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Earlier this year, Jaston Williams and Joe Sears brought the two dozen or so Tuna, Texas denizens they created to La Mirada, in a big theater production of Greater Tuna, which scored both of them Ovation Best Actor nominations.
Now, just in time for the holidays, TV and film favorites Mindy Sterling and Patrick Bristow bring those same characters, plus a few new ones, to equally dazzling life in a 99-seat production of Williams/Sears/Ed Howards’ Tuna sequel, a Tuna Christmas.
(By the way, it’s not at all necessary to have seen Greater Tuna to laugh at (and love) the myriad characters and outrageous situations which have made the Tuna plays so popular throughout the country.)
Here’s just a taste of what’s happening to the residents of Tuna, Texas in the days preceding Christmas:
1) A “Christmas Phantom” is on the loose, destroying holiday yard displays, most especially Vera Carp’s, whose Virgin Mary now sports an ERA button and whose manger-adjacent animals now wear boxer shorts.
2) Town treasurer Dixie Dewberry plans on pulling the plug on this year’s production of A Christmas Carol because the theater hasn’t paid their light bill.
3) The Christmas Carol production is further in jeopardy from the Smut Snatchers, who are out to clean up Dicken’s vocabulary.
Sterling and Bristow are both consummate comic actors. She is perhaps best known for her “Frau Farbissina” in the Austin Powers movies, and he was Ellen DeGeneres’ gay friend Peter on her sitcom (and out professionally years before Ellen’s Time magazine cover). That both Sterling and Bristow are Groundling alumni serves them well, as they each bring to vivid life 11 of Tuna’s kooky residents. That Sterling is a female actor (LAStageScene.com is always politically correct) is a brilliant stroke for this production, meaning that some of the men’s roles get to be played by a woman, in addition to the women’s roles traditionally played by a male star duo. That Bristow completely submerges his well-known and loved gay-best-friend persona is deserving of special mention.
Sterling's characters include: • Arlis Stuvie, the mustachioed co-anchor of local radio station OKKK’s newscast • Didi Snavely, mullet-wearing owner of Didi’s Used Weapons (Weaponry That Works). Their motto is “If we can’t kill it, it’s immortal.” and seeing that this is Christmas, Didi asks, “Wouldn’t you rather shoot someone than have him run off with your new toaster?” • Petey Fisk, of the one-man Greater Tuna Humane Society. This Christmas, Petey is housing an iguana, a sheep, and a coyote, gifts of holidays past that were abandoned when their owners lost interest in them • Charlene Bumiller, with her platinum 80s moussed-up bangs, stage struck community theater actress • Stanley Bumiller, Charlene’s delinquent brother, now performing community service at the community theater as a way of getting off probation. (Stanley dreams of “a bus ticket out of this black hole” to start a new life as a taxidermist.) • Jody Bumiller, youngest of the three Bumiller offspring • Vera Carp, the bejeweled richest woman in town, a shoo-in for the Best Christmas Yard Display title for the 15th year in a row, unless the “Christmas Phantom” has its way. (This year’s display features both Bing Crosby and Natalie Wood.) Smut-hating Vera also wants to ban “Silent Night” because of its mention of a “round young virgin.” • Helen Bedd, the appropriately named, big-haired, and man-crazy waitress at the Tastee Kreme restaurant
Bristow brings to life (among others): • Thurston Willis, Arlis’ co-anchor, who keeps Tuna’s residents apprised of local happenings • Elmer Watkins, left eyebrowless after an unfortunate flameshooter incident • Bertha Bumiller, the bouffant-coiffed Texas housewife extraordinaire with a never seen drunk of a husband who’s “as useless as an ice tray in hell” and three very problematic offspring, the aforementioned Jody, Charlene, and Stanley • Aunt Pearl Burras, a loveable gray-haired old lady out to kill the blue jays that are threatening her hens because, she explains, “They’re like a lot of people, loud and pushy.” • Sherrif Givens, who has borne the unfortunate nickname of “Rubber Sheets” ever since wetting his bed at church camp • Joe Bob Lipsey, the pretentious (and hypoglycemic) community theater director, who has come to town all the way from Lubbock and (as a measure of his experience and qualifications as a director) declares with pride, “I have been to Waco!” • Ineta Goodwin, Helen Bedd’s tall-haired strawberry-blonde coworker at the Tastee Kreme, who like Helen considers herself an “aspiring career woman.”
Casting a female and a male to star in Greater Tuna was a stroke of genius, and the fact that Sterling is half Bristow’s size only adds to the pleasure of watching these two sterling performers crossdress. And brilliant as the two stars may be, they cannot help but have been aided and inspired by director Stan Zimmerman, who keeps the proceedings moving along swiftly, despite costume changes too numerous to count. (Kudos to backstage dresser Cameron Johnson.)
Scenic artist Kevin King has surrounded the stage with a three wall mural depicting the flat arid Texas plain, so real you can almost imagine a roadrunner running across the road. Ronda Dyrice Brooks has succeeded splendidly at the daunting task of coming up with two dozen character-fitting costumes (Bertha and Vera’s gowns being King’s creations). Eusebio Aynaga’s wigs complete the costumes to perfection. John Toom’s lighting works well at spotlighting the various locations where the action is taking place on stage as well as the passage of time. Steve Kahn and Benjamin Jones surround the actors with “The Sounds of Tuna,” including squawking birds every time Aunt Pearl misses.
Ultimately, A Tuna Christmas succeeds, not just because of its crazy characters and its outrageous situations, but also because of the humanity of Williams/Sears/Howard’s creations. When Baptist Bertha confesses that “I always wondered what it felt like to be a Methodist” (because that would mean she could enjoy some spiked punch from time to time and even dance with a man), when she wonders if her worthless husband will get off his bar stool and come home for Christmas, when she worries that wayward son Stanley might not get off probation if A Christmas Carol is cancelled, well, as Bill Clinton would probably put it, “We feel her pain.”
This production of A Tuna Christmas is a winner all around.
Theatre Asylum, 6320 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles. Through January 6. Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8PM and Sundays at 3PM. (No performances the week before Christmas.) Reservations: (323) 960-7753
--Steven Stanley December 7, 2007 Photos: Lisa Franchot
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