The Untamed Stage
Scrumbly Koldewyn
With Additional Material by Terance Bennan, Damien Chacona,
Cab Covay, Andy Wegner, Martin Worman, and Alex Kinney
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Scrumbly Koldewyn |
“You are here to see things you haven’t seen,
And feel things you haven’t felt.”
And thus are we greeted in a café setting reminiscent of an
underground Berlin kabarett during those sultry and sensuous years between the
World Wars when Berlin flourished, even exploded, in expressions of political,
social, and sexual boundary busting. From
such smoky, crowded corners were birthed entire movements of new thought and
art; but from their stages, pianos, and small bands erupted music that swept
the city, continent, and the world (Hollander, Kurt Weill, Spliansky) and are
remembered in later voices like Marlene Dietrich. San Francisco-treasured composer and original
Cockettes member, Scrumbly Koldewyn, returns to those too-few years of new
forms of music that immolated and celebrated Berliners’ experiments in
gender-bending, women’s newfound freedoms, openly gay expression, and every
sort of previously no-no behavior imaginable.
In a world premiere production at Thrillpeddlers, he and a cast of
enthusiastic entertainers of all shapes, ages, colors, and sexes (and
in-between sexes) present his newly written The
Untamed Stage, with music that reflects the
period and is all originally conceived by the beloved composer himself.
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The Cast of "The Untamed Stage" |
Enhanced with a small stage and tables with cutout patrons
in tails and others who actually live and breath, the first half is a series of
variety acts entitled “The Untamed Stage Kabarett.” With a strong, welcoming voice that is not
afraid to belt when needed, Zelda Koznofski as our evening’s MC sings a rousing
“Ich Bin Ein Berliner,” a city where “Everyone’s a sinner ... We don’t have a
sense of guilt.” She will continue to
come in and out the entire first act and when singing, is always a kick-in-the-pants
for the show’s energy level.
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Steven Satyricon & David Bicha |
The strong beginning continues and builds in excellent
vocals for the next couple of numbers as two of the opening’s back-ups return
for solo spotlights. Kim Larsen, in long
white drag dress, sings “No One Is Looking,” a song that is one of several that
encourage raucous, even raunchy behavior but one that also comes with a warning
of what may lie ahead for Germany. “So
go ahead and do it, do it before it’s too late,” she cautions, looking one by
one at each audience member. With a
manacled eye, wide yellow tie knotted in daring manner, and his pin-striped
three-piece suit, David Bicha follows, bringing his strong voice and wild-eyed
expressions to remind us that these are daring times where all is up for grabs
in “Herr and Frau Anstatt.” “They
married as man and wife and at some point they traded,” he croons mischievously.
At this point, audience members are regularly hooting and
stomping feet in delighted approval after each number. Unfortunately, efforts to bring comic bits
into this kabarett never match the quality of the music itself, either in the
writing or the delivery. A rather long,
crude skit between an Italian father and son who are cleaning a canvassed,
life-size toy for men’s sexual pleasure falls flat and deflates for a while the
show’s energy, taking a few numbers to recover.
Other attempts of staged humor (like a on-and-off, wandering juggler)
also do little to enhance the evening.
But as the act’s numbers continue, often with the
deliciously dirty lyrics and ass-showing antics Thrillpeddlers’ audiences have
come to expect, those in the seats and couches of the small theater soon get
fully back into the mood of a Berlin nightclub.
Highlights include one of the evening’s best numbers when Zelda
Koznofski, Crystal Why, and Bruna Palmeiro knock it out of the park in “How
Much Longer,” with three diva voices giving it all they got and singing, “How
much longer will we endure it? ... When will the day come women are free?” Vying as the best voice and overall performer
of the show, Crystal Why in her fabulous dress of black and white,
metallic-shiny squares returns with Jason Wade and Steven Satyricon to belt a
song (“Too Decadent for You”) hilariously detailing their boredom with
once-tried sexual kinks and fetishes. Again,
with some premonition of what is historically to come, “We’ve slipped so far
down the slippery edge, there’s no place to go,” the trio sings.
In long, silvery gown hugging his tall, slender body, the
always satisfying Noah Haydon closes the kabarett half of the night with a
haunting “Waiting,” unnerving for us who know what probably happened to many of
the performers and patrons of those Berlin venues. In quiet voice, the drag performer sings, “We
are all waiting for the next crowded train.”
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The Brown Shorts |
While Act One is full of sexual explicitness, Act Two crosses
the borders into erotic fantasies, and some might way downright sexual
perversion (which may or may not be a good thing, according to one’s tolerance
level for such tongue-in-cheek, XXX material).
“The German Thing to Do – or How a Cow Changes History” is a musical
parody of the threats already appearing in the German ‘20s of those who
espoused Aryan superiority, in this case a group of “Brown Shorts” (instead of
the actual ‘Brown Shirts’), all wearing aprons outlined as lederhosen. Their plans to inject worthy blonde-headed
youth with a serum to make them super-studs for Germany is thwarted by a lone
cow (played with daring, body exposure by Bruna Palmeiro), whose udders soon
take on phallic proportions and new ways of being milked. The musical numbers of this half overall
never take off in ways those in the first half do until we get to the near
end. A full-cast (with the miracle cow
in center) “Divine Bovine” is a wonderful, farcical, full-voiced “We Are the
World” type of number, with each person taking a moment vocally to shine in
solo, alternated with everyone else swaying and singing, “Tune into the world
... Ride the waves of existence.” This
is quickly followed by a foot-tapping, well-chorused reprise of “Ich Bin Ein
Berliner,” bringing everyone back into the mood of the first act and into both
the joys and upcoming sadness of that brief reprise from a Kaiser’s and a
Fueher’s repression.
As is always the case, costume rule supreme in a
Thrillpeddler’s production, and Glenn Krumbholz delivers yet again an array of
color, sparkle, and risqué that smacks of fun and flair. James Blackwood’s simple design puts us in
the dusky mood of a Berlin kabarett, and Nicolas Torre provides the needed
lighting for just the right effects.
Hair is a big deal for Thrillpeddler performers, and Flynn DeMarco dons
the heads with proper glamour.
Bravo to Scrumbly Koldewyn and Thrillpeddlers for another
premiere like none other in San Francisco or anywhere else. While not totally successful in all its
parts, the sum is totally worthwhile and celebrates in Thrillpeddler-expected
style the bold and bawdy music of a time when people were just trying to fight
for individual rights against a rising tide of hellacious hatred.
Rating; 3 E
The Untamed
Tide continues
at Thrillpeddlers’ The Hypnodrome, 575 10th Street, San Francisco
through May 28, 2016. Tickets are
available at https://app.arts-people.com/index.php?ticketing=thril or by calling 415-377-4202.
Photos by David Allen Studios
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