Anand Nagraj keeps a little plastic toy of Jafar from βAladdinβ sitting in his dressing room.
Itβs from a McDonaldβs Happy Meal he got not long after he saw the Disney film on the big screen when it was released in 1992.
βI must have been 8 or 9. I was at my peak Disney age,β the Chicago native recalled. βIt really resonated with me strongly. Something I didnβt clock at the time was here is a Disney movie and all of the characters look like me.β
That realization hit home when he took on the role of the villainous Jafar last October in the North American tour of Disneyβs βAladdin.β Broadway In Tucson brings the show to Centennial Hall Sept. 5-10.
βIβve been carrying (the toy) around with me and keeping it in the dressing room because it really drives home for me what a journey Iβve had with this story,β Nagraj said during a phone call in early August when the show was starting its run in San Francisco. βI didnβt realize what a profound impact it had on me until I was working on it and a flood of memories come back to you.β
Nagraj, whose father is from India and mother is from Iowa, is among a diverse cast that includes actors of Indian, Afghani, Korean and Armenian heritage, as well as Hispanic and African-American.
βItβs great to be reaffirmed what a universal story this is,β said the veteran of regional theater who is making his Broadway tour debut with βAladdin.β
This is the longest time Nagraj has spent with a character, not counting the four years heβs spent voicing and providing the body imaging for Kelloggβs Frosted Flakes mascot Tony the Tiger. He and the βAladdinβ cast launched the tour last October and are expected to continue through May 2024.
βI feel like I know this role obviously better than anything Iβve worked on in my life,β said the veteran actor whose career has included acting in small independent films, guest roles on βChicago Fire,β βChicago P.D.β and βProven Innocentβ and several national commercials. βAt this point, it gets to feel like second nature. My previous theater experience, you rehearse a show for four weeks, you run it for maybe five, six weeks if youβre lucky, and then onto the next thing under the regional theater model. ... To live with a role this long is a real gift.β
Nagraj plays the villain in βAladdinβ β βIβve dabbled in the villainous arts before,β he joked. Jafar is the evil sorcerer determined to stop the loveable street urchin Aladdin and the genie Aladdin conjured from the magic oil lamp from their journey to save Princess Jasmine.
βItβs really the most fun,β Nagraj said of the role. βOne of the first things that comes to my mind is βdelicious.β Itβs really, really tasty every night. I donβt get too many boos at curtain time; it happens from time to time. I definitely relish my particular part in this story. I think this story is a such beautiful and important one that you need a bad guy to help Aladdin get to where heβs getting along the way.β
If the audience does boo him, Nagraj said, βI believe that means Iβve done my job very well.β
Since the tourβs launch, the βAladdinβ cast has performed the show around 300 times before audiences that range from people Nagrajβs age β mid- to late-30s β to young kids who werenβt around when βAladdinβ came out.
βThere are kids in the audience experiencing the story for the first time, but it is definitely a musical for people like me who have very strong memories of this movie. ... Itβs a very wonderful thing to be a part of,β Nagraj said, ticking off a list of his favorite tunes from the show including the iconic βWhole New Worldβ and βArabian Nights.β
βI think βFriend Like Meβ is one of the best showtunes you could possibly want to see,β he added. βItβs a brilliant number, fueled by Marcus Martin who plays Genie but also by our fabulously talented ensemble (cast).β
Disneyβs βAladdinβ opens Broadway In Tucsonβs 2023-24 season of musicals that includes the return of βThe Book of Mormonβ on Sept 15-17, the legendary jazz musical βChicagoβ next February and βMrs. Doubtfireβ to close the season next May.