The San Francisco Mime Troupe Predicts the 2012 Election Be a Pelican Rooster in Chinatown
Aliens from the Future Influence a Presidential Election
Photo by Fletcher Oakes
The San Francisco Mime Troupe ensemble seeks to make you laugh by satirizing contemporary life with mimics and mocks. Since the 1960s the Troupe has pushed a message of solidarity and comedy about most of the burning issues of our time. They perform free in public parks every summer. They begin their World Domination Tour with this year’s offering 2012 - The Musical! an exploration of presidential elections, piercingly debunking the official story.
On a small portable stage the Troupe continues to pound out their political message about the desperate plight of the under trodden in our corporatized society.
This year’s annual show lampoons the dynamic between profit-seeking entities and underfunded artists, with a bit of a dig at green industries thrown in. For the July 4 opening, fans packed the hillside in Dolores Park. The Troupe will return to Dolores in September after performing in such far-flung places as Napa and Nevada City.
The afternoon show on July 4 began with two Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence on stage for some topical shticks, and then moved on to parody everyone from President Obama to Jesus Christ. The ‘60s liberal leanings of the players rings out stridently.
Pat Moran, a past contributor to the Mime Troupe, and Bruce Barthol, former Country Joe & The Fish bassist, wrote the music and lyrics for Michael Gene Sullivan’s play within a play. An idealistic theatre company seeks any contribution to stay afloat. A large corporation will underwrite a production for them if they will toe the capitalist party line.
The ensemble enacts the struggling, artistically focused company Theater BAM! In order to stay in business, they eventually give in to “corporate fascism.” Their devil-on-the-shoulder takes the form of Green Planet Inc. company evangelist Ms. Haverlock (Keiko Shimosato Carreiro). The corporation will supply the money if Theater BAM! will write the play 2012 – The Musical!
The stage curtain opens to another curtain as the new show begins. They parody the next President with Senator “Skip” Pheaus (writer Sullivan, who also plays Obama and Jesus). He claims there are terrorists outside children’s windows. In the end, Theater BAM! thanks International Amalgamated Cheese Industries and is “ready to par-tay!”
Wilma Bonet directs this musical satire about the art of Mass Distraction. The ensemble of Lizzie Calogero, Cory Censoprano, Siobhan Marie Doherty, Michael Gene Sullivan, and Victor Toman takes on characters ranging from Nostradamus and an alien to a Mayan Priest. Barthol’s lively music is performed by a three-man band. The songs are competently voiced.
Bring your picnic blanket and relax to this fast eighty-minute play. This new show has red-state edges, a departure from the Troupe’s tradition. Sometimes they seem to doubt Obama’s message.
2012 – The Musical! by San Francisco Mime Troupe will be touring through California and beyond past Labor Day. Their next performance is 7:00 pm Wednesday July 13 at Mitchell Park, 600 East Meadow Drive, Palo Alto. See the full schedule at http://www.sfmt.org/index.php.
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Bob Greene and Zoe Conner explore geriatric activities at Pelican Roost.
Photo by David Allen
Aging is a funny thing, and Assisted Living: The Musical® proves it. The revue debuted two years ago in a Florida retirement community and has rolled its wheelchair into San Francisco’s Chinatown. The singing duet of Zoe Conner and Bob Greene goes through 19 songs about the problems of seniors. The seventy-five minute show is lively and wickedly funny.
The Act
Piano accompaniment is provided by actor Robbie Cowan, whom they claim is their nephew. The music is diverse and familiar, with take-offs of well-known songs. The writers Rick Compton and Betsy Bennett have created new lyrics for old songs. The show is tightly staged with hilariously descriptive costume changes.
Against gold framed red velvet panels Bennett and Compton act as denizens of the Pelican Roost nursing home, or “Senior Village.” The players circulate through the house in character as the show begins. Compton introduces himself as Andy, saying “I’m the handyman around here.” Bennett is Marge the Social Director. Their nephew is Lou. Andy also becomes a cowboy lawyer and Marge also plays a nurse and Naomi Lipschitz Yamamoto Murphy who upgrades her living quarters every time her next husband dies.
The music styles range from doo-wop to a slow ballad. The duo laughs at everything from dentures to Viagra. Andy’s opening solo “Help! I’ve Fallen For You And I Can’t Get Up” is a reference to the little blue pill. In one scene Andy wears a deely-bobber with big blue pills. His “A Ton-And-A-Half Of Cadillac Steel” is a litany of senior driving errors sung while Bob mimes using a stool as a steering wheel.
For comedy hour at Pelican’s Roost, Marge welcomes the audience to “Poughkeepsie-by-the-Sea” where she introduces Bob as a Catskill comedian. He tells every lame joke from the borscht belt circuit and acts surprised when nobody laughs. “Haven’t you ever been to the Catskills?” he asks.
The Actors
Both actors are remarkably versatile. Bob in his hideous yellow and green golf clothes looks like he can play the game when he sings the blistering “Golf Cart Seduction.” For his geriatric solo “Lost-My-Dentures-On-Steak-Night BLUES” he stoops as he slowly shuffles across the stage with his dinner tray. Bob’s sleazy cowboy-hat lawyer insists that he can be trusted as he looks at the audience with wide-eyed innocence.
Zoe switches characters easily. She is very efficient in her white nurse uniform and very cold as Naomi singing about how she is able to capitalize on the deaths of her husbands. Her voice is pleasant and well controlled. At the end of her slow ballad about an online love affair (“WalkerDude@Facebook Dot Com”) she rises effortlessly to a high C.
Robbie as Lou is personable and interacts with the audience. Sometimes he has to set things up, such as for “WalkerDude,” where he had to explain some Internet terms. He got the audience to sing along “Happy Birthday” twice for people in the house. When Marge and Andy sing about “The AARP,” he plays along the score to “Ghost Riders In The Sky.” Andy and Marge plan to “go out rock and rolling.”
Assisted Living: The Musical® has an open-end run at The Imperial Palace, 818 Washington Street, San Francisco. The second-floor dining room has room for 150 people at large tables. A Chinese food banquet precedes the show. Tickets ($79.59; $99.50 VIP) are available online at AssistedLivingTheMusical.com or by phone at 888.885.2844.
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