"Defying Gravity" was the ticket to Tony-winning stardom for Idina Menzel. Now she hopes to defy the odds by bouncing from Broadway to pop stardom.
Barbra Streisand did it. And no one since, really.
Knowing the challenge, Menzel turned to hit producer Glen Ballard, who helped transform Alanis Morissette into an overnight star and worked on successful albums by Aerosmith, the Dave Matthews Band, Josh Groban and Annie Lennox.
"I was pinching myself the whole year and a half that I was in the studio working with him because it was a dream of mine," said the "Rent" and "Wicked" star, who will perform Saturday at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul. "I feel I was very honest and authentic, and I didn't alienate my theater fans because I still sing big and challenging melodies. Yet I was able to be more intimate and personal because it's my own music."
While she's no Streisand, Menzel, 37, shows remarkable range on "I Stand"-- from penetrating intimacy ("Perfume and Promises") to dance-floor instincts ("Gorgeous") to "American Idol"-like bravura ("Brave"). She has a big, potent voice.
Even though her album, released in January by Warner Bros., can't be found on any of Billboard's charts, Menzel's Broadway credentials have landed her an upcoming PBS special and other TV exposure.
"I'm happy that I have the kind of career that is multifaceted, and people are taking a ride with me," said the singer, who co-wrote all but one of the songs on "I Stand." "My fans are not trying to pigeonhole me."
While the green-faced "Wicked" star is no greenhorn when it comes to pop (her 1998 debut, "Still I Can't Be Still," was "more angry and more sexual"), this is her first concert tour. "I have my own tour bus and my own band," she said recently from Nashville. "To travel the country and perform my own music is something I've always wanted to do."