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Greetings from Atlanta. Or, as the natives call it "Hotlanta." Or as I'm calling it this weekend "Coldlanta." And, quite frankly, after the enormous dinner I had at the Mall's Chinese restaurant, "Mylanta." That's right, I'm now a Borscht Belt comedian. Nu? Anyhoo (anyhu?) I'm here at the National Junior Theater Festival ( summer-stars.com/id15.html). One of the sponsors of the event is Music Theater International, who presented some of their new "junior" shows (hour-long versions of musicals for elementary and middle schools). Suwanee Performing Arts Inc. and Dekalb School of the Arts teamed up and did Fame Jr., and they tore it up. [AUDIO-LEFT] I was so impressed that all the guys had crazily high extensions. PS, remember when one could write about someone's extension and it would be assumed it was their leg. Now, due to its new-found popularity, I feel that I have to clarify that I don't mean hair extensions. Damn you, Kristin Chenoweth.
The one thing during the weekend I was having a mini-breakdown about happened during the presentation: A few different people got introduced, and the host would bring them onstage not with "let's give it up for…" or "let's hear it for…" but instead, "let's give a standing ovation for…." Three times!!! I had just ingested six deep fried dumplings and an enormous ginger fish platter (with brown rice). I couldn't get out of my seat once let alone three times.
At my Sirius/XM Live On Broadway show I interviewed one of my old pit musician buddies from Grease. Conrad Korsch not only plays bass but sings and composes and now has his own CD and is doing his release party at Joe's Pub on Jan. 24. (Go to ConradKorsch.com for details.) We were telling pit bass players stories back and forth. I remembered something that happened when I sat in the pit for A Chorus Line. The show was about to begin and the bass player, who had been playing the show for years, realized he had forgotten his bow! He literally walked to the coat rack outside the pit in the Shubert Theatre, got a wire hanger, bent it into a straight line and used the hanger as a bow! (Insert unfunny Joan Crawford Mommy Dearest joke here).
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Caitlin Carter sits on Korsch's bass in Swing! |
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photo by Joan Marcus |
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Stephanie Umoh and Quentin Earl Darrington |
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photo by Joan Marcus |
At my Chatterbox, I interviewed three originals from Forbidden Broadway: Gerard Alessandrini (who wrote and starred in it), Nora Mae Lyng (who was his co-star) and Fred Barton (the brilliant music director). A new book has just come out detailing the whole history of the show including all of the amazing lyrics. I was literally "laughing out loud" on the subway reading it. The success of that show is so the opposite of the calculated method that some corporations use when they green-light a Broadway show. You can just imagine them in their boardroom saying, "How can we make money? Let's take a title everyone knows… and add music.." Ka-ching. Forbidden Broadway came about because Gerard was always writing funny parody lyrics to Broadway songs. He would call his friends' answering machines and leave messages singing them.
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Wendee Winters, Nora Mae Lyng, Gerard Alessandrini and Bill Carmichael in 1982 |
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Fred Barton |
And, finally, here's the big event of last weekend. And by "big" I mean "traumatic." Lin-Manuel Miranda invited me to his birthday party, and I was psyched to go…until it was time to go. It was Saturday night at 10 PM, and I was feeling way too lazy to get on a subway and go anywhere, and James had literally fallen asleep already. He woke up and we hemmed and hawed ‘til we decided that it would be fun and it was worth putting on a cute outfit and sassing out our hair. We then got on the A train and took it to mid-town. When we started looking for the address I realized the party was in a club. UGH! Even when I was the age when I was supposed to go to clubs, I hated them. Plus, there was a line to get in. I asked the security/bouncer guy if it was the line for Lin's party, and he told me to get in line. Rude. We waited in the FREEZING-ness until we got to the front where we were carded. That's right. Normally people think I look 70, but when it's below zero, apparently I look 18. The guard then said, "You're the guy looking for Link's party, right?" Link? Was I in a live version of Hairspray? I corrected him with a pointed "Lin." He shrugged and said there were a lot of parties and we should just walk in. I glared and we entered. Of course, it was crazily noisy and filled with people who looked like they should be starring in 13. We searched but couldn't find the area with Lin's party. I was looking for some kind of visual signpost that would indicate where it was… like a group of people doing intricate Broadway break-dancing, a gaggle of high belters or the long black hair of Karen Olivo. I finally became panicked we were in the wrong club and maybe were actually at a party for someone named Link. I quickly looked up the Evite on my Blackberry. The good news is we were in the right club. The bad news? We were a week early. We fled the club…careful to use a different door so that I wouldn't have to see the bouncer I glared at. I then sent this text to Lin: It's fun to not read an invitation thoroughly and show up at a loud club with people half my age for a party you're having next week. Lin sent back: Funniest text ever. Hmph. At least the night ended with some praise. Peace out, everyone!
* Seth Rudetsky has played piano in the pits of many Broadway shows including Ragtime, Grease and The Phantom of the Opera. He was the artistic producer/conductor for the first five Actors Fund concerts including Dreamgirls and Hair, which were both recorded. As a performer, he appeared on Broadway in The Ritz and on TV in "All My Children," "Law and Order C.I." and on MTV's "Made" and "Legally Blonde: The Search for the Next Elle Woods." He has written the books "The Q Guide to Broadway" and "Broadway Nights," which was recorded as an audio book on Audible.com. He is currently the afternoon Broadway host on Sirius/XM radio and tours the country doing his comedy show, "Deconstructing Broadway." He can contacted at his website SethRudetsky.com, where he has posted many video deconstructions.
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