December 5, 2008, Raleigh, NC: In Raleigh
Little Theatre and Actors
Comedy Lab's
crowd-pleasing joint production of Forever Plaid: Plaid
Tidings,
Stuart Ross' cute 2003 sequel to his hit 1990
Off-Broadway musical, the four twenty-something members of the
heavenly 1960s close-harmony guy group return to Earth on another
mysterious mission
from above — spurred on this time by enigmatic clues from the
late, great Rosemary Clooney. In this latest temporary reprieve from
joining the heavenly choir, The Forever Plaids get to perform the
Christmas concert that was still in the early planning stages on
Feb. 9, 1964, when the boys died in a car-bus collision on the way
to their breakthrough gig — in the lounge of an Airport Hilton,
hear Harrisburg, PA.
Ironically, it was a bus full of excited Catholic schoolgirls on
their way to witness The Beatles' historic debut on "The
Ed Sullivan Show" that crashed into the boys' 1954
Mercury, obliterating the cherry-red ragtop and killing the quartet
instantly.
What a great metaphor. The British invasion, led by The Beatles and
the Rolling Stones, figuratively put a big dent the careers of other
heretofore popular close-harmony guy groups, such as The Lettermen,
The Four Lads, and the Hi-Los. So, it is fitting that ecstatic fans
of the Fab Four literally buried The Forever Plaids, four high school
friends who met in the audiovisual club in 1956 and took their name
from the specially made tuxedoes, with matching plaid bowties and
cummerbunds, that they wore onstage.
In the current production of Plaid Tidings, David Adams
as Sparky, Jason Justice as Frankie, Jon Karnofsky as Jinx, and Jim
Tarantino as Smudge create heavenly harmonies on “Strangers
in Paradise,” “Hey There,” “The Christmas
Song,” “Let It Snow,” “It’s Beginning
to Look a Lot Like Christmas,” and “Have Yourself a
Merry Little Christmas.” These four very funny lads ham it
up delightfully in “Sha-Boom (Life Could Be a Dream),” “Bésame
Mucho” / “Kiss of Fire,” “Mambo Italiano,” “Mele
Kalikimaka,” and especially the “Christmas Calypso” with “Day-O” and “Matilda” and
a priceless three-minute and 11-second parody of “The Ed Sullivan
Show,” featuring vivid vignettes spoofing Sullivan regulars,
such as The Vienna Boys Choir, the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes,
plate spinners, ballet dancers, the Spanish ventriloquist Señor
Wences, the Italian mouse puppet Topo Gigio, Alvin and the Chipmunks,
etc.
The highly talented husband-and-wife team of Rod and Nancy Rich
have directed and choreographed the Plaid Tidings with lots
of snap, crackle, and pop. The monkey business that Rod Rich injects
into the proceedings and Nancy Rich’s deliberately cheesy choreography
for The Forever Plaids’ production numbers really heighten
the show’s hilarity, and the Actors Comedy Lab co-founders
have combined with veteran Raleigh Little Theatre musical director
and pianist Harrison Fisher and a bass player (Aaron Bittikofer,
Dave Aduddell, Ed Moon, and Dan Zehr rotate) to make the music of Plaid
Tidings as much fun as the comedy. Plus, technical director
and set and lighting designer Thomas Mauney has created a nifty nightclub
set in RLT’s Gaddy-Goodwin Theatre—which is perfect as
a backdrop for The Forever Plaids’ latest cosmic comeback.
During the opening-night performance on Dec. 5th, Plaid Tidings quickly
won the audience’s heart with endearing comic characterizations
by David Adams as Sparky, the group’s resident jokester whose
wisecracks keep the other Plaids loose; Jason Justice as Frankie,
the passionate leader of the Plaid-pack whose asthma acts up whenever
the pace of the performance picks up; Jon Karnofsky as Sparky’s
shy stepbrother Jinx, a terrific tenor who is prone to nose bleeds
whenever he strains to hit the high notes; and Jim Tarantino as Smudge,
a card-carrying pessimist and an inveterate worrywart with a nervous
stomach and a suitcase full of regrets. Messrs. Adams, Justice, Karnofsky,
and Tarantino not only give Plaid Tidings four distinct
and sympathetic personalities, but they happily harmonize on all
or part of 35 separate songs that earned this funny foursome a standing
ovation on Dec. 5th and, my sources tell me, every performance since.
Note: All
shows are wheelchair accessible.