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Thursday, November 24, 2005

Reading Eagle Article

As promised, here is the Reading Eagle's pre-concert article. Clay plays the Reading Soverign Center next week. This article is featured in the Eagle's weekly "Weekend" arts section's cover page.

Christmas Clay's way
Clay Aiken puts together a holiday showcase called "Joyful Noise" that is based on his own writing and features performers from his hometown. The end product is everything he'd wished for and more.

By Tracy Rasmussen
Reading Eagle Correspondent

As if singing, dancing and idol status weren't enough, Clay Aiken has added writing to his resume.
"I did a Christmas show last year and it was so much fun," Aiken said. "I thought I'd love to continue to do it, but I wanted to do something different."

That something different is his new "Joyful Noise" tour, which comes to the Sovereign Center in Reading on Wednesday (which happens to be Aiken's 27th birthday).

Aiken said he tried to come up with an idea that could join all the different songs he sings together, when he hit on the idea of having an older woman talk about her Christmases past with a young neighbor.

"Then I just sat in my pajamas and wrote it," he said. "I thought, Golly, I can do this. I'm not Arthur Miller, but this story works."

The story revolves around a little boy who is annoying his parents and they send him outside to get him out of their hair. He goes next door and meets one of his neighbors a woman who has recently lost her husband.

"She starts talking to him and telling him stories," she said. "And there are dancers who sort of show the back story."

Aiken sings in between and throughout the stories, pulling the show together.

"I'm sort of the guardian angel," he said.

And staying in line with the guardian angel theme, he hired his choir teacher from high school, Alison Lawrence, to play the part of the elderly woman. And since his teaching certificate is up to date he hired Gregory Ellis, a child from his hometown, to play the child in the show.

"I figured I could teach him on the road," Aiken said.

Still, he admitted to being a bit nervous about having so much input into the show.

"But it ended up being so much bigger and better than I thought," he said. "You usually have a vision in your head about what something is supposed to be and then you hope for the best, but this is everything I hoped it would be."

Although the subject matter is poignant, Aiken promises a Christmas ending.

"Everyone dies," he deadpanned. "No, really, it's a Christmas show, of course it has a happy ending."

Aiken said that for him this show portrays one of his own wishes.

"Sometimes I wish that life had a soundtrack," he said. "That's what this show is."

The show includes many of Aiken's songs from his Christmas album, "Merry Christmas With Love."

If Aiken's life did, indeed, have a soundtrack, it would likely be solid gold.

He's perhaps America's best known runner-up, as he came in second to Rueben Studdard in the second season of "American Idol."

Aiken used that notoriety to promote his first CD, "Measure of a Man," which has sold more than 600,000 copies, and he's found himself playing to sold out venues and basking in the adoration of the "Claymates" who follow him from venue to venue.

He said he's particularly looking forward to the Reading show.

"This is the first time I've ever done a show on my birthday," he said, laughing. "So I'll expect lots of presents."

Aiken has used his own gifts to help others, too. His teaching degree allowed him to work in special education, including a part-time job as an aide to a child with autism. That child's mom, Diane Bubel, convinced Aiken to audition for "American Idol." Together they now have a charity that supports children with autism.

Education is still important to him, and he keeps current with the field while traveling the country.

And he said he never imagined that his life could be as good as it is.

"Right now I'm at a friend's house in Vancouver," he said. "She lives on a cliff overlooking the bay and all I can see is water and these majestic mountains. I'm never going to expect things like this to happen."

He said that prior to "American Idol" he hadn't gone far from his Raleigh, N.C., home.

"Myrtle Beach is about as far as I had traveled," he said. "But now I've been to places like Indonesia and Uganda (as a UNICEF Ambassador)."

He will be home for Christmas, though.

"We'll be in Raleigh with the tour around Christmas," he said. "So I'll be home."

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