NEW YORK — Christine Baranski was in the playground outside St. Matthew's Church in Bedford, New York, about three years ago when she came across Matthew Guard, artistic director of the Grammy-nominated Skylark Vocal Ensemble.
''I love choral music,'' she told him.
An Emmy- and Tony-Award winning actor, Baranski went on to attend some of his concerts.
''I was a fangirl basically,'' she recalled. ''And I think we just said, `Wouldn't it be fun to do something together?'''
Baranski agreed to narrate a music-and-spoken word version of Charles Dickens' ''A Christmas Carol'' last December at The Morgan Library & Museum in New York, which owns the original manuscript of the 1843 classic. A recording was made last June at the Church of the Redeemer in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, and released Dec. 4 on the LSO Live label.
She will perform it again with the group on Thursday night at the Morgan, which is displaying the manuscript through Jan. 11, and again the following night at The Breakers in Newport, Rhode Island, where she will again portray the acerbic Agnes van Rhijn when Season 4 of HBO's ''The Gilded Age'' starts filming season four on Feb. 23.
''I have this thing about keeping language alive, keeping beautiful, well-written language,'' she said. ''Dickens, Stoppard, Shakespeare. We're getting awfully lazy in our use of the English language.''
She compliments Julian Fellowes, creator of ''The Gilded Age'' and ''Downton Abbey,'' for distinguished prose.