson in "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" with a darker, less cartoonish young woman in "Venice," a thrilling musical that debuts at the Public this month. It marks her return to the stage after taking time off after a five-year nonstop grind.
"This project just came up right at the perfect time. I had taken a little bit of time (off) and it just kind of happened," she said. "I honestly wasn't sure what the next thing would be at all, even if it would be theater. But I can't stay away from the new musicals."
'PERFECT ROLE'
"Venice," which has been incubating for five years, is a collaboration between Eric Rosen and Matt Sax and can best be described as an "Othello"-inspired futuristic hip-hop musical. The story centers on an attempt by a dynamic new leader to reunite his war-fractured city of Venice, still reeling from a terrorist attack.
Damiano, who grew up in Westchester County, N.Y., plays the leader's bride-to-be, Willow, who may or may not be lying about whom she really loves. The body count mounts as jealousy and ambition run rampant.