The era of the singing cowboy has gone the way of Roy Rogers,
Gene Autry, Tex Owens, Son’s of the Pioneers and a host of others. To some
there still is an air of nostalgia, especially when so many of the ‘songs’
-(“I’m An Old Cowhand”, “Tumblin Tumbleweeds”, “Ragtime Cowboy Joe”, “Cool
Water”, “Back In The Saddle Again”, “Jingle Jangle Jingle” and “Cigarettes and
Whisky and Cool Water”), that I remember had me a toe tappin’ and knee slappin’
throughout.
Autry has a highway named after him, Rogers, a museum and
both the as close as the ride to Palm Springs from San Diego. Although I never
did stop into the Roy Rogers Museum, I did, as a kid, send a postcard into a
contest to name Trigger’s (his horse) new pony. Those were the days.
Charles Evans, Jr., Catie Gradie Manny Fernandes, Steve Gouveia |
Lamb’s Players Theatre is mounting the Joanna Beecham,
Malcolm Hillgartner’s 1959 British Comedy, “Chaps” in their Coronado Playhouse
that for this production, has been transformed into a 1944 London Studio,
Studio B at the BBC, through April 20th (Mike Buckley designed the set).
Director
Robert Smyth calls this a ‘cowboy cabaret’, more like a cowboy musical revue with
some very very silliness thrown in.
It seems the regular staff at Studio B: Archie Leitch (Steve
Gouveia), sound man Stan (Arusi Santi), Miles Shadwell (Charles Evans, JR)
announcer Lesley Briggs Stratton (Ross Hellwig) are anxiously waiting the
arrival of ‘Tex Riley and His Radio Roundup” singers to entertain the troops on
the front- (in foxholes in France, the fields of Belgium, and Holland and the
hills of Italy), a gig planned for some time.
Into the mix, Clive Cooper (Manny Fernandes) the next- door
fish and chips owner (“Salty Fish and Chips”) happens in . He along along with the rest of the radio crew, are enlisted to ‘go on with the show’ when the singers are no where to be found. Confusion reigns, no one is ready for this and after some heavy twisting of arms, they resolve to give it a try.
(“Have a Salty’s Fish and Chips today they’re ever so good, ever so grand, and when the bugle calls you’ll hear them say “It’s gonna be a salty day”)
(“Have a Salty’s Fish and Chips today they’re ever so good, ever so grand, and when the bugle calls you’ll hear them say “It’s gonna be a salty day”)
It seems tour manager Mabel Halliday (Grady) arrived at the
station only to learn the guys never made it to the show. Conveniently, their trunks with
costumes (Jeanne Reith) and some instruments did. Unfortunately the singing group was
otherwise engaged; it seems they got lost.
Steve Gouveia, Charles Evans Jr., Manny Fernandes and Catie Grady |
Stiff upper lip, and the crew at the BBC stand in and
improvise for the missing musicians. They sing ballads and they harmonize.
There is a male duet and a quartet and just about every other singing combination used to entertain along with a variety of comedy acts.
Using the props and costumes from the trunk
that put the Western into Western Music and changed a British radio crew with
“Chaps” into Brits looking like a horse could gallop right through their legs, slap a ten gallon hat on their heads, and voila, we've got cowboys.
The odd- looking blokes in their chaps and ten gallon hats sound
like they had been singing right out of a Texas radio station all along. From a country western point of view they were
all right as long as they twanged and Yippee-I-O-Ki-Yay’d, but challenges came up when
juxtaposed with some off the wall British humor a la Monty Python (as
advertised) that lands them in some REALLY? you want to go there? situations. Not to worry it all worked out in the end.
Don’t read anything too serious into this fluff piece. It's pure entertainment. My
recommendation is to sit back enjoy the voices and talent of this ensemble of
six, and show appreciation especially to Stan (Santi) the sounds effects guy who
doesn’t utter a sound but whose job it is to make sounds.
He squeeze horns, claps coconut shells together to sound like
galloping horses, slams doors, makes wind whistling breezes along with all
those many wonderful tricks they did in the days of radio where no one could
see the action, but could hear it.
There are other laugh out loud moments as when Leslie (Hellwig)
who stands over six feet comes Out in drag, painted face, lipstick and wig,
wearing an off the shoulder (Jeanne Reith) dance hall ruffled dress with cowboy
boots, and struts his stuff, or when there is a blackout and we hear "The
William Tell Overture" –three times.
Steve, Manny Charles and Catie |
More hysterics when Miles (Charles Evans, Jr.) dressed up as “Aces”,
the little fellow with the wooden head, (think puppet) much resembling the Lord
Farquaad look in Shrek. Unfortunately his head is pulled out from his body in a tug of war somehow, (‘Curly Joe From Idaho’) and
Miles and Clive, the somewhat master of Aces, when all is said and done, are in full throttle comic mode banging out jokes and songs,
one after another. (“Oh, Mary Anne”, “Oh Sally Jane Oh Sally Jane”, “I’ve Got
Spurs That Jingle Jangle Jingle”.) Too funny for words.
Catie Grady gives the production some well deserved balance
in this all male show, singing duets, handing out scripts as to how the show
should be, wishing her Yankee brother well wishes while fighting overseas and
finally singing a beautiful rendition of “White Cliffs Of Dover”.
As you can imagine, just as the radio show nears its end
the real deals show up. That’s show biz for ya, and if you snooze, you loose.
Credit Deborah Gilmour Smyth for choreography, Jon
Lorenz for music direction, Nathan Peirson for lighting, and Patrick Duffy for
sound and Rachel Hengst for properties.
L to R. Steve Gouveia, Catie Grady, Ross Hellwig and Manny Fernandes |
Saving the best for last, hats off to a well tuned musical
cast who, from beginning to end sing, dance around, and play every instrument as it was their
only. It always amazes the versatility and qualities of musicians that can pick
up an instrument, in this case mostly strings, and and play as if it was their instrument of choice.
Envious congratulations from one whose violin and guitar
lessons were cut short for lack of showing any musical talent or finger
coordination. Sigh!
See you at the theatre.
Dates: Through April 28th
Organization: Lamb’s Players Theatre
Phone: 619-437-6000
Production Type: Musical Revue
Where: 1142 Orange Ave. Coronado, CA 92117
Ticket Prices: $28.00-$78.00
Web: lambsplayers.org
Photo: Ken Jacques
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