“I feel like with the kind of work we do as artists, we are literally giving ourselves — we’re giving our body and voice and spirit,” said Kecia Lewis, who recently won a Tony Award for her performance as the tough-minded but inspirational piano teacher Miss Liza Jane in the musical “Hell’s Kitchen.”
What with all that giving at the theater, Ms. Lewis was in the market for a place that did the giving — “that made me feel welcome when I was just being still” — when she started looking for apartments in Manhattan for the run of her “Hell’s Kitchen” contract.
“It had to feel peaceful, because I have to be able to pray,” said Ms. Lewis, 59, a native New Yorker now based in Atlanta. “I have stayed in places where it was not peaceful, and I have moved out. If it feels like there’s an energy that’s frenetic or chaotic, I’m like, ‘No, not for me.’”
She was 18 when she got her first role on Broadway, in the original production of “Dreamgirls,” and has since appeared in numerous shows, among them “Once on This Island” and “Chicago.” Last spring, she came north for a couple of “Hell’s Kitchen” workshops. On one visit, she stayed at an Airbnb in New Jersey, and then an Airbnb in Queens.
“But once we knew we were going to Broadway, I wanted to find something in the city,” Ms. Lewis said. Not too close to Midtown, but not so far as to make for a burdensome commute to the stage door.
Kecia Lewis stands in a doorway in her apartment.