Prepare to cry. Credit: Courtesy of Kataka Corn

I cried the first time I saw Kataka Corn perform. They were starring in the 5th Avenue Theatreโ€™s 2022 production of The Wiz and days ago I had just moved back home to the Pacific Northwest after being away for almost a decade. During the showโ€™s final song โ€œHome,โ€ Cornโ€™s voice was as powerful as Aretha or Diana or Whitney when they sang, โ€œA world full of love / Like yours, like mine / Like hoooooome.โ€ I fucking lost it.

I blamed my emotional purge on the timing, but in the summer I saw Corn again in ArtsWestโ€™s production of Hedwig and the Angry Inch. They played Yitzhak alongside Nicholas Japaul Bernardโ€™s Hedwig, and the two were explosive. When Corn sang the finale, โ€œMidnight Radio,โ€ it happened again! Tears! And I wasnโ€™t the only one. The audience was full of people wiping their eyes.

See Corn yourself when they perform in Seattle Shakespeare Companyโ€™s production of The Merry Wives of Windsor in October. Itโ€™s a comedy, but bring tissues just in case.

Your voice is mesmerizing. How long have you been singing?

Thank you! I started singing when I was around 12 and began with community childrenโ€™s choir and training in opera. So just over a decade now, which doesnโ€™t seem very long now that I think about it.

I watched The Wiz a lot growing up, but had never seen it on stage until last year. Everyone was crying while you sang โ€œHome.โ€ Did you have any connection with the film or the play prior to starring in it?

I was pretty familiar with the tunes but hadnโ€™t actually watched the film or seen the musical until a few years ago. Then, of course, I fell in love with it, having resonated with Dorothyโ€™s struggles. When I tell you doing that show, in that role, with that cast, at the 5th Avenue Theatre was a dream come true… I mean, I will never get an opportunity to experience anything like that again. Iโ€™m so grateful for the support I received during the show and from then on.

Speaking of the 5th Avenue Theatre, in the opening monologue of Hedwig, Nicholas Japaul Bernard took a cute little swipe at them by joking about how yโ€™all couldnโ€™t perform Hedwig there because they already had their annual all-Black cast show. Was that joke written before you were cast? Was that improv?

Oh my goodness, okay, so the director, Eddie DeHais, took a good look at the script and realized the authorโ€™s note gave permission to make all the changes necessary to make sense with our setting (2023, WEST Seattle, post quarantine, all-Black cast, etc.), just โ€œmake it funnyโ€ while we do it. So Eddie took this newfound freedom and ran with it! That being said, the script is quite short without the devised material and improvisation; Nicholas Japaul Bernard, being the hilarious and creative genius that he is, curated the material/ improvisation. To answer your question, that was a written joke, not improv, only to poke fun at the fact that The Wiz was the very first all-Black cast on the 5th Avenue stage in 2022, and it was during the process in which most of the new material was discovered, being very aware, honest, and celebratory that we were an all-Black cast of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, which is hardly ever seen.

ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
View this post on Instagram
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 
ย 

A post shared by Kataka Corn (@kataka.corn)

I read that the upcoming production of The Merry Wives of Windsor will be a queer adaptation of the play. Can you tell me more about that?

Yโ€™all are in for an absolute TREAT! Eddie DeHais is back with the immaculate storytelling, creativity, magic, and tricks. Everywhere I go, the music follows. Surprise surprise… and Iโ€™ll be music directing! No spoilers!

Whatโ€™s your go-to karaoke song?

Honestly, I despise doing karaoke, but I love to watch! More power to the folks who do it. However, I love singing anything Whitney Houston, and from the musical theatre canon, Les Miseฬrables and Beauty and the Beast.

See Kataka Corn in Seattle Shakespeare Companyโ€™s presentation of The Merry Wives of Windsor at Center Theatre October 25-November 12.

Megan Seling is The Stranger's managing editor. She mostly writes about hockey, snacks, and music. And sometimes her dog, Johnny Waffles.