PHOTOS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1998

Second Show - Middle Camp

 

 

 

 

 

 

Andrea and I really wracked our brains during the offseason before the summer of 1998, trying to come up with a show to put between our two “must-do’s,” Rocky Horror and The Lion King. Andrea suggested an old, obscure show from the mid-’60s called It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s Superman, which sounded like a good idea; I had never heard of it, but the thought of a musical involving Superman intrigued me.

 

Then I heard the score.

 

The songs were so unbearably awful (written by Charles Strouse, composer of the similarly egregious and NEVER-EVER-EVER-TO-BE-PERFORMED-AT-PONTIAC Annie, and Lee Adams) that I clearly understood why the show closed after only 129 performances. Not to mention that the sheet music didn’t exist and the songs seemed almost impossible to play by ear. So it was back to the drawing board.

 

We got together one weekend to see what Andrea had in her collection; we considered The Music Man and a couple of other shows, then I thought of Damn Yankees, which was actually the first camp show I ever saw (at Natchez in 1978; the first show I ever performed in was a little children’s musical called The Weather Company, in 1979 at age 8). I started humming the tune of “You’ve Gotta Have Heart,” and Andrea said, “I have that.” Turned out she had the complete script and sheet music. Excellent, I thought, let’s do this.

 

I got my hands on the 1994 Broadway Revival cast recording, with Victor Garber and Bebe Neuwirth, which happily, unlike most cast albums, contained tracks of condensed dialogue to establish plot continuity on the CD, making the adaptation much, much easier. Figuring out how to stage the baseball scenes was a little more difficult, but that could wait until we actually got on stage.

 

I had some ideas on adapting this show that didn’t make it to the final play, such as making Joe Hardy’s team the Mets instead of the Washington Senators, but I ultimately decided against it, in part because the on-field competition between the Mets and Yankees is less direct and meaningful than it was for the Yankees and Senators in the ‘50s. I was troubled again, as I would be repeatedly over the years, by the paucity of female roles in proportion to male roles, so Andrea and I created the “Mambo Girls/Demonettes” to perform the otherwise pointless “Who’s Got The Pain?” mambo number (the only reason that song is in the show in the first place is because Gwen Verdon, Broadway’s original Lola, wanted another song-and-dance solo; it does nothing to further the plot).

 

I was off coaching a baseball tournament at Scatico, so Andrea handled the auditions and casting along with Kirsty Langsdale, our dance choreographer. Half of the inter boys division tried out, including Marc Asnis and Dan Vesey, who would become mainstays of the theatre program in the coming years; Dan was cast as Applegate while Marc, who had been the youngest Transylvanian in Rocky Horror, played Joe Boyd. Justin Camacho, who had a terrific singing voice at 11, was cast as Joe Hardy, while A.J. Strasser played Senators manager Benny Van Buren.

 

We all knew from the beginning that the star of this show would be Lauren Musacchio, who had a phenomenal singing voice and could also dance. I still wish Lauren had come back to camp after 1998; this turned out to be her only show but she really wowed the audience as Lola. Dana Bergman was cast as Meg Boyd; she also had a great voice but the adaptation had cut all of Meg’s songs except the opener, “Six Months Out of Every Year.” Leigh Kasoff got the part of reporter Gloria Thorpe, while her twin sister Alyssa was cast as one of the Senators, one of two girls on the team (Leigh and Alyssa had also been Transylvanians in Rocky Horror.)

 

From a pure production standpoint, Damn Yankees was, in many ways, better than Rocky Horror, mostly because we applied the technical and logistical lessons we learned on that show to this one. We found that having the cast learn their songs from the tapes they were given was a successful strategy, and that only needed a few days to teach the music before blocking and staging the individual scenes. We got a little better at scheduling rehearsals around the campers’ availability and paid more attention to technical details like curtain and lighting cues. I moved the piano from behind the stage to in front of it on the side, which enabled me to hear the sound mix (which was significantly better than in Rocky Horror) and have a better view of the actors.

 

One thing that made life a bit difficult for us this year and in 1999 was the fact that the stage was being used for other purposes during most of the rehearsal process, meaning we weren’t really able to have the entire space to ourselves, let alone get any work done on sets and scenery, until the last day or two before the show. Thankfully this issue was resolved in 2000 when those purposes were moved to another location on camp.

 

The sets for Damn Yankees were fairly simple; we had three large wooden frames (which were down to two by 2000, one by 2001, and zero by 2002), two wide and one narrow. The two wide ones were used for the Senators dugout on the left side (audience POV), and a stadium/outfield backdrop on the right, with a tiny “PONTIAC Motor Cars” ad on the scoreboard, along with out-of-town scores for all the contemporary Major League teams. The narrow frame was Joe Hardy’s locker, with an actual jersey hung on the front of it. We made the jerseys by buying white v-neck t-shirts (which turned out to be too big, unfortunately) and painting the Senators’ “W” logo and button-down seams on the front, with numbers on the back. We also gathered up as many Yankees caps as we could and covered the “NY” logo with a white “W” painted on black construction paper.

 

The actual performance of Damn Yankees was very good (Lauren, though certainly nervous and a bit shy, was simply amazing as Lola), with a couple of minor flaws. One of the boys playing the Senators came out for the baseball scenes wearing blue jeans with his jersey hanging out, instead of tucked into baseball pants or sweats like all the others; it might have made sense given that the Senators were supposed to be such a bungling, rag-tag bunch, but it looked awful. Dan made a classic blooper by coming out on stage before Justin sang “A Man Doesn’t Know” instead of after, and then making a really nice recovery: “Hey, Joe...uh...gotta go!” Priceless.

 

One thing that was a problem in this show was that the cast members were often on the wrong side of the stage for their entrances and exits between scenes; this was mostly due to the fact that while we had staged all the scenes individually, we hadn’t really established continuity by running the whole show from start to finish and paying attention to scene transitions, entrance and exit directions, microphone exchanges, and the like. This made it clear that we would have to do that for future shows; yet another lesson learned, and yet another positive step for the Pontiac Theatre program.

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Pontiac Players present

DAMN YANKEES

 

Music and lyrics by RICHARD ADLER and JERRY ROSS

Book by GEORGE ABBOTT and DOUGLASS WALLOP

 

Principal Cast

LAUREN MUSACCHIO as Lola

DANIEL VESEY as Applegate

MARC ASNIS as Joe Boyd

DANA BERGMAN as Meg Boyd

JUSTIN CAMACHO as Joe Hardy

LEIGH KASOFF as Gloria Thorpe

A.J. STRASSER as Benny Van Buren

 

Directed by ANDREA LEVINE, JAY BRAIMAN and KIRSTY LANGSDALE

 

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