FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
What
is it you C#nt Face Maria?
By Emma Chasin-Rappaport
Was
it Princess Anne or Paul Lynde who said "There's nothing better
than hanging out with a bunch of queens?" Well let me tell
you, my friends, that couldn't be truer.
Recently, I went to a special evening of theatre called "Sing
Along Sound of Music" at the Hollywood Bowl. That should
make the first sentence make sense now. Everyone who knows me knows
two things: 1) I like to refer to myself in the third person, and
2) Emma loves the musical as a genre. There's nothing like having
a dramatic storyline interrupted by song whenever the emotion hits
a high. However, The Sound of Music was never one of my faves.
Maybe it's the goyisha family that actually has a "Captain"
or the prolific Nazi influence in its heroic theme that makes me
feel a little alienated -- neigh I say, stifled -- but The Sound
of Music was not a first choice when it came to car-ride sing-alongs
on the way to visit Auntie Rashi at the King David Home for the
Elderly in beautiful, downtown Deer Beach, Florida (never could
get a private room ... it was such a shanda.)
However,
I would like to tell you that for everyone that has ever felt the
outsider at an Austrian-based love story musical, let me say that
you should give it another try. Maybe it was the camaraderie of
16,000 gay men and disenfranchised, nerdy comedy writers, or the
soft pretzels and Chandon champagne available, but this night was
a panoply of good, not so clean, fun.
I was
sitting with my gaggle of girlfriends for our monthly "girl's
night out" which was usually pre-made crudités from
Ralph's and a bad Michele Lee TV movie. But my friend Jane picked
this one and it was a winner.
Anyhoo,
in the beginning I had my doubts as the pre-show was an unending
roll call of kids and adults in various, home-made Sound of Music
costumes for the apparent semi-annual Sound of Music Costume
Contest (the winner gets a free cruise to Catalina
does not
include free Jitney rides or golf cart rentals.) I saw visions of
lederhosen in drapery material obviously snatched from the discount
bin at House of a 1000 Fabrics. I saw six youngsters dressed in
white, all attached at the head to a huge pillow kitten face (whiskers
on kittens...get it?) and worst of all I saw an aged transvestite,
resembling Gene Rayburn, dressed as the Countess. But the pre-show
entertainment didn't stop there.
The
pace inched along as the sun started to set, but not before the
choreographer of said movie had a thing or two to say, thank you
very much. "Oh Mommy please tell me there's a chance the script
supervisor will be there PLEEEESZZZZE!!!!???" Nope, but I know
a 58-year-old Leisel will be there and maybe she'll sing a pathetic
unaccompanied version of "Sixteen Going on Seventeen."
Oh yes
the little minx faked us out, introduced herself and
threatened to sing "58 Going on 59" but laughed it off
as just a far away dream. "Oh stop Leisel! You're killing me!"
Finally,
the show was to begin and not a moment too soon. The crowd was getting
uneasy. Bored with their polite conversation and French cheese and
crackers, they had resorted to craning their necks to get a glimpse
of Tom Cavanaugh from everyone's favorite comedy, Ed (brought
to you by the producers of The Late Show with David Letterman!)
and were all too ready for the piece d'resistance
Sing Along
Sound of Music!
Behind
me were a charming and cutting group of homosexuals. More entertaining
than the experience itself were my new friends, now honing in on
my "gay man pheromone" that usually hinders me from meeting
a potential free dinner with a nice Jewish boy at every social gathering.
They offered me wine, cheese, crackers and fruit while we laughed
and laughed -- ha ha ha, hee, hee, hee, we were best pals. The girls
and I settled in as the hills became "alive."
continued...
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