Video Interview with Richard Skipper as Carol Channing

After a wonderful performance I had the opportunity to get an depth interview with Richard Skipper as Carol Channing (and as Richard Skipper too!)

Filmed at The Theatre at S. Lukes
For more info go to
www.AsCarol.com
or
http://www.richardskipper.com/ 

Miss Coco Peru Is Still Alive!

Miss Coco Peru Is Still Alive!
Laurie Beechman Theater – November 7, 2010 – 7:30 pm

By Elli – The King Of Broadway

HEADLINE: “DRAG QUEEN FROM THE BRONX ABDUCTED BY ALIENS LIVES TO TELL THE TALE!”

Sounds fantastic, right? I’ll get to that soon. In the meantime, I don’t want to spoil the show by telling you all the jokes. What I will tell you is that this show is not what you are expecting.

Miss Coco Peru Is Still Alive! is so much more than a stand-up comedy routine replete with musical numbers, sound effects, specialty lighting, visual aids and copious monologues, and to my delight, the show has heart.

This autobiographical Cabaret performance is definitely a one person show of the quality found lately on Broadway. Coco Peru is now the ultimate storyteller. Retelling the story of growing up ‘different’ on City Island in the Bronx, Miss Coco’s story is at once funny and heartwarming, happy and sad, and several times I was moved to tears only to be laughing uncontrollably moments later. Coco Peru also displays quite a vocal range as a singer, something I had not known before. The songs (Barry Manilow of course) are blended into the story as if this were a Jukebox Musical like Mama Mia.

“Not quite as famous as RuPaul,” as Miss Coco says in the show, I first became a fan when I saw her in the movie, Trick and fell in love with her all over again on Logo TV’s “One Night Stand Up.” Whether you are a fan of old, or have never heard of this fabulous artist, chances are you’ll fall in love with Miss Coco soon after the show begins.

Oh, and the abduction? “That’s a very long story, and Coco Peru is going to tell it to you… all in just a little over an hour”, when you attend Miss Coco Peru Is Still Alive! at the Laurie Beechman Theatre.

Storyteller/monologist Miss Coco Peru (aka Clinton  Leupp) grew up in the Bronx on City Island and got his/her start as a downtown favorite in the cabaret world of NYC after she wrote, produced, directed, and starred in her first show Miss Coco Peru in My Goddamn Cabaret in the early 90’s. On screen Miss Coco is best known for her roles in Jim Fall’s Fineline feature film, Trick (Sundance 1999) and Richard Day’s IFC feature length comedy Girls Will Be Girls. Coco also has her very own half- hour Logo TV comedy special taped as part of the “Wisecrack” series. The episode airs regularly and is available on iTunes.

Originally directed for the theater by Michael Schrialli, Miss Coco Peru Is Still Alive! continues its run November 12-14, Friday-Sunday at 7:30pm at the Laurie Beechman Theatre, inside West Bank Cafe at 407 West 42nd Street — at Ninth Avenue.

Tickets are $20 with a $15 food/drink minimum per person, available at www.SpinCycleNYC.com or by calling 212-352-3101.

For complete info about the reviewer, please go to www.thekingofbroadway.com and follow on twitter/tkob

Johnny Rodgers Band – Bon Voyage Party

Johnny Rodgers Band – Bon Voyage Party
Birdland – October 25, 2010 – 7:00 pm

by Elli – The King Of Broadway

Hello. My name is Elli, and I am a JRB-aholic.

In my last review of the Johnny Rodgers Band (JRB) I made no attempt to hide the fact that I am a JRB fan. Not just your average, run-of-the-mill fan, but more along the lines of a bobby-sox-wearing Fan Boy. Tonight’s Bon Voyage Concert at the famous and fabulous Birdland Jazz Club really sealed the deal.

Last time I complained about the “much too short hour long set” and Johnny, of course, took my criticism to heart and this time wooed us with nearly an hour and a half of his, oozing-with-charm style, and his delicious music.

Opening the set with his New Orleans inspired “Miss Dixie,”Johnny broke with the traditional ‘wait till the end to introduce the band’ and gave each of his talented band-mates a sweet solo turn followed by a formal introduction of each of his uber-talented musicians, Brian Glassman on bass, Danny Mallon on drums and additional vocals, and Joe Ravo on guitar.

Slipping effortlessly

into the next tune, Johnny proved once again that Johnny Mercer’s “Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home” might easily have been written about him, for truly, Johnny is at home on any stage.

For this wonderful show, Mr. Rodgers again mixed his own songs, “Home to Mendocino,” “Mary Jean,”

“She” with its light Bossa Nova beat, and “The Best of You in Me” with the hits of the American Songbook. “Let’s Get Lost” was smooth, soft and romantic. “Too Marvelous For Words” was an upbeat, bass-driven, cornucopia of tongue-twisting fun. Hoagy Carmichaels’ “Huggin’ & Chalkin’” was not only funny, but staged as if it were part of a Vaudeville Review.

During tonight’s show, I also made a few new discoveries. The Bands arrangements and performance seemed to mesmerize the audience. It was unusually quiet and as I looked around everyone was transfixed on the band. I also discovered that all of the JRB’s original songs had a familiar feeling – they were written like songs I knew very well. Even though I have only heard them a few times before, I could almost hum along, as if I had heard them all dozens of times before. That familiarity made me comfortable. So, when Johnny and the band began “What A Wonderful World,” all my troubles, every issue, every negative thought in my head, melted away, and all I felt was peace and love.

Just when it seemed that Mr. Rodgers had covered every style of music that there is, he pulled one more out of his hat. In his off time, i.e. between performing, travelling and preparing an overseas tour, Johnny took the helm as the Music Supervisor, Musical Director, Arranger, Orchestrator, and co-Songwriter with Sue Fabisch, for Motherhood The Musical (from the producers of Menopause The Musical) currently playing an extended run in South Florida. Tonight we were treated to one of the songs from that show, “Grannyland,” which Johnny performed, in character, with Granny-glasses and silver wig.

Of course, since Johnny performs only for me, he included my favorite JRB tune, Ray Henderson’s’ “Birth of the Blues” (and no broken piano bench this time).

From Big Band to Jazz to Showtunes to Scat, the Johnny Rodgers Band has it all covered. With his sweet smile, silky voice and enough charm to last forever, Johnny is the ultimate entertainer.

A few days after this Bon Voyage Party at Birdland, the JRB hits “The Rhythm Road” taking American Music Abroad touring Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands (Fiji, New Guinea, Singapore, Cambodia, Burma and Malaysia) from November 2-29.

“We’re really honored to be part of a program that has been such a piece of American history,” says Johnny Rodgers“Dizzy Gillespie and Louis Armstrong have big footsteps to follow!”

This Tour is sponsored by Jazz at Lincoln Center & the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs.

The Johnny Rodgers Band will be back in NYC on December 11th, 2010 performing at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola. For more information, and to follow their International travels, check out theJRB website.

A gifted songwriter, Mr. Rodgers won ASCAP’s Jamie deRoy & Friends Foundation Award in 2009, The New York Sheet Music Society’s Gerald Marks Award and the Songwriters Hall of Fame Abe Oldman Award. Other honors include the Nitelife Outstanding Cabaret Vocalist Award 2010, Backstage Magazine’s Bistro Award and the MAC Award. Mr. Rodgers recently made his Broadway debut co-starring in the Tony Award winning “Liza’s At The Palace” with Oscar, Emmy and Tony Award winning superstar Liza Minnelli. JRB’s recently released CD, “Box of Photographs” (PS Classics) has won acclaim from critics and radio stations across the country.

For complete info about the reviewer, please go towww.thekingofbroadway.com and follow him on twitter/tkob