Producers of the touring musical "Fun Home" — which opens Tuesday at the Orpheum Theatre — did not cast Kate Shindle in the lead role for guaranteed publicity, but it sure hasn't hurt that everyone wants to talk to a former Miss America who is now president of the stage actors' union and touring the country playing a famous lesbian.
Including, of course, the newspaper in a Midwestern city chock full of theatermakers and theater enthusiasts.
"I'm actually really looking forward to playing Minneapolis," Shindle said, speaking recently from Detroit, fifth stop on the "Fun Home" tour. "It's got an educated theatergoing audience that will really be ideal for our show."
She hastily added, "Minneapolis gets all the good buzz, but St. Paul is awesome, too."
Shindle recalls working in the Twin Cities after her 1998 Miss America win, but can't remember which show. It just wasn't at the Guthrie. ("That would be a dream, to work at the Guthrie.") Now she's starring in the 2015 Tony Award winner for best new musical, adapted by Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Kron from the hit graphic memoir by Alison Bechdel. Shindle's "Big Alison" mostly serves as a narrator, observing the challenges faced by young "Small Alison" and teenage "Medium Alison," both of whom are struggling to grow up in a home led by their closeted gay father. He's an undertaker.
The role is not one you'd typically associate with a beauty queen. Shindle, who is straight but has long advocated for LGBT issues, cut her long auburn hair into a buzz cut and recently posed with the much more butch Bechdel for the New York Times, a paper that rarely gives significant coverage to Broadway tours.
The road show began this fall in Cleveland, and from there went to Durham, N.C., where it sold out, helped in part by sentiment against the state's law restricting bathroom use by transgender people.
Shindle spoke about how the tour is going, the pros and cons of being tall and what she's learning from actors in "flyover country."