You can't tell the players without a program and with this old switcheroo routine, ICT's "The Legend of Georgia McBride” is perfect for Pride Month. What I love about Long Beach's ICT is the intimacy of the space and how nice the staff is at first blush. Producer caryn desai makes first nighters feel right at home.
Casey (Taubert Nadalini)
Taubert Nadalini Photo by Kayte Deioma |
drives forty miles each way to Cleo's on the Beach, a dive bar run by Eddie (Tom Trudgeon) the least competent MC on the Florida Panhandle. He introduces Casey, a pretty darned good Elvis impersonator / lipsync artist.
Elvis does not disappoint!
Trouble at home? Yes. Casey has used up the debit card to quell a pizza jones and his wife, Jo (Karese Frizell) takes him to task for screwing up the rent payment. And?? And.. she's pregnant!
Matthew Lopez's somewhat loopy play is slightly over long, but the cast and the audience are all having a great time. The story moves along cinematically. Director Jamie Torcellini's clever deployment of a quick change stage crew as well as an on stage makeup artist, works! We buy the transitions from back stage to on stage to Jo and Casey's apartment without batting an eye.
Showing up for work with a new Elvis jump suit, Casey learns that Elvis is out and Drag is in. Miss Tracy Mills (Jeff Sumner)
MISS TRACY MILLS |
and side kick Rexy (Donzell Lewis who also knocks it out of the park as Jason) show up at Cleo's and the real fun begins
Big lip synced musical numbers are bright and colorful and Kimberly DeShazo's wonderful costumes bring the characters to life. There are feathers.
It's a slow transition for Casey from reluctant conscript to becoming Miss Georgia McBride. Miss Tracy has most of the one liners that include a long list of really horrible puns. One liners and the wonderful device of a guy virtually forced into a dress to lip sync to Edith Piaf crooning "Padam Padam Padam" is passing hilarious. Miss Tracy's lesson in lipsyncing when you don't know the words is far out!
The ups and down, the conflicts and resolutions, succeed. It's a comedy with a taste of Mickey and Judy putting on a show in a barn. Cleo's on the Beach magically transforms from a beachfront dive to a Happening Drag Show Room just in time for Pride Month. I would like to credit the on stage makeup artist, but I cannot find his name. The transformations are really spectacular.
Lopez has an agenda.
He's penned a script that juggles the broad world of Female Impersonation with
the shame of a straight male coming into his own as a 'woman'. He lets us know through an eloquent monologue by Rexy that 'Drag is not for sissies!'
And! To fully express one's self as a Drag Queen is nothing to be ashamed of. Revelations
and amazing transformations float the plot with one major stumbling block
hanging clouds over Miss Georgia McBride (Casey), but as in any
eventually cheery story, the clouds part and the big, big finale has the
audience on its feet.
This is a must see, especially for heterosexuals. Misconceptions regarding gender and female impersonation are nicely addressed. To be gay and proud and certainly not apologetic, is part of the theme. "Georgia McBride" is a play with music with strong performances and some magical quick change effects. It has a fantastic stage crew, and is certainly a show for our times.
Please head to Long Beach and see this Legend of Georgia McBride.
Playwright Matthew Lopez
Director Jamie Torcellini
Karese Frizell (Jo)
Donzell Lewis (Rexy/Jason)
Taubert Nadalini (Casey/Georgia McBride)Jeff Sumner (Miss Tracy Mills/Bobby)
Tyler Scrivner (Scenic Designer)
Donna Ruzika (Lighting Designer)
Kimberly DeShazo (Resident Costume Designer)
The Legend of Georgia McBride
by Matthew Lopez
International City Theatre
Long Beach Performing Arts Center
330 East Seaside Way
Long Beach, CA 90802
Performances: June 10 – June 26, 2022
Thursdays at 8 p.m June 16, June 23
• Fridays at 8 p.m June 10 (Opening Night), June 17, June 24
• Saturdays at 8 p.m. June
11, June 18, June 25
• Sundays at 2 p.m. June 12, June 19, June 26
Tickets and Information www.InternationalCityTheatre.org
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