Friday, July 18, 2014
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Marxfest Diary: Days 27-31
Matthew Curiano, Bob Homeyer, Robert Pinnock, Noah Diamond, and Seth Shelden. Photo: Getty Images. |
In addition to the I'll Say She Is group, Trav put together a great bill of performers -- Ariella Pizza, Michael Goldfried, Abe Goldfarb, Lady Rizo -- all of whom performed material associated with the Marxes. Young Ms. Pizza impersonated all of the Brothers, in an epic performance of "Everyone Says I Love You." The Players Club didn't know what hit it. You can find a wealth of photos from the event here, here, here, here, and here.
Clockwise from top: Seth Shelden, Brett Leveridge, Noah Diamond, Trudy Marshall, Kathy Biehl. Photo: Kathy Biehl. |
First, there was the turnout. No kidding, that Trav S.D. has the legs of a ballerina. No, no, I'm talking about the turnout, the crowd, which packed the sixth-floor lecture hall of the Mid-Manhattan Library, so the staff had to remove an accordion wall to accommodate more chairs! Throughout this festival, we've been looking for signs that our madness is contagious, any indication that we're doing something to spread the gospel of our Brothers. Exhibit 29: Too many people attended a lecture at the library on a Thursday night! Well -- certainly one too many, and that was the other distinguishing factor. If you missed the fracas before the show, no description of it is going to do you any good.
Incidentally, Trav has published the adapted text of his three Marxfest lectures:
From Angels to Anarchists | Anarchy in Astoria | We're All Mad Here
Kevin Fitzpatrick begins the tour. |
Paul Wesolowski, Seth Shelden, and Brett Leveridge |
And so...
Melody Jane, Noah Diamond, Seth Shelden, and Trav S.D. at Flute for A Night at Wit's End. Photo: Amanda Sisk. |
For the last night of Marxfest, friend of the festival Don Spiro of Wit's End threw a spectacular speakeasy party at Flute Midtown (which was once Texas Guinan's Club Intime), dubbed A Night at Wit's End.
This was a magical night, and the perfect chaser to the big drink of Marxfest. It was attended by old friends, new friends, and so many of the people who in various ways have made this month the time of our lives. Though it must be acknowledged that on this joyous evening, some were conspicuously absent. The great Jonny Porkpie, Marxfest Committee member and Burlesque Mayor of New York City, had to spend the final week of May in Vienna, continuing the rollicking celebration of the human body which is his primary beat. I barely got out of that sentence alive. You were missed, Mr. Mayor, but I suspect you had a pretty good time nonetheless.
Jesse Gelber and Kate Manning and their band. |
In addition to sparkling conversation, highlights of the evening included a dance lesson, drawings by Adriano, warm words from hostess Kita St. Cyr, and live entertainment from my new favorite act in New York, Gelber and Manning. It feels like many months since they last crossed paths with Marxfest, at Music of the Marx Brothers on May 9. (Read all about it here.)
I might as well admit that I was only at the party about half the time; the rest of the time I was Groucho. (Walking to Flute, a pedestrian who was clearly not a Marxfest participant saw me in costume and shouted, "Hey, Charlie!") Groucho hobnobbed, Groucho posed for a drawing by Adriano, Groucho danced with Amanda Sisk (actually that might have been me). And Groucho was even permitted to perform a couple of songs with Gelber and Manning and company.
Kevin Fitzpatrick took the microphone at one point and said some gracious words about the festival and its family. He also unveiled the key component of a Marx Brothers surprise that remains up our sleeves, which you'll be hearing about later this summer.
We all laughed, talked, sang, and danced into the night, and then we all said goodbye and went home. Marxfest, ladies and gentlemen.
So, a question that's come up a lot lately is: Are you going to do it again? Some have not even considered it a question; there have been many references to "next year's Marxfest" as though it were sure as Christmas.
Well, here and now, I can give you the official answer: We don't know!
We all laughed, talked, sang, and danced into the night, and then we all said goodbye and went home. Marxfest, ladies and gentlemen.
Noah Diamond, Meryl Danziger |
Well, here and now, I can give you the official answer: We don't know!
Some of us are turning our attention to I'll Say She Is, which you will see in all its glory in the New York International Fringe Festival in August. And as hinted above, there are a few other Marx Brothers happenings around the corner. Some are scattered fragments of Marxfest, and some are just Marx Brothers things we're excited about, like the release of the Marx Brothers TV Collection DVD set in August, the publication of Matthew Coniam's The Annotated Marx Brothers next year, and the publication (hopefully soon) of Robert Bader's epic chronicle of the Brothers' stage career.
Seth Shelden, Melody Jane |
Noah Diamond, Amanda Sisk |
It's not goodbye -- it's hello, we must be going.
As always, I remain
Yours in Marx,
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Marxfest Diary: Days 20-26
DAY 20: At the "secret" Party of the Second Part at Kabin, thrown by Marxfest Committee president Kevin Fitzpatrick for the festival's Kickstarter backers, so many familiar names were finally given faces! For me, the highlight of this night was getting to meet and speak with some of the fine men and women who helped make this festival possible. But it was an evening rich in highlights. The scintillating Bunny Buxom performed twice, and Marxfest Committee member Jonny Porkpie and I did our double-Groucho version of the immortal Gallagher and Shean theme song. Would you like to see some lovely watercolor renderings of these performances, by the inspired Carolyn Raship? Of course you would.
DAY 21: This day has been removed from the festival by special order of the Freedonia Chamber of Deputies.
DAY 22: At 2:00 pm was the penultimate free screening at the Epiphany Library -- A Day at the Races, a transitional Marx Brothers film, which many of us regard as either the last good one or the first bad one. (Next week's Epiphany screening is one we all agree is among the very best -- Horse Feathers.)
In the evening, the Marxfest audience was forced to choose between two outstanding events. Downtown at the Players Theatre, there was the final performance of Pinchbottom Burlesque's The Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House." Meanwhile, in midtown, the Brothers' 1933 masterpiece Duck Soup was screened at no less a venue than the Museum of Modern Art. Having seen the Pinch Brothers show earlier (see my previous entry), I arrived at MoMA ready to be entertained by the Marx Brothers themselves.
Marxfest Committee member Trav S.D. introduced the picture with some well-chosen words about how in the midst of planning the festival, it occurred to us that in addition to our talks, walks, parties, and performances, it might be nice "to get together and watch a Marx Brothers movie" too.
Far too rarely have I had the experience of watching the boys on the big screen, with a big audience. Whenever I do, I'm reminded that despite impressive advances in home entertainment technology, nothing can come close to watching a classic comedy film in its natural habitat. I have a nice big TV, and you probably do too, but when was the last time you saw the Marx Brothers two or three stories tall? As Trav points out in his account of the screening, Duck Soup is simply much funnier on the big screen, in front of a big crowd, than it can ever be on Netflix. The visual humor had infinitely greater impact, and the contagious nature of laughter illuminated much that hadn't gotten to me before, or not in many years.
DAYS 23 & 25: I've been working on my reconstruction-adaptation of I'll Say She Is for more than five years. Maybe you've heard about it. On Friday and Sunday, we presented the work publicly for the first time (or for the first time in ninety years, depending on what we're talking about).
It's a bit difficult for me to write about the I'll Say She Is readings the way I've been writing about the other Marxfest events. The whole festival has been a euphoric dream, but this show, having incubated in my hands for so long, is exceptional for me, even in this month of exceptions.
Working on I'll Say She Is, I've been so lucky so often. I was lucky to stumble upon so much research material; lucky to attain the guidance and friendship of Meg Farrell and other experts in Marxism, Johnstoneism, and musical theatre history; lucky to brush against this legend I've cherished since reading about it as a child. But it's hard to think of a luckier break, or one more crucial to the readings and the imminent production, than the association of I'll Say She Is and its producer and director, Trav S.D. I know that to burble about one's collaborators is almost as tiresome as to burble about one's work, but I can't help it. And since I'm already guilty of this, I'm going all the way and telling you that I've been humbled and gratified every day by this beautiful group of people who've brought the show back to life. There hasn't been a cast of I'll Say She Is since 1925. Let's hear it for Melody Jane, Seth Shelden, Robert Pinnock, Matthew Curiano, Kathy Biehl, Ivory Fox, Grace Gotham, Glen Heroy, Dan Herrman, and Bob Homeyer; for Frances Ines Rodriguez, for Sabrina Chap -- the active ingredients of a dream come true.
Besides the material itself, the readings included a scoop, announced with characteristic flair and showmanship by Trav during his opening speech: I'll Say She Is will be presented in full, with band and chorus, at the New York International Fringe Festival in August of this year. If you missed the Marxfest readings, fear not -- you'll see the whole show in August! And if you saw the Marxfest readings, fear not -- you'll see the whole show in August!
Trav's speech posited that the audience for the I'll Say She Is readings included two factions: the hardcore Marx Brothers fanatics, and others. Judging by the audience's reaction to the material, the former faction seemed to dominate. I'm bursting with excitement about the upcoming Fringe production, and I even dare to hope that I'll Say She Is will have a long life, um, beyond the Fringe. But it's possible that the show will never have as appreciative an audience as the glorious crowd who attended the Marxfest readings. The love in the room was palpable -- I mean the love for our Brothers, which unites us, one for all, and all for me, and me for you, and three for five, and six for a quarter.
And you know what, forget the love; how about the laughs! It's probable that this highly addictive drug, this most potent of all uppers, is what gets most of us on stage in the first place -- the exquisite, life-affirming sound of a large group of friends and strangers collectively issuing rolls of riotous laughter. There is no better music in the world. It was beautiful. It was a tribute to the Marx Brothers, to the Johnstone brothers, to the family on stage and the family in the audience.
Following Sunday's reading, there was a talkback session, with Trav, Meg, and me, and in its way this was almost as much fun as the reading itself. As Trav noted from the stage, virtually the entire capacity audience stayed for the talkback, which never happens! Video of the talkback may be forthcoming. I hope so.
UPDATE (6/5/14): Here it is!
DAY 24: To back up slightly -- in between the first I'll Say She Is reading on Friday and the second one on Sunday, there was a Marxfest event on Saturday afternoon at Kabin. (This comfortable East Village bar and lounge, incidentally, has been one of Marxfest's happiest homes. In addition to Saturday's event, we had our original photo shoot for both I'll Say She Is and The Pinch Brothers at Kabin, as well as the secret backers' party last Tuesday. The folks at Kabin have been incredibly welcoming and generous with the Marx Brothers community, so why don't you stop in sometime and thank them by having a drink or two on their premises?)
One of my favorite sidebars to the saga of the Marx Brothers is Groucho's seemingly unlikely friendship with T.S. Eliot. With this in mind, I conceived The Love Song of J. Cheever Loophole. The event consisted of readings -- first of the complete Groucho/Eliot correspondence as published in The Groucho Letters, and then of selections from both men's work, culminating in Eliot's masterpiece "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," interrupted by some of Groucho's most distinguished wisecracks. I enjoyed this event immensely, not just because I always enjoy any opportunity to speak in Groucho's voice, but because the Eliot selections were read by Hugh Sinclair, a great friend, a great actor, and a great Marxist. I could listen to him all day. In the future, I believe The Love Song of J. Cheever Loophole might be the basis for a full-length work exploring the Groucho/Eliot relationship.
DAY 26: There were no public Marxfest events on Memorial Day. I spent a lovely afternoon with my lovely mother, who was in town for the I'll Say She Is reading and the Eliot event. We even found time to discuss things other than the Marx Brothers! I'd forgotten there was anything else. Thanks, Mom!
It's hard to imagine that anything could have topped the first three weeks of Marxfest, but Week Four actually did. And would you believe that there's still another week ahead?
Tonight, members of the cast of I'll Say She Is will be performing at the Theatre Museum Gala at the Players Club (which is distinct from the Players Theatre -- we try to keep things as confusing as possible). On Thursday, there's Horse Feathers at the Epiphany Library at 2:00, and then at 6:30, Trav's talk at the Mid-Manhattan Library: We're All Mad Here: The Marx Brothers in Context. Throughout the festival, it's been said many times that the Marx Brothers were an enormous influence on every comedian since. What is said far less often is that the Brothers were enormously influenced by comedians who came before them, and who were their peers in vaudeville. Trav, author of No Applause -- Just Throw Money: The Book That Made Vaudeville Famous, will shed some light on this in what I'm sure will be an entertaining and informative talk. And it's free. After that, there's the final day of Marxfest -- Saturday, May 31. At noon, meet us outside the Algonquin Hotel for Kevin Fitzpatrick's Marx Brothers and Algonquin Round Table Walking Tour. And at 7:00 pm, we wrap up this dizzying month of Marxian madness with A Night at Wit's End, a speakeasy party at Flute Midtown. You probably know that Wit's End is the city's preeminent Jazz Age party. Did you know that on this particular night, in addition to vintage or vintage-inspired attire, the Wit's End dress code includes the option of Marx Brothers or Marx Brothers-inspired attire? We'll see you there.
As always, I remain
Yours in Marx,
P.S. Did you hear the one about Trav, Carolyn, Groucho, and a screaming child on the subway?
DAY 21: This day has been removed from the festival by special order of the Freedonia Chamber of Deputies.
DAY 22: At 2:00 pm was the penultimate free screening at the Epiphany Library -- A Day at the Races, a transitional Marx Brothers film, which many of us regard as either the last good one or the first bad one. (Next week's Epiphany screening is one we all agree is among the very best -- Horse Feathers.)
Trav S.D. introduces Duck Soup at the Museum of Modern Art, May 22. Photo from Travalanche. |
Marxfest Committee member Trav S.D. introduced the picture with some well-chosen words about how in the midst of planning the festival, it occurred to us that in addition to our talks, walks, parties, and performances, it might be nice "to get together and watch a Marx Brothers movie" too.
Far too rarely have I had the experience of watching the boys on the big screen, with a big audience. Whenever I do, I'm reminded that despite impressive advances in home entertainment technology, nothing can come close to watching a classic comedy film in its natural habitat. I have a nice big TV, and you probably do too, but when was the last time you saw the Marx Brothers two or three stories tall? As Trav points out in his account of the screening, Duck Soup is simply much funnier on the big screen, in front of a big crowd, than it can ever be on Netflix. The visual humor had infinitely greater impact, and the contagious nature of laughter illuminated much that hadn't gotten to me before, or not in many years.
Robert Pinnock, Matthew Curiano, Seth Shelden, Melody Jane, and Noah Diamond performing the Napoleon Scene in the I'll Say She Is reading at the Players Theatre, 5/23. Photo: Jonathan Melvin Smith. |
It's a bit difficult for me to write about the I'll Say She Is readings the way I've been writing about the other Marxfest events. The whole festival has been a euphoric dream, but this show, having incubated in my hands for so long, is exceptional for me, even in this month of exceptions.
Working on I'll Say She Is, I've been so lucky so often. I was lucky to stumble upon so much research material; lucky to attain the guidance and friendship of Meg Farrell and other experts in Marxism, Johnstoneism, and musical theatre history; lucky to brush against this legend I've cherished since reading about it as a child. But it's hard to think of a luckier break, or one more crucial to the readings and the imminent production, than the association of I'll Say She Is and its producer and director, Trav S.D. I know that to burble about one's collaborators is almost as tiresome as to burble about one's work, but I can't help it. And since I'm already guilty of this, I'm going all the way and telling you that I've been humbled and gratified every day by this beautiful group of people who've brought the show back to life. There hasn't been a cast of I'll Say She Is since 1925. Let's hear it for Melody Jane, Seth Shelden, Robert Pinnock, Matthew Curiano, Kathy Biehl, Ivory Fox, Grace Gotham, Glen Heroy, Dan Herrman, and Bob Homeyer; for Frances Ines Rodriguez, for Sabrina Chap -- the active ingredients of a dream come true.
Matthew Curiano and Melody Jane. Photo: Jonathan Melvin Smith. |
Backstage: Kathy Biehl as Ruby Mintworth in I'll Say She Is. |
Trav's speech posited that the audience for the I'll Say She Is readings included two factions: the hardcore Marx Brothers fanatics, and others. Judging by the audience's reaction to the material, the former faction seemed to dominate. I'm bursting with excitement about the upcoming Fringe production, and I even dare to hope that I'll Say She Is will have a long life, um, beyond the Fringe. But it's possible that the show will never have as appreciative an audience as the glorious crowd who attended the Marxfest readings. The love in the room was palpable -- I mean the love for our Brothers, which unites us, one for all, and all for me, and me for you, and three for five, and six for a quarter.
And you know what, forget the love; how about the laughs! It's probable that this highly addictive drug, this most potent of all uppers, is what gets most of us on stage in the first place -- the exquisite, life-affirming sound of a large group of friends and strangers collectively issuing rolls of riotous laughter. There is no better music in the world. It was beautiful. It was a tribute to the Marx Brothers, to the Johnstone brothers, to the family on stage and the family in the audience.
Following Sunday's reading, there was a talkback session, with Trav, Meg, and me, and in its way this was almost as much fun as the reading itself. As Trav noted from the stage, virtually the entire capacity audience stayed for the talkback, which never happens! Video of the talkback may be forthcoming. I hope so.
UPDATE (6/5/14): Here it is!
DAY 24: To back up slightly -- in between the first I'll Say She Is reading on Friday and the second one on Sunday, there was a Marxfest event on Saturday afternoon at Kabin. (This comfortable East Village bar and lounge, incidentally, has been one of Marxfest's happiest homes. In addition to Saturday's event, we had our original photo shoot for both I'll Say She Is and The Pinch Brothers at Kabin, as well as the secret backers' party last Tuesday. The folks at Kabin have been incredibly welcoming and generous with the Marx Brothers community, so why don't you stop in sometime and thank them by having a drink or two on their premises?)
One of my favorite sidebars to the saga of the Marx Brothers is Groucho's seemingly unlikely friendship with T.S. Eliot. With this in mind, I conceived The Love Song of J. Cheever Loophole. The event consisted of readings -- first of the complete Groucho/Eliot correspondence as published in The Groucho Letters, and then of selections from both men's work, culminating in Eliot's masterpiece "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," interrupted by some of Groucho's most distinguished wisecracks. I enjoyed this event immensely, not just because I always enjoy any opportunity to speak in Groucho's voice, but because the Eliot selections were read by Hugh Sinclair, a great friend, a great actor, and a great Marxist. I could listen to him all day. In the future, I believe The Love Song of J. Cheever Loophole might be the basis for a full-length work exploring the Groucho/Eliot relationship.
DAY 26: There were no public Marxfest events on Memorial Day. I spent a lovely afternoon with my lovely mother, who was in town for the I'll Say She Is reading and the Eliot event. We even found time to discuss things other than the Marx Brothers! I'd forgotten there was anything else. Thanks, Mom!
Noah Diamond, Robert Pinnock, and Seth Shelden backstage at the Players Theatre for the I'll Say She Is reading on May 25. |
Tonight, members of the cast of I'll Say She Is will be performing at the Theatre Museum Gala at the Players Club (which is distinct from the Players Theatre -- we try to keep things as confusing as possible). On Thursday, there's Horse Feathers at the Epiphany Library at 2:00, and then at 6:30, Trav's talk at the Mid-Manhattan Library: We're All Mad Here: The Marx Brothers in Context. Throughout the festival, it's been said many times that the Marx Brothers were an enormous influence on every comedian since. What is said far less often is that the Brothers were enormously influenced by comedians who came before them, and who were their peers in vaudeville. Trav, author of No Applause -- Just Throw Money: The Book That Made Vaudeville Famous, will shed some light on this in what I'm sure will be an entertaining and informative talk. And it's free. After that, there's the final day of Marxfest -- Saturday, May 31. At noon, meet us outside the Algonquin Hotel for Kevin Fitzpatrick's Marx Brothers and Algonquin Round Table Walking Tour. And at 7:00 pm, we wrap up this dizzying month of Marxian madness with A Night at Wit's End, a speakeasy party at Flute Midtown. You probably know that Wit's End is the city's preeminent Jazz Age party. Did you know that on this particular night, in addition to vintage or vintage-inspired attire, the Wit's End dress code includes the option of Marx Brothers or Marx Brothers-inspired attire? We'll see you there.
As always, I remain
Yours in Marx,
P.S. Did you hear the one about Trav, Carolyn, Groucho, and a screaming child on the subway?
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Marxfest Diary: Days 12-19
Marxfest Committee member Kathy Biehl chats with Bill Marx during Marxfest's Global Marx Brothers Shindig on May 15 |
DAY 15: The second half of the festival began on Thursday, May 15. This was the day designated by Bill Marx (son of Harpo) as the International Day of Laughter, so chosen because it's the actual centennial of the Galesburg, Illinois poker game at which Art Fisher gave the boys their nicknames. (Actually, according to Robert Bader, the fateful event could also have occurred on May 14 or 16.) To mark the occasion, Marxfest held a special event, an online conversation with Bill Marx and a virtual gathering of Marx Brothers fans from around the world.
There were some technical glitches, and we were sorry to hear that some who attempted to participate were either unable to log in, or unable to stream the event once they did. But more than 200 Marxists from both sides of the Atlantic did manage to get in, and were treated to a wonderful exchange. Bill graciously and eloquently answered questions about Harpo, the Marx Brothers, and the significance of their lives and careers. "My dad said, 'I never would have made it without my brothers,'" he told us. He also talked about playing the piano for Allan Sherman's debut performance (attended by all five Marx Brothers), shared memories of Harpo's innate wisdom and decency, and described his father's speaking voice.
The hour flew by, and at the end, Bill said -- not only to us, but to all Marx Brothers fans everywhere: "I want to tell you that I love you." He thanked us, all of us, for loving the Marx Brothers and keeping their comedy alive. The pleasure is ours, sir.
We're hoping to obtain video of the conversation and make highlights available online.
Tigger! as Pinchy in The Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House." Photo by Don Spiro. |
The show began with a Pinchbottom parody of the old Paramount Pictures logo, followed by newspaper headlines setting up the plot -- a clever and beautifully-executed nod to the opening moments of Animal Crackers. For Marx Brothers fanatics (of which there are more than a few running around the city these days), much of the fun of The Pinch Brothers is identifying the many references to classic Marx material, which Jonny has deftly woven throughout his original libretto. The references I spotted, in addition to the Animal Crackers intro, included:
- A "charades" scene between Pinchy (Tigger!) and Chica (Lady Scoutington), modeled on the Harpo/Chico charades sequences in A Day at the Races, A Night in Casablanca, and Love Happy.
- Porkpie parodies of "Lydia the Tattooed Lady" and other Marx standards.
- Tigger!'s spot-on recreation of Harpo's "getting tough" business, as seen in Monkey Business and Horse Feathers.
- Jonny Porkpie and A. Goldfarb hilariously capturing the Groucho/Dumont dynamic, with a twist or two.
- Trav S.D. perfectly embodying the archetypal Marx Brothers detective -- a "pre-noir" lawman, as Trav has said, generally named Hennessy or Henderson. (At other performances, the role is played by Don Spiro.)
- In addition to all the Marx references, The Bawdy House gleefully borrows classic comedy devices from elsewhere (pie fights, silent-movie chases, Donny Vomit as a moustache-twirling villain), nicely contextualizing the Marx mythos.
There are many others, including two classic cinematic Marx Brothers sequences impressively reinterpreted for the stage, but to be more specific would spoil too many surprises. You still have one more chance to see it, this Thursday. Adults only, and all that. For a more detailed account of The Bawdy House, read Trav S.D.'s article about the show.
Day 15 of Marxfest was also a big one for free screenings; at 2:00 you had your choice of A Night at the Opera (96th Street Library) or Room Service (Epiphany Library). The latter venue is showing A Day at the Races on May 22 and Horse Feathers on May 29.
A few Marxfest Committee members, and friends, at the Brothers' childhood home. |
DAY 17: I only got to spend a brief amount of time enjoying the Barx Brothers event, but it was a beautiful morning in Yorkville, and it was nice to meet up with part of the group on the steps of the Brothers' childhood home, 179 East 93rd Street. Or 179 Marx Brothers Place.
I had to get to the 96th Street Library to prepare for my own presentation, "The Marxes of Yorkville," which began at noon. The 96th Street Library has a great room downstairs, which they refer to as a meeting room, but which is really a small auditorium. Some years ago, I participated in a "Save Marx Brothers Place" event there, where we screened my film tribute The Brothers, and ever since then I've associated that room with the Marxes.
"The Marxes of Yorkville" was well-attended and seemed to go over nicely. It was a triple bill, starting with my -- lecture? Talk? Presentation? All of these words make it sound like something that would be a chore to sit through. I spoke for about thirty minutes, telling the story of the Brothers' early years in New York, accompanied by photographs and artifacts projected on a screen behind me. It was so much fun, I kind of wanted to keep going and cover their whole career. Maybe some day I'll get to teach a class in Marxism (perhaps in hi skule). But it was time to move on: Next on the bill was a particular treat, Dan Truman and Seth Shelden reading excerpts from Groucho and Me and Harpo Speaks. I'd selected the excerpts, all dealing with the Yorkville years, to complement my talk. Seth, who also plays Harpo in I'll Say She Is this week, told me that it was very helpful having heard Bill Marx's description of Harpo's voice two days earlier.
Noah Diamond speaks at "The Marxes of Yorkville" at the 96th Street Library, May 17. Photo by Amanda Sisk. |
DAY 18: I'm hoping that Marxfest Committee president Kevin Fitzpatrick will report on the Bronx Zoo "Elephant in Your Pajamas" event which took place on Sunday. I missed that one, owing to a nine-hour marathon rehearsal for the two staged readings of I'll Say She Is which are coming your way this Friday and Sunday at the Players Theatre. (Details are here. Even more details are here.) I'm going to spare you the self-satisfied burbling in which I am tempted to indulge. I'm not going to tell you how exhilarating the rehearsal was, how brilliant the cast is, how historic these readings are, or how sorry you may be if you don't buy your tickets in advance right now and be part of this moment in Marx Brothers history.
DAY 19: There were no public Marxfest events on Monday, but it was nevertheless an important day. It was the actual ninetieth anniversary of the opening night of I'll Say She Is at the Casino Theatre. Nine decades since the boys graduated from vaudeville to Broadway. And how exciting to think that their ninety-year-old vehicle is still "a masterpiece of knock 'em down and drag 'em out humor" (as George Jean Nathan wrote in 1924), and even more exciting to think that you can be part of the first audience to enjoy this work since the original production closed, and all you have to do is buy tickets right now.
I'd better end this before I plug again.
As always, I remain
Yours in Marx,
Friday, May 16, 2014
Dogs & Elephants? It Must Be Family Weekend
Marxfest has been in full swing since the beginning of the
month, however, this weekend is all about families. The Marxfest Committee has
focused two days over the weekend on programming that’s aimed at the next
generation of Marx Brothers fans. Here are the details to attend, for people of
all ages.
Saturday, May 17, 10 AM. The Barx Brothers Dogwalk
We will be meeting at Marx Brothers Playground, on East
Ninety-sixth Street, between First and Second Avenues (closer to Second). We
will meet at 10 AM and the walk will commence between 10:15 and 10:30. The walk
will be held rain or shine. Come dressed as your favorite Marx Brothers member,
or dress your dogs and kids up too. Meet Eli the Celebrity Chihuahua! We will be walking about 12-15 blocks.
Among the stops will be Marx Brothers Place on East Ninety-third street, where
the brothers and their family lived for more than a dozen years. The walk will
wind up at the 96th Street Library, 12 East 9th Street
for “The Marxes of Yorkville” talk by Noah Diamond. This talk is also free and
open to the public, and suitable for kids. It commences at Noon.
Sunday, May 18, Noon, An Elephant in Your Pajamas, at the
Bronx Zoo
South Entrance (Gate C) meeting point (Noon) –parking entrance
-or-
-or-
Asia Gate Entrance meeting point (12:30) – mass transit
entrance
The trend of wearing your pajamas in public (not a new trend
in New York City) will be on display when we visit the Bronx Zoo attired in our
sleepwear. Of course we are paying tribute to the famous Groucho Marx joke,
however, we are taking it to the real world by visiting the Bronx Zoo elephants.
However, the African Elephants at the zoo are not in a cage to walk up to in
our pajamas. There is a bit of planning needed to get to see them!
There are two entrances to meet at, and then the rallying
point. The South Entrance is where the parking lot is. If you are driving to
the Bronx Zoo, park in the South Lot (Gate C). We will meet at the gate from 12:00-12:20
and then proceed to walk to the rallying point in Asia Plaza. If you are taking
mass transit, you will be entering at Asia Gate! This is the 2 or 5 subway
lines, or the BX9, BX36, Q44, BX40, or BX42 bus lines. You can meet here at
approximately 12:30. Then proceed to the rally point in Asia Plaza. In Asia
Plaza we’ll pose for photos about 1 PM and then get in line for the Wild Asia Monorail, which
takes us to see the elephants (and their friends, the lions, tigers, etc).
Following the trip to seeing the elephants (and shooting only photos), we can
decide which exhibits to see next.
For all updated information on Saturday and Sunday, follow
on Twitter @marxfest for updates that will be sent out. You can also email me kevin@marxfest.com for information.
The rest of the weekend is decidedly adults only! Saturday
night Murray Hill hosts You Bet Your Ass and Sunday night is the Pinch Brothersin the Bawdy House.
Monday, May 12, 2014
Marxfest Diary: Days 8-11
Jonny Porkpie, Tigger-James Ferguson, and Scout Durwood in The Bawdy House. Photo: Nishell Falcone. |
There are still three chances to see The Bawdy House -- which, as you may know, is a burlesque show written and directed by Marxfest Committee member Jonny Porkpie. I'll catch it this Thursday, May 15, following our Shindig with Bill Marx. The Bawdy House also has performances on May 18 and 22. (Get your tickets right here.) It will be another week before I can report on this event, but perhaps someone who saw it last Thursday will provide more details in the meantime. I'm told it's extremely funny. (Update: Here's Trav S.D.'s commentary on the opening night performance.) Here's a short video Jonny posted yesterday, featuring clips from Thursday's show:
DAY NINE: Friday night was yet another of our tentpole events -- the big Marx Brothers cabaret at 54 Below, produced by Kevin Fitzpatrick, devised by Bill Zeffiro, and fittingly entitled The Music of the Marx Brothers.
The Music of the Marx Brothers company: Marissa Mulder, Dandy Wellington, Tonna Miller, Bill Zeffiro, special guest, Rebekah Lowin, Kate Manning, Jesse Gelber, Steve Ross. Photo: Kevin Fitzpatrick. |
There was something in the air on Friday, besides mist, but the mist didn't hurt. It was a great, gray New York day. I arrived in the vicinity of 54 Below too early for the noon soundcheck, so I wandered around Broadway in the mist and did something I've never done before -- bought the Wall Street Journal. Because we were in it. (There was a Music of the Marx Brothers item, and a great photograph of our emcee, Dandy Wellington -- and even a nice mention of I'll Say She Is. Trav fears they may revoke it after they see our Wall Street number.)
This was the sign on our dressing room door at 54 Below. |
The show itself was spectacular -- owing largely, like other Marxfest events, to the obvious love and enthusiasm of the audience. Imagine a crowd that breaks into cheers and applause when they hear the opening notes of "The Monkey Doodle Doo!" That semi-classic from The Cocoanuts was performed most winningly by Rebekah Lowin in one of the evening's highlights. Some others:
Bill Zeffiro at the piano, rehearsing with Marissa Mulder, Rebekah Lowin, Dandy Wellington, and Jesse Gelber in the greenroom before the show. Photo: Kevin Fitzpatrick. |
- Bill Zeffiro, head down and fingers fluttering, beginning the show with the deeply evocative medley I call "The Grouchoverture." Also: His conviction on "Stay Down Here Where You Belong."
- Dandy Wellington's "Everyone Says I Love You" softshoe.
- Tonna Miller, delivering "Cosi-Cosa" in a state of operatic splendor, and also of pregnancy, gesturing to her midsection to give subtext to the lyric "Well, yes and no!"
- Marissa Mulder's "Always." Bill introduced her with the anecdote about "Always" being cut from The Cocoanuts: George S. Kaufman told Irving Berlin, "It stinks." Ms. Mulder took the stage, said, "This song really stinks," and proceeded to stop the show.
- The elegance and touching sincerity of Steve Ross, delivering "Love Me and the World is Mine" -- first in a tremulous whisper, then richer and more urgent as the song progressed.
- Gelber and Manning did two sets, both consisting only of highlights, but if I could only tell you about one I'd pick their sweet, winsome, and period-perfect rendition of "Why Am I So Romantic?"
Marxfest Committee member Kathy Biehl, with special guest. Photo: Amanda Sisk. |
Roughly halfway through the show, following Tonna Miller's beautiful rendition of "Alone," Bill Zeffiro announced that there was a very special guest in the house who probably needed no introduction. Then a familiar voice was heard, yammering from a corner of the room -- "Well, well, a worse-looking audience I've never seen!" -- and a familiar figure loped his way through the room and onto the stage. Once there, he casually insulted Zeffiro, the venue, and the audience, and between jokes he warbled "There's a Place Called Omaha, Nebraska." I'm told his turn was well-received.
I'm also told there will soon be video available of a few of the performances from The Music of the Marx Brothers. (On our YouTube channel, incidentally, we've just released some of the vaudeville performances from the May 7 Marxes in Manhattan show.)
UPDATE (6/11): Video of three performances from Music of the Marx Brothers has now surfaced on YouTube:
UPDATE (6/11): Video of three performances from Music of the Marx Brothers has now surfaced on YouTube:
DAY TEN: On the tenth day of Marxfest, it was out to Queens. The Greater Astoria Historical Society is mere blocks from the Kaufman-Astoria Studios, formerly Paramount's New York production base, where the Brothers filmed Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers. (The GAHS, incidentally, appears twice on our calendar -- they're also offering a free screening of Room Service on May 24.)
Trav S.D. speaking at the Greater Astoria Historical Society. Photo: Don Spiro. |
Trav's entertaining account of the making of Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers ("a backlot backstory," he has said) again achieved the Marxfest Ideal: it provided enough of an overview to be of interest to casual fans, and also plenty of obscure detail and fresh insight for the fanatics to chew on. I might as well confess at this point that I'm in the latter group. I especially enjoyed Trav's reasoned defenses of directors Robert Florey and Victor Heerman against Groucho's frequent criticisms, and his appraisal of the film version of The Cocoanuts as "strangely underwater."
Research project: What was the name and location of the Italian restaurant in Astoria that Chico disappeared to during the filming of the team's first two pictures? Anybody?
For this talk, Trav appeared in a white suit and pith helmet, his appearance suggesting to me that Mark Twain was understudying for Groucho in Animal Crackers. Captain Spalding meets Captain Stormfield. For the Coney Island talk, he donned an academic robe and mortarboard. What will Trav wear at "We're All Mad Here: The Marx Brothers in Context?" Find out at the Mid-Manhattan Library on May 29!
Kat Mon Dieu as Marilyn Monroe, with Jonny Porkpie, Scout Durwood, and Tigger!, at the Stonewall Inn. |
Day Eleven of Marxfest was also Mother's Day. For us, of course, this was a day to celebrate not just our own mothers, but also Minnie Schoenberg Marx. She generally emerges from Marx Brothers literature as an amalgam of Mama Rose and Joan of Arc. Some of the most diligent Marx researchers have established that Minnie's management of her sons' career was not as masterful as they liked to say it was. (Simon Louvish's reluctant conclusion is that "being Minnie's boys was a bad career move.") But it all worked out pretty well.
Read Trav S.D.'s appreciation of Minnie here.
Read Alexander Woollcott's appreciation of Minnie here.
Marxfest now goes quiet for a few days, so we can catch our breath and prepare the next course. The festival comes roaring back this Thursday, May 15. That's the International Day of Laughter, so designated by Bill Marx -- and the centennial of the legendary nicknaming, according to Robert Bader. We're marking the occasion with a full day of events. At 2:00, you can choose between free screenings of A Night at the Opera (96th Street Library) or Room Service (Epiphany Library). At 6:00, we have a Marxfest event you can attend no matter where you are -- an online video conversation, in real time, with Bill Marx. This global gathering of Marx Brothers fans is presented in association with the video chat platform Shindig, and all you need to participate is a computer and a webcam. And then at 8:00 at the Players Theatre, the second performance of The Bawdy House. Then, on Saturday, May 17, we've got two Yorkville events during the day (The Barx Brothers Dogwalk and my presentation The Marxes of Yorkville), and another Porkpie-produced burlesque event, "You Bet Your Ass," at 10:00 pm.
And that will have taken us past the halfway point in this miraculous Month of Marx -- with some of our most exciting events still to come. We'll see you there.
Yours in Marx,
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Marxfest Diary: Days 5-7
Marx Brothers on Television and Marxes in Manhattan, editor of Groucho Marx and Other Short Stories and Tall Tales, compiler of The Marx Brothers TV Collection, and author of a forthcoming comprehensive chronicle of the Brothers' stage career.) None of us knew what to expect (except for Kathy Biehl, who has a way of knowing what to expect) -- just that Rob's research had led him to numerous unknown bombshells from the Marx saga, and that he'd be sharing one with us.
If you're a fellow fanatic, you're familiar with the story of how Groucho got his first professional job in show business, which turned out to be with the Leroy Trio. It was 1905, and young Julius Henry Marx answered an ad in the Morning World, and wound up auditioning on a rooftop. Here's Groucho telling a version of the story on his 1972 Carnegie Hall LP:
Incredibly, after decades of searching the World archives, Rob Bader found the ad -- the actual ad which Julius responded to, and which, in a sense, was the beginning of Groucho. (He showed us the ad: "BOYS wanted for act, singers or dancers. Leroy 200 E. 22d st.")
Even more incredibly, the actual building is still there, as is the lower rooftop which was the exact location of Groucho's first audition. We gazed up in awe, then entered the building -- now a German restaurant, Rolf's, coincidentally a favorite haunt for years of both Bader and Biehl, before they had an inkling of its significance to Marx Brothers history. Over a meal which surely would have pleased Lafe and Fanny Schoenberg, Rob shared further morsels of his groundbreaking research, and then we proceeded with plans for the Marxes in Manhattan show. Rob and I wound up walking around the city and talking long into the night about obscure corners of the Brothers' story, with an emphasis on I'll Say She Is. Of course, I have a special interest in I'll Say She Is -- but that's not the point of this particular article, so I won't go into detail about it here. (This is not the proper context, for example, to tell you that my adaptation of I'll Say She Is premieres in two historic staged readings on May 23 and 25, or that you can get tickets here right now.)
DAY SIX: Again, no public Marxfest events, but in the afternoon I attended a rehearsal for The Music of the Marx Brothers, Marxfest's big cabaret revue at 54 Below, which takes place tomorrow night (Friday, May 9) at 11:00 pm. (Get your tickets here!)
In Room Service (screening on May 15 and 24), Chico is heard to announce that "the rehearsal, she'sa wonderful." (He still thinks it's a terrible play, "but it makes a wonderful rehearsal.") This rehearsal was so wonderful, I can hardly imagine how much fun the show itself will be. Participating on Tuesday were Bill Zeffiro, Gelber & Manning, Tonna Miller, Dandy Wellington, and me; also appearing on Friday night are Steve Ross and Marissa Mulder. It's very exciting to be in such talented company -- even though I realize there's a good chance I will be bumped from the bill on Friday, in favor of a celebrity. (A legend, really. He has a moustache. No more hints.) Marxfest Committee founder and president Kevin Fitzpatrick, producer of the Music of the Marx Brothers show, managed to grab a bit of video, and here's a fragment for your enjoyment:
DAY SEVEN: For some reason -- I can't imagine why -- I've been craving cigars lately. Having arrived in the Village much too early to enter the Players Theatre and set up for Marxes in Manhattan, I treated myself to a two-dollar stogie and loped around Minetta Lane, puffing and mugging.
Before long, I met up with Kathy, Rob, and Paul Wesolowski, and we were soon admitted to the Players. Marxes in Manhattan was another beautiful and memorable evening, at least the equal of Sunday night's glorious Marx Brothers on Television. Last night's show offered a more diverse lineup of programming. Like the TV event, it included precious rare video footage, including twenty minutes of Marx family home movies, deftly edited by Bader and scored and narrated by Bill Marx. (This "family Marx Brothers movie," which includes the earliest known footage of Groucho, and many other incredible clips that were new to most of us, will be included in the upcoming DVD set.) There was also a fascinating multimedia presentation in which Rob Bader shared more secrets from his research, exquisite performances of "Alone" and "Everyone Says I Love You" by Rob Schwimmer on the theremin, and recreations of early vaudeville material.
In an evening full of surprises, the vaudeville performances were perhaps the most satisfying. Who ever thought we'd be watching a faithful recreation of the Leroy Trio? Kit Russoniello (as Johnnie Morris), Richard Taylor Pearson (as Gene Leroy), and Zachary Catron (as Julius Marx) were outstanding, and completely convincing as this infamous act we've heard and read so much about but certainly never expected to see. They performed "I Wonder What's the Matter with the Mail" -- one of those ghostly song titles often encountered in Marx Brothers literature. To hear the song itself, performed so well and so accurately, was the kind of time travel experience I dream about. It was not hard to imagine that the Players Theatre was a vaudeville house in 1905 and that we were witnessing the birth of the onstage Groucho. Sealing the deal, young Mr. Catron returned to the stage twice more, to perform early Julius Marx specialties "Somebody's Sweetheart I Want to Be" (sung by Groucho at the Metropolitan Opera House benefit for the victims of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake) and "Hello Mr. Stein" (performed by the Brothers in Mr. Green's Reception and other early acts).
Read Trav S.D.'s lovely account of Marxes in Manhattan right here, at Travalanche.
Update: Since this entry was published, we've released video of the three vaudeville performances:
A special word should be said about "Hello Mr. Stein." According to Rob Bader, Minnie bought this song from the publisher in 1907, and it was part of the Brothers' act from the Nightingales period through Mr. Green's Reception. Mr. Catron's performance on May 7 was likely the song's first public hearing in a century, and this video is the song's first-ever recording. "Hello Mr. Stein" was the first comedy song to be associated with the Marx Brothers.
As Bader explained, the boys are performing "Hello Mr. Stein" in this familiar photo from Mr. Green's Reception:
The only disappointment of the evening was that we didn't get to see Kelley Loftus. Ms. Loftus was supposed to be running the merch table, selling copies of Rob Bader's Groucho compilation. But she never showed up -- and added insult to injury by sending in her place a monkey wearing a fez cap. Why, the very idea! Though Kelley was missed, the creature Kathy dubbed "the merch monkey" seemed to do a pretty good job. Maybe we'll have her back, or maybe she'll have our back.
I wrapped up the night at the Washington Square Restaurant with Rob, Kathy, Paul, Meg Farrell, and Herbert Goldman. As we partook of moussaka, tuna melts, pizza burgers, and pie, we traveled more uncharted byways of Marx Brothers history, enriched by Mr. Goldman's footnotes about Jolson and the Shuberts.
Marxfest continues to exceed my wildest expectations. And my expectations are plenty wild.
And that was only the first week, folks! Tonight (Thursday, May 8) it's back to the Players for the opening night performance of Pinchbottom's adults-only burlesque tribute The Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House" (tickets here! tickets now!). I'll be catching a later performance (The Bawdy House continues its run May 15, 18, and 22), but hopefully one of my colleagues on the Marxfest Committee can report on opening night to keep these Marxfest Diaries complete. And tomorrow night (Friday, May 9) I'll see you at 54 Below for the aforementioned Music of the Marx Brothers. This weekend, it's Trav S.D.'s presentation about the making of Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers (Anarchy in Astoria, May 10) and a special Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House" session at Dr. Sketchy's (May 11). At which point we will still have more than half of the month of Marx ahead of us!
See you real soon.
Yours in Marx,
If you're a fellow fanatic, you're familiar with the story of how Groucho got his first professional job in show business, which turned out to be with the Leroy Trio. It was 1905, and young Julius Henry Marx answered an ad in the Morning World, and wound up auditioning on a rooftop. Here's Groucho telling a version of the story on his 1972 Carnegie Hall LP:
Incredibly, after decades of searching the World archives, Rob Bader found the ad -- the actual ad which Julius responded to, and which, in a sense, was the beginning of Groucho. (He showed us the ad: "BOYS wanted for act, singers or dancers. Leroy 200 E. 22d st.")
It all started right here. |
Clockwise from upper left corner: Bill Zeffiro, Tonna Miller, Jesse Gelber, Dandy Wellington, Noah Diamond, Bill Zeffiro, and Jesse Gelber rehearsing at Pearl Studios. Photos by Kevin Fitzpatrick. |
In Room Service (screening on May 15 and 24), Chico is heard to announce that "the rehearsal, she'sa wonderful." (He still thinks it's a terrible play, "but it makes a wonderful rehearsal.") This rehearsal was so wonderful, I can hardly imagine how much fun the show itself will be. Participating on Tuesday were Bill Zeffiro, Gelber & Manning, Tonna Miller, Dandy Wellington, and me; also appearing on Friday night are Steve Ross and Marissa Mulder. It's very exciting to be in such talented company -- even though I realize there's a good chance I will be bumped from the bill on Friday, in favor of a celebrity. (A legend, really. He has a moustache. No more hints.) Marxfest Committee founder and president Kevin Fitzpatrick, producer of the Music of the Marx Brothers show, managed to grab a bit of video, and here's a fragment for your enjoyment:
"It's a handy thing for a comedian -- assuming you are a comedian." |
Before long, I met up with Kathy, Rob, and Paul Wesolowski, and we were soon admitted to the Players. Marxes in Manhattan was another beautiful and memorable evening, at least the equal of Sunday night's glorious Marx Brothers on Television. Last night's show offered a more diverse lineup of programming. Like the TV event, it included precious rare video footage, including twenty minutes of Marx family home movies, deftly edited by Bader and scored and narrated by Bill Marx. (This "family Marx Brothers movie," which includes the earliest known footage of Groucho, and many other incredible clips that were new to most of us, will be included in the upcoming DVD set.) There was also a fascinating multimedia presentation in which Rob Bader shared more secrets from his research, exquisite performances of "Alone" and "Everyone Says I Love You" by Rob Schwimmer on the theremin, and recreations of early vaudeville material.
Kit Russoniello, Richard Taylor Pearson, Zachary Catron |
Read Trav S.D.'s lovely account of Marxes in Manhattan right here, at Travalanche.
Update: Since this entry was published, we've released video of the three vaudeville performances:
A special word should be said about "Hello Mr. Stein." According to Rob Bader, Minnie bought this song from the publisher in 1907, and it was part of the Brothers' act from the Nightingales period through Mr. Green's Reception. Mr. Catron's performance on May 7 was likely the song's first public hearing in a century, and this video is the song's first-ever recording. "Hello Mr. Stein" was the first comedy song to be associated with the Marx Brothers.
As Bader explained, the boys are performing "Hello Mr. Stein" in this familiar photo from Mr. Green's Reception:
Kelley Loftus??? Photo by Kathy Biehl. |
I wrapped up the night at the Washington Square Restaurant with Rob, Kathy, Paul, Meg Farrell, and Herbert Goldman. As we partook of moussaka, tuna melts, pizza burgers, and pie, we traveled more uncharted byways of Marx Brothers history, enriched by Mr. Goldman's footnotes about Jolson and the Shuberts.
Marxfest continues to exceed my wildest expectations. And my expectations are plenty wild.
And that was only the first week, folks! Tonight (Thursday, May 8) it's back to the Players for the opening night performance of Pinchbottom's adults-only burlesque tribute The Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House" (tickets here! tickets now!). I'll be catching a later performance (The Bawdy House continues its run May 15, 18, and 22), but hopefully one of my colleagues on the Marxfest Committee can report on opening night to keep these Marxfest Diaries complete. And tomorrow night (Friday, May 9) I'll see you at 54 Below for the aforementioned Music of the Marx Brothers. This weekend, it's Trav S.D.'s presentation about the making of Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers (Anarchy in Astoria, May 10) and a special Pinch Brothers in "The Bawdy House" session at Dr. Sketchy's (May 11). At which point we will still have more than half of the month of Marx ahead of us!
See you real soon.
Yours in Marx,
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