Temple of Shtick
Musical on legendary Catskills hotel hits right notes
at classical venue
By JOSEF WOODARD, Special to The Times
Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times
Friday, June 16, 2000
The Kavli Theatre, in
the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza, is often a sober, upstanding joint--hosting
the orchestral likes of the New West Symphony and other classical fare.
News of the Los Angeles
Jewish Symphony's booking there might logically have suggested another
classical event on the schedule.
Last Sunday, though, the
normally reserved hall became a temple of shtick for a night. More to the
point, it paid homage to a legendary, lamented temple of shtick, the resort
hotel called Grossinger's.
There, in what became
the comic haven and breeding ground in the Catskill mountains in upstate
New York, Jenny Grossinger turned a failed family farm into a star-studded
resort destination for an era's vacationers.
This was the West Coast
premiere
of the musical "Grossinger's--The Last Resort," in a concertreading, without
sets, that had actors with scripts in hand. The L.A. Jewish Symphony, on
its casual, Broadway-esque behavior, proved to be a very fine pit band,
though it actually performed on stage.
A standing-room-only house
was on hand, and, in shtick tradition, was even treated to a comedic warmup
act.
* * *
Improv impresario Bud
Freeman and funny men Shelley Berman, Kenny Ellis and Fred Travalena swapped
wisecracks and reminisced about the resort, which helped establish the
reputation of the Catskills as an incubator for American comedy culture.
The symphony, energetically
led by conductor Noreen Green, has been involved in supporting the cause
of Jewish composers in Southern California, in and around "serious" music.
On this occasion, the
mood and the score lightened for what is an enjoyable opus, written in
a not particularly challenging but competent and tuneful style by Claibe
Richardson.
The book, by Stephen Cole,
with lyrics by Cole and Ronny Graham, tells the story of the resort and
of Jenny's resolve to make it a success. That, it was. Grossinger's gave
a start to comedians such as Rodney Dangerfield and Jerry Lewis, and hosted
a stellar list of celebrities.
Business trailed off in
the '70s, and the resort was demolished in 1987, but its legacy lives on.
A project such as this could help perpetuate its memory.
Still, the musical itself
may be of limited interest--a bit of show biz about life behind show biz,
whose songs are stronger than its narrative.
The vocal cast was superb,
especially the robust-voiced Susan Edwards Martin as Jenny, and Estelle
Harris (from "Seinfeld" fame, as George Costanza's meddlesome mother).
Here, Harris was the flame-topped comic relief within the comic fabric
of the piece.
No doubt, for the many
in the audience who had personal experience with Grossinger's, the musical
has an intimate, been-there-done-that resonance. What the uninitiated among
us get is a sense of the show biz buzz on this fabled property.
A sense that, as one of
the refrains intones, "It was an innocent time, a fabulous place."
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