Reviews
& Previews from Last Season
Campy holiday
fun is back at SNAP! published Thursday | December 13,
2007
BY
BOB FISCHBACH WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
Cast members jokingly
call it "the show in a box."
Simple set, lots of
returning actors, two weeks of rehearsals. Even a built-in
audience.
Friday, "Christmas
With the Crawfords" opens its fourth run since 2003 at the
SNAP/Shelterbelt Theatre. Since the cast took last year off, pent-up
demand for the Theatre Arts Guild best-comedy winner already has sold out
several shows in the tiny 55-seat space.
The campy spoof,
packed with cross-dressers playing famous movie stars from the 1940s,
finds Joan Crawford preparing for a radio interview with Hedda Hopper at
Joan's Hollywood home. Trouble is, Gary Cooper is having a party next
door, and drunken celebs keep stumbling in, spoiling Joan's carefully
planned portrait of domestic bliss.
Ron Osborn, who plays
Crawford, admits it's not bliss to stomp around in 4-inch spiked heels
when you're 6-foot-2. "The shoes are torture, and the wig is heavy,
too."
He found the size-13
pumps at Frederick's of Hollywood. He accepted the role thinking "it would
be fun, everyone would laugh and we'd all go home. End of story." He's
back, he said, because "four years into it, the script still makes me
giggle."
No auditions were held
that first year. Director Michal Simpson tapped actors who fit specific
profiles. He took the leftover role of Carmen Miranda for himself and has
been playing it ever since.
Simpson studied
Miranda's moves and her thick accent in old musicals such as "Flying Down
to Rio," then pushed her already oversized personality further over the
top.
Osborn viewed "Mommie
Dearest" and "Mildred Pierce," then added inspiration from movie spoofs on
"The Carol Burnett Show," aping Burnett's exaggerated walk: "Lots of
shoulder, strutting across the stage and overly
dramatic."
Daena Schweiger got
the speech patterns of Bette Davis from watching "Whatever Happened to
Baby Jane," picking out lines that reappear in the "Crawfords"
script.
All have played those
roles each time the show was staged, along with Michael Taylor Stewart as
Hopper, musical director Todd Brooks as Liberace, Teri Fender as Judy
Garland and Mark Cramer as one of the Andrews Sisters.
Also back this year:
Wai Yim, who won a TAG award for his cameo as Gloria Swanson, and Robert
Williams as Hattie McDaniel ("Gone With the Wind"), though both have
stand-ins at some performances because they no longer live in
Omaha.
Jeff Nelson, who has
long played Ethel Merman, shifted to Shirley Temple this year. Denny
Maddux will play Merman.
With all the returning
cast members, Brooks said, rehearsals are like the reunion "of a very
neurotic family."
Simpson said audiences
keep coming back because of the show's many dark twists on familiar movie
lines and personalities.
"We chose it because
we wanted something light for a holiday fundraiser," he said. "We just
wanted a piece of fluff to make people forget their
problems."
Judging by ticket
sales, the fluff still works four years later.
Warren T. Francke THE
READER December 23 - 2005 Its tempting to
come up with the top ten reasons to stay away from Christmas with the
Crawfords, starting with No. 10: you might find Joan Crawfords menacing
version of Silent Night or Carmen Mirandas mangled Away in a Manger
just a tad sacrilegious. But only reason No. 1 counts.
Its the
fact that all 12 performances through New Years Eve were sold out before
the outrageous musical opened last weekend. So, in the rather perverse
spirit of this spoof, lets skip the reasons to stay away and talk about
what the ticketless are missing.
Theres Ron Osborn, of course,
back again as Mommy Dearest, whose portrait hangs over the fireplace and
scares her guests. But his mountainous pompadour, coat-hanger shoulders,
high heels and Crawford kimono have been at the heart of this successful
production for three years.
He still seethes at the children on
stage and sews their little matching outfits off stage. So dont get
nervous when he grabs the axe: only Christopher, Christina and the
Christmas tree are in any danger.
And the full house would rise in
righteous indignation if Wai Yim didnt return as Gloria Swanson, the only
character who can compete with Crawford in striking poses, or if Michal
Simpson didnt reprise his tootsy-fruitsy Carmen, the colorful Latin
bombshell.
Once more the Andrews Sisters, played by three sturdy
lads, don we now our gay apparel and fa la la all over the
place.
So now youre guessing its the same old stuff: Hedda Hopper
doing her Christmas Eve 1944 radio broadcast from Crawfords Brentwood
mansion while celebrities stop by, mistaking it for Gary Coopers party
across the street.
Well, youd be right and youd be wrong. Its
the same script and mostly the same talent from the first outing two years
ago, which won favorable reviews.
But some of the changes from the
original border on genius. Teri Fender was originally an acceptable Judy
Garland in a Victorian dress circa Meet Me in St. Louis. Now shes a
knockout, discarding an overdress to appear in that classic Garland garb
of cocked black fedora, black tux top and fishnet stockings.
Tell
me Im ga-ga over Teri F. as Judy G., but even the makeup seems perfect,
not to mention her vocals on Winter Wonderland and a drunken Have
Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.
You want show-stoppers? Wait
til Hattie McDaniel, straight from the set of Gone with the Wind, leads
the ensemble in O Holy Night and Children Go Where I Send Thee. Robert
Williams was a top Hattie on preview night, but Derrick Crawford will do
nicely in the double-cast role.
Same goes for Bette Davis doing her
nasty little Baby Jane bit. Daena Schweiger gives a whole new threat to
Better watch out when she sings Santa Claus Is Coming to Town with a
snarl while batting big, spidery eyelashes. Ive seen Liz Heim, who shares
the role, and shes a king-size menace, too.
Michael Taylor-Stewart
seemed better than ever as Hedda Hopper, simpering under her room-filling
hat but ready to flash her claws when Crawford calls her Louella. (If
that Lolly Parsons reference eludes you, you wont understand why seniors
join the rather diverse group that loves this show.)
If youve seen
it all before and arent yet kicking yourself for not making reservations,
heres the worst news: Roderick Cotton as the precocious and campy
Christina and Dan Chevalier as the terrified Christopher Crawford, two
newcomers to the cast, almost stole the show from an ensemble full of
veteran scene thieves.
SNAP! Productions and Shelterbelt combined
to produce this show, with Michal Simpson and Todd Brooks (hes also
Liberace at the keyboard) directing. They claim its the final year for
this offering, but time will tell if they can resist another dozen full
houses. |
|
|