Front row: Sarah Fuller, Christie Quinn, Rachel Thomas, Chris Byrne. Back row: Spencer Masson, Heather Sutherland, Nick Serrone, Max Powell, Carl Dahlquist |
By Tina Arth
By some standards, the Holly
Jolly HART Family Christmas Variety Show may not be the best holiday show
on local stages for 2016, but it is unquestionably the most fun. Co-authors
Sarah Fuller and Chris Byrne have pulled together more than a dozen snippets
from some of the best loved holiday TV shows of the ‘60s and ‘70s and
transformed them into a nonstop montage of live theater that hits all the right
notes. The material is tied together in two ways – first, by the TV-addicted
“typical” Hart family and second, by projecting several authentic period
commercials on a giant TV screen backdrop.
The wraparound story is simple. It’s Christmas Eve, and the
Hart family is gathered in classic seventies style right in front of their
living room television. In keeping with family tradition, mom Barb (Henley
Slepyan) wants to read “The Night Before Christmas” but the kids think that’s
boring. They’d rather watch their favorite TV specials, but can’t agree on
which show to watch. Michelle (Courtney Bell) wants to watch “A Charlie Brown
Christmas Special” but brothers Greg (Cameron Bell) and Jeff (Carson Bell) are
lobbying for “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.” The kids fight over the remote,
triggering a wonderful live action clash between the casts of the specials. By
intermission, the kids have gone off to bed, so Barb and husband Phil (Mark
Putnam) settle in to watch more adult Christmas fare, with their own
disagreement: Phil wants to watch “It’s A Wonderful Life” while Barb prefers
classic musical holiday specials featuring stars like Andy Williams, Dean
Martin, Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, and Mel Torme. Soon the restless kids
wander back downstairs, where they eventually fall asleep while awaiting
Santa’s arrival.
The rest of the cast members fill at least 30 roles as they
bring the many scenes to life in front of a giant television screen. It’s hard
to pick out favorite bits – but the Charlie Brown kids (Rachel Thomas as Lucy,
Spencer Putnam as Charlie, Max Powell as Linus, and Christie Quinn as Sally)
are particularly memorable. Nick Serrone’s Jimmy Stewart impersonation is spot
on, and Sarah Fuller positively channels Judy Garland singing “Have Yourself a
Merry Little Christmas.” Spencer Masson
has real star power as Frank Sinatra, and Carl Dahlquist does a fine job as
both Mel Torme and Clarence the Angel. Co-authors/directors Byrne and Fuller
show off their versatility with a spectacular tap number, and Slepyan’s vocal on
the “White Christmas” duet makes it clear that some of the best talent is right
in the Hart living room.
Three super stars of the show are definitely music director
Sarah Thornton, lighting designer Heather Sutherland, and costumer Chris Byrne.
The special effects drive the production, and the dozens of costumes (cleverly
done in living color or black and white depending on when each special
originally aired) define and enhance each number.
This is a show that deserves to become a holiday tradition,
for both HART and the large audiences it so richly deserves. Give yourself and
a friend tickets as an early Christmas present – you’ve earned it! (And if you
get the chance, don’t miss Ray Hale’s Orphan
Train, playing on the same stage this month. See HART’s website for show
dates/times.)
Holly Jolly HART Family
Christmas Variety Show is playing at the HART Theatre, 185 SE Washington,
Hillsboro through Sunday, December 18th, with performances Friday
and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2:00 p.m.
I am in the 2018 Holly Jolly play and it is fantastic!
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