Showing posts with label James Beaman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Beaman. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Richard Skipper Celebrates...Goldie Dver and so much More!

There is a logic of colors, and it is with this alone, and not with the logic of the brain, that the painter should conform.
-Paul Cezanne

June Is Bustin' Out All Over!
June 26 is the 177th day of the year . 188 days remain until the end of the year.

I feel radiant and glowing with happiness today. I]ve had a great month.
Most recently, Sunday night, I went to Asbury Park for a celebration of Judy Garland's famed Carnegie Hall concert. It was great to see friends both on stage and in the audience. The evening was hosted by Lorna Luft and featured Joan Ellison, Debbie Gravette, Karen Mason, and Gabrielle Stravelli: all at the top of their game.
They were all backed by a 41 piece orchestra. It was fun to see Jon Burr on bass, Ray Marchica on drums, and Don Rebic on piano.
A full weekend of music. This past weekend also was the fiftieth anniversary of Judy Garland's
passing. I was eight years old when she passed and I remember it like it was yesterday.
The decisions I made worked out for the best. The first was hiring Eugene Gwozdz to be our musical director.  Also, asking Raina Sabella to open for us. And what a cast I assembled: Charles Karel, Nathan Robert Pecchia, Katie Dunn McGrath, Ann Kittredge, and Burke Moses (pictured below) !
Burke Moses

Let the good times roll!
I like to split my time between lively activities with others and more cerebral ones I can do alone.
Where does the time go? May was a great month, albeit a wet one!
Now, it's time to gear up for June and today's blog is a celebration of what is on the horizon...

My social calendar might be overwhelming with its demands today.
Boredom is the one thing you can’t abide by.

Today, I am celebrating the return of Goldie Dver to cabaret after an absence to deal with life.  I saw her opening night show and I highly recommend this show. She takes us on a poignant but upbeat celebration of life.
She will be back at Don't Tell Mama tonight at 7PM.
She will also be there tonight, but she is sold out!
Music is the food of love.

What is the first show you remember singing in and your thoughts around that?  
Ok - if we’re talking about the very first show?
I was 6 yrs old - and we used to spend summers in Atlantic City - back when AC was an innocent, family oriented vacation spot.

There was a weekly amateur show every
Goldie Dver
Wednesday night at Garden Pier, which was right next to the famous Steel Pier on the boardwalk.

Garden Pier had a beautiful band shell, similar to the one in Central Park and it had seating for 1000 people.
During the summer these talent nights were a big deal, and drew capacity crowds every week.
The shows were run by a professional musician, “Uncle Harry”, who played piano and directed - and the lovely and gracious “Aunt Lucy”, who was the MC.

The deal was - you auditioned on Wednesday afternoon and if they felt you were good enough - you were given a slot for that night’s show.
I had already imagined myself to be Judy Garland or Connie Francis, and felt it was high time for me
to be on stage!
So one Wednesday afternoon I decided to leave the beach and walk the four blocks along the boardwalk, by myself, to audition.
In those days I was actually allowed to walk on the boardwalk by myself, even at 6 yrs old - without the fear of being abducted, and without my mother being accused of child neglect.
It really was a different world back then!
I auditioned with the song “I’ll Follow The Boys”, which was a huge Connie Francis ballad at the time.
And Uncle Harry gave me the thumbs up!

But when I returned to the beach to tell the exciting news to my mother, she didn’t believe me! She thought I had been in the arcade playing pinball, which is where I usually was if I wasn’t on the beach.
No matter how much I kept saying we had to have dinner early so we could get to Garden Pier by 7:00, and that she had to help me choose which dress to wear, etc - she just didn’t think I had even had the nerve to go all by myself to audition.

Finally - just to stop what was becoming a full fledged melt done on my part - she got me dressed and took me to Garden Pier.
I’ll never forget the look on her face when she found out that I was, in fact, scheduled to sing that night!!
After the shock wore off she ran to the pay phone (it was a LONG time ago - lol) and called our apartment to tell everyone to come over immediately so they could see me sing.

How magical it felt that night to sing with a pro pianist, and hear my voice coming through the microphone as it washed over that sea of smiling faces.  And the intoxication of getting my first applause - OMFG!

The performance bug bit me hard that night and has never lost its grip on my heart!

Seen any great documentaries I have to see? 
I recently was captured by the documentary that was all about the year 1969 - it was the perfect combination of entertainment and information and was fascinating to watch.
Even though I was only 14 at the time, I remember that year very well.

It was one of the most important, socially pivotal years of our time.

1969 was the year of Woodstock, Man’s first walk on the Moon, Judy Garland’s death and the ensuing Stonewall riots, Chappaquiddick, Major race riots across the country — and that was all just in one summer!
The country seemed to be going through the same kind of growth and unrest as I was experiencing in my own life at the time.

You are coming back to entertain at Don’t Tell Mama. Is there a special reason why you chose this venue? 
When I decided to come back home to cabaret I knew two things.
 I wanted to do my show at DTM, which had always been like my cabaret home- and I wanted to call  it “Back In Mama’s Arms”.
I love the feel of that back room at Mama’s - and I adore connecting with Sidney Myer again!
I love him (who doesn’t?)
He's always so helpful, and has made what can be a daunting experience as easy as possible.
He’s a true champion of artists.

I also feel that attitude and support extends through Tanya Moberly and the rest of the staff as well.
with director James Beaman
What has been the highlight of your day so far? 
Waking up!
That’s always the highlight of my day! Everyday you wake up to bitch about something - it’s a good day!

Are you reading anything right now that you love? 
These days I barely have the time to read my mail!
But I love reading, and miss it. Lately I’ve gotten into reading biographies (especially autobiographies).
There are a few that are on my immediate list -
- “Becoming” (Michelle Obama)
- “In Pieces” (Sally Field)
- “Whats So Funny - My Hilarious Life” (Tim Conway)
- Watching the series “VICTORIA” has reawakened my fascination with the British Monarchy.
So I’d like to read more about them, especially Queens Victoria and Elizabeth, and the whole Tudor line.
I have several of them sitting on my iPad, waiting patiently for me to get to them (the books - not the Tudor’s themselves - lol)
GOLDIE DVER: BACK IN MAMA’S ARMS 6/26/19
Click HERE to order tickets

HELP! Backpacks for The Street is doing a Pride outing for our LGBT youth and adults .
They could use help getting a few items from their Amazon Wish List. The most important items are at the top, as shown in the photos. The link is: http://tinyurl.com/bftsam

And Keep in Mind...
"Viola Davis, Chadwick Boseman Set for August Wilson Adaptation 'Ma Rainey's Black Bottom'" by The Hollywood Reporter's Mia Galuppo - "Netflix is heading into production on a screen adaptation of August Wilson's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom. Viola Davis ... will star in the feature, along with Chadwick Boseman. Emmy winner Glynn Turman, Tony and Olivier nominee Colman Domingo and Michael Potts round out the cast. " READ MORE

40 Days till Showtime! Reserve TODAY for best seats available! Richard Skipper at St. Luke's Theatre August 5th celebrating 40 years in New York August 5th One Night Only! Reserve TODAY for best seats available! Order tickets HERE.

Here are some of my OUT entertainer friends who are performing around town this week. Check them out.
Tym Moss

Michael T & Cathyland present
SUMMER SOUNDS OF ‘79: New Wave/Power Pop Explosion!
Wed, July 3rd
@Arlene's Grocery
95 Stanton St NYC
8pm doors    $10 adv/$15 door
Join them for a rockin' 40th anniversary celebration of these iconic albums released in 1979!

MAE WEST wrote “The Drag” and was proud to put “seventeen fairies on stage.” Banned in her era,
the play has been making the rounds anew. This is Part 1 of 4 parts.
• • “The Drag” by Mae West in D.C. on Friday, 7 June 2019 • •
• • Sarah Hookey wrote: Celebrating Pride Month, Shakespeare Theatre Company will close out its 2018-2019 ReDiscovery Series on Monday, June 17, 2019 at 7:30 p.m. at Lansburgh Theatre with a free staged reading of Mae West's closet melodrama "The Drag" (1927).  Read MORE


Barry Day (OBE/M.A. Vice President Coward Archive Trust/Literary Advisor Noel Coward Estate) has been involved with Noel Coward since he and his wife visited the icon’s Jamaican estate, Firefly, 38 years ago and found it a shambles. Appalled, he contacted legatee and former partner, Graham Payn. For some reason regularly sent funds had not been not utilized. Payn couldn’t bear to go back after his partner’s death. (Read MORE)


Bette Midler is set to appear at New York’s Pride Main Event this Saturday (June 29) at the Javits Center. In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Stonewall, she’ll perform a song accompanied by composer Marc Shaiman, of “Hairspray” and “Mary Poppins Returns” fame. Her stage time is set for 11 p.m. (Source: Variety)


Fred Aiese reprises his show, Ballads, Blues, and a Boy from Brooklyn on Sunday, July 15 at 7 PM at
Don’t Tell Mama, with insight, humor, and musicality. The show offers a wide variety of songs ranging from standards, rhythm and blues, jazz and gritty, down home blues, from the repertoires of Nat King Cole to Stevie Wonder. Interspersed in these songs are stories of growing up Catholic, Italian-American and gay with a backdrop of Brooklyn, with  Aiese sharing different parts of himself. Ballads, Blues, and a Boy from Brooklyn offers an inventive, skillful singer combined with alternately funny and touching stories. Direction is by Lina Koutrakos and musical director is Rick Jensen. Read MORE

For Bette Midler, the early nineteen-eighties was a period of searching. Her début studio album, “The Divine Miss M,” from 1972, had catapulted her from cult
lounge singer to national star, and the record’s success had led to film projects, such as the starring role, as a reckless rock star, in “The Rose” (1979), which earned Midler an Oscar nomination and spawned a hit single. But her follow-up film, the comedy “Jinxed!” (1982), famously flopped. She wrote a memoir, “A View From a Broad,” which was published in 1980 and well received, but her show-biz career was at an impasse.
“I was waiting for something to happen, for something to come my way,” Midler told me recently by phone. One day, daydreaming at her home in Los Angeles, she came up with an idea for a children’s book: the origin story of a precocious baby, a tiny diva in the making, who combats self-doubt and learns to step into the limelight with the help of three heavily maquillage fairy godmothers. Midler shared the idea with her close friend Jerry Blatt, a composer and lyricist for “Sesame Street,” who had co-written Midler’s “Clams on the Half Shell Revue.” “In show-business parlance, he thought it had ‘legs,’ ” Midler told me. (Source: The New Yorker)


Betty Buckley is a Tony-winning Broadway, film and television star, but when she takes the cabaret stage, you’re undeniably in the hands of a master artist. Without fail, she knows when and where to let it ride, when to pull back or lean in. There are years of love poured into all of her song choices that come simply from a genuine admiration of music and storytelling. She truly connects with each and every moment, providing a rare gift of exquisite memories for her devoted fans. Click HERE to see her in concert

Four years ago today, the Supreme Court made same-sex marriage legal across the country. Pride
month is celebrated each year in June to recognize the progress of the LGBTQ community and what still needs to be done to achieve full equality. "CBS This Morning" spoke to prominent figures in the LGBTQ world, like "Pose" star Billy Porter and "Sex and the City" actor Mario Cantone, about what pride means to them. Click HERE for more


PAWS ON THE PIER🐾 is almost here! The weather looks to be sunny so a perfect morning to stroll the pier and enjoy the event! Online pre-registration strongly encouraged and assures quick check ✔️in for goodie bag https://www.piermontdogpark.com/paws-on-the-pier
🐾 There are no refunds, but if you register and don't attend, proceeds will be donated towards Hi Tor’s animals!🐾



Now, go and do something nice for someone
without expecting anything in return! Treat Them to see Adam Shapiro as Tevye in The Yiddish Fiddler on The Roof at Stage 42, 422 West 42nd Street on July 6 and 7
Order Tix HERE

********

Thank you all! Here's To a Great End of June! Happy Pride!

A Few Audience Testimonials about Richard Skipper Celebrates

Richard Skipper is the host with the most: personality, hospitality, responsibility, congeniality... to
name a few.  I have had the pleasure to share the stage with Richard in 'Showtune' and his recent production of 'Richard Skipper Celebrates May Flowers' and on both occasions, I had so much fun!  I also know Richard personally as a sensitive and caring soul and our conversations have always been interesting, lively and left me wanting more time to talk. I highly recommend him for a variety of positions; publicist, talk show host, mentor/teacher... also to name a few!!!
JUDI MARK,NEW YORK, NY

I had the amazing privilege of musical-directing and playing piano for "LOVE, AQUARIAN STYLE" yesterday at the Laurie Beechman. Impressive cast of singers and instrumentalists, all Aquarians (with a Virgo rising!) starring/emcee'd by the positively charismatic Richard Skipper. 
We all "painted the town red" this day!!!
Christine Talbott Sutin,Kew Gardens, NY

Richard Skipper's Facebook Live interview program from the YORK Theatre Oscar Hammerstein Awards Gala honoring Susan Stroman was great fun and Richard was, as always, a charming and skillful pro. I couldn’t help but think what a much needed service (and interesting and fun) it is for events like that one, smaller than the Tony Awards but important to many! And the Tony Awards and anyone else would be lucky to have Richard, too!
Betsyann Faiella, http://www.savoypr.com


With grateful XOXOXs,

 




Please LIKE (if you do!) and SHARE!

NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED.  FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY!

Please do what YOU can to be more aware that words and actions DO HURT...but they can also heal and help!  

  Keeping America great through Art!     

Here's to an INCREDIBLE tomorrow for ALL...with NO challenges!
Please leave a comment and share on Twitter and Facebook
Keeping Entertainment LIVE!

TILL TOMORROW...HERE'S TO AN ARTS FILLED DAY
Richard Skipper, Richard@RichardSkipper.com

This Blog is Dedicated to the Memory of Bob Dorian





Tuesday, April 10, 2018

James Beaman and MORE!

Hearts will never be practical until they are made unbreakable.
-L. Frank Baum

Happy April 10th, 2018!
April 10 is the 100th day of the year. There are 265 days remaining until the end of the year.
It is a gorgeous day here in New York. As I begin today's blog, I'm listening to Moondance playing in the background sung by Gary Crawford.
A lack of physical and mental energy, as well as motivation, has me in a lethargic mood today.
I am extremely irritated at the thought of having to work in any way...but it is a necessary evil! Having a great subject to write about makes it so much more bearable. Writing and knowing that I'm going to see Lynn Henderson tonight at Don't Tell Mama gets my juices flowing. The last few days in my art has given me enough passion to keep me smiling for some weeks to come.
My blog today is a celebration of James Beaman.
James Beaman's journey in show business has been an eclectic one, embracing classical theatre, musicals, the cabaret stage, celebrity impersonation, and more.  He has also worked for many years as a makeup artist, a Pilates teacher, an acting coach and cabaret director.  Versatility, transformation, expansive self-expression—these are are his passions!
James Comes to a life in theatre honestly.  He's the son of a set designer and a playwright/director/actress, who met in theatre school.  He grew up on stage and backstage, and started acting as soon as he could speak.  He cut his teeth on Shakespeare, playing Arthur in “King John” when he was 12.  In his teens, he learned acting, dance, mime, singing and all aspects of theatre at his mother's theatre school in my hometown of Beverly, MA.  He left high school early to attend Simon's Rock College, the nation's premier early entry college.  While there, he acted in, directed, and designed plays by Shakespeare, Wilde, Synge, Strindberg-- and earned his Associates Degree and his high school equivalency at the age of 17.
After earning his B.F.A. in acting at Boston University, he stayed on in Boston, working at Boston Children's Theatre, where his mom served as artistic director; he also gained his first professional acting experience at some of Boston’s finest theatres.
Here's his story.

Are you unstoppable?
I’ve been pursuing my acting career for 28 years. Nothing has stopped me yet.
Although there have been many challenges. They’ve all been issues of survival, really—how to make a living at this? Some of the challenges have been about reinventing myself, evolving, gaining new skills, finding new modes of expression.
These challenges have all made me stronger and more dimensional, as a person and as a performer.

Tell us about James Beaman.
I’m an actor, a teacher, and coach, a Shakespeare scholar, and geek, a movie lover, and devotee of the Golden Age of Hollywood films. I’m a good and true friend. I’m opinionated, ambitious, and have a big heart. My life has been anything but dull. And I feel, and hope, that my best years are ahead of me.

If you had limitless funds, what’s one purchase you would instantly make and why?
I’d probably buy a modest home somewhere warm. Somewhere to retreat to during the brutal northeast winters, which I’ve had quite enough of for one
lifetime!

How has the Trump era affected your art?
Trump and the Republicans have practically taken a hit out on performing artists with their new tax laws. It will be even harder for people who struggle to piece together
a living as performers to afford the career.
But the rise of bigotry, greed, injustice, and cruelty in our culture as a result of Trump’s twisted “leadership” is having a galvanizing force on people everywhere and artists are in a position to be a light in the darkness. I hope that I can create work that reminds people of our common humanity and encourage diversity, inclusion, and empathy.

Has your perspective changed any since starting in this business?
I think one of the gifts of getting older is learning from loss. Losing loved ones. Realizing you didn’t wind up where you thought you’d be in your life and career by the time you reached (insert number here). Loss and struggle can break you, or they can harden you, or... I like to use the metaphor of a river stone in a constant surge of moving water.
You can either get swept away, or you can hold your ground and be softened over time by those forces. I’ve always been sure of myself as an actor, but over time I let the chip fall from my shoulder... I stopped trying to prove myself so much; I’m much less pugnacious. I’ve learned that no matter how much knowledge one has, how much training and craft, how many wonderful credits... that show business is not, and never will be, a meritocracy. We are constantly going back to one... and proving ourselves again.

Do you approach every role you play the same way or does it depend on the character?
I am a research whore... I love being my own dramaturg. I want to know as much
as I can about the history of the piece (I do many revivals), who originated my part, what the inspirations were for the creating of the character by the writers. I also love digging into history and period details (when I played John Adams I was in absolute heaven). Being a devotee of classic film, I also draw inspiration for
many of my character parts from the great character men who came before me.
And I steal, liberally! Mostly, I try to find an idea or a handful of influences or “flavors” that inspire me and I let them play on my imagination.
I am a very physically and vocally driven actor, so finding a voice and a physical life for the character is always essential to my process.

How do you see proceeding with your career? What lies ahead?
So much of an actor’s career is shaped by forces not in his control. The
opportunities to be seen for great parts and great jobs have to be offered... the
granting of the actual job itself is at the whim and impulse of someone other than you (or a team of others). I have always wanted to do Broadway. It’s been a dream of mine since I was a boy. I thought when I played Sir Robin in the First National Tour of Spamalot that the next step would be Broadway.
That was nine years ago. So is Broadway ahead of me? I don’t know. I want to break into TV and film and that’s a challenge in and of itself as I have nearly 30 years of
exclusively theatre credits to my name. I wrote a feature screenplay over the course of five years and it is currently being shopped around for investment by an indy production company. I’m a good writer. I’d like to see where that takes me

Is doing what you do at all difficult?
There are two worlds actors have to negotiate: the work of acting itself and THE BUSINESS. The business doesn’t just include networking and auditioning and schmoozing and promoting. The business is also about how to survive between
jobs and how to keep body and soul together in New York City on a continually unpredictable income. This gets even more trying as one gets to be a certain age. It’s not an easy path and it requires constant reinvestment of energy and optimism and effort.

What do you do when you’re not performing?
I stopped working my day job a few years ago (I worked in the beauty industry as a makeup artist for almost 20 years) because it was becoming increasingly a drain
James in La Cage Aux Folles
on my vitality and made too many demands on my time. But the trade-off has been a precarious financial life. I have been building a side career as an audition coach and Shakespeare teacher and I have found great inspiration in these pursuits and have contributed to the success of quite a few talented actors. But I can’t deny, I feel more ME, more disciplined, clearer, more energized when doing the work of acting.


Why do you think theatre continues to endure despite our culture’s more powerful consumption of films, TV, and streaming entertainment, and what will ensure its survival?
I just finished doing a Shakespeare play in original Elizabethan performance practices, on a basically bare stage, with no lighting changes, and with the audience in full view.  Through the power of storytelling and a direct connection with the audience, we had incredible experiences of joy and laughter, and a shared human event.  Nothing can take the place of that.  Theatre has to be relevant to people’s lives and it is subject to the changing trends and fads that drive the market… but what is eternal about the theatre is the fact that it is LIVE.

Name one person you would like to see profiled on my blog.

I am just familiarizing myself with your blog and you’ve already profiled some great people! I am a big fan of Danny Burstein. I know him slightly and admire him as a person and an actor. I’d love to know more about him and what drives his work.

Anything else you wish included?
Just to say that I have known you now for well over 20 years and I applaud your continued creative passion and the ways in which you raise other artists up with your work! Keep it up.

James is currently directing Sierra Rein. Please click HERE to read more about Sierra and HER body of 'worth'.

Richard Skipper Also Celebrates...
Yes, Sheree Sano is the WINNER! Laat night she won. Tomatoes Got Talent at The Triad. She didn't have to bring all her friends, because they had judges including Gretchen Cryer who wrote and starred in I'm Getting My Act Together And Taking It On The Road.
What a way to go! I am so happy for her.

Last month, the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs (MAC) held the 32nd annual MAC Awards, honoring the best in cabaret and live entertainment. This was Michael Barbieri's first MAC Awards in nearly 10 years, having taken a break from the industry a while back. Read MORE

Honoring the Groundbreaking Jamie deRoy–30
Jamie deRoy, Shelly Markham, Richard Skipper, Eda Sorokoff, Peggy Herman
Years a Friar! Tomorrow, Wednesday, April 11
It’s the season to honor the very deserving Jamie deRoy singer/performer/host/actress/producer and general force for good in the cabaret, film/TV and theatrical worlds. DeRoy has been a pioneer and a powerful driver in her varied career, which includes the early days of the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs (MAC). Read MORE


Friday, May 4, at 7:00pm (one set)
Back by popular demand

LIFE IS A BITCH —the poetry and lyrics of Fran Landesman
with John DiMartino-piano; Ed Howard-bass
Pangea NYC
178 Second Ave, NYC (bet 11th/12th St)
$20 cover online ($25 at the door) – $20 food/beverage minimum
212.995.0900 for additional information
Mary Foster Conklin



Advance reservations strongly recommended

Here is the ticket link:  https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/3381682

LIFE IS A BITCH is an evening of songs by Fran Landesman, self-proclaimed “poet laureate of lovers and losers,” the Dorothy Parker of jazz lyrics, best remembered for The Nervous Set, the world's only beatnik musical, which flopped on Broadway, but two numbers All the Sad Young Men and Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most survived to become jazz standards.  The evening includes collaborations with Tommy Wolf, Alec Wilder, Bob Dorough, Roy Kral, Simon Wallace and Richard Rodney Bennett.

“Every joke has a switch/ Every joker a twitch/ Every high has a hitch/ Baby, life is a bitch.”

“Full of salt and vinegar…with the intensity and tough humor of someone who might have lived on the bohemian fringe in the late ’40s and ’50s, when the word ‘hip’ meant something.”
Stephen Holden, New York Times

"Mary Foster Conklin proved to be the perfect choice to present the writer and her work to 21st-century audiences. In addition to showcasing Conklin’s long-recognized mastery of the jazz vocal idiom, this show was so smart, so sophisticated,
and so assured that it was a total pleasure."
Gerry Geddes, BistroAwards.com

"Ravishing words and music presented with knowing dramatics and warm intelligence”  Michael Dale. BroadwayWorld.com

The sumptuously sexy "Big-Boned Comedian" Leanne Borghesi returns to The Triad Theater, NYC in her comedic cabaret- "MOOD SWINGS”. April 16th, 7pm
After a raucous debut in November, she's back and swingin' uptown!
From sold-out houses at Feinstein's, The Duplex, and The Triad, get seduced into “Borghesi’s Hideaway” for a one of a kind 75-minute spree of sultry jazz, bawdy comedy, and over-the-top bling!

Now, go and do something nice for someone without expecting anything in return!




May 20th, 2018 

Russ Woolley Proudly Presents
Richard Skipper CelebratesPeggy Lee, Liberace, and Friends

1 PM Brunch Show Laurie Beechman Theater 
As we Celebrate (Russ' Birthday!), we celebrate Leanne Borghesi, David Maiocco (as Liberace), David Sabella, Jim Speake*, Chuck Sweeney (as Peggy Lee), AND Those Girls* (Karen Mack, Eve Eaton, Rachel Hanser, Wendy Anne Russell) Tickets are now on sale! Reserve TODAY and Let's Celebrate!

So — Order your tickets now online…
RESERVATIONS A MUST!

Musical Direction Joe Goodrich with Don Kelly on Percussion, Matt Scharfglass on bass, and Erik Lawrence on Sax
*Steven Ray Watkins will accompany Jim Speake and Those Girls 
Stephanie Pope from Richard Skipper Celebrates April 8th, 2018
With music, reminisces and an afternoon of fun and show business! 90 minutes of merriment and excitement …Right on the heels of the 4/8 Richard Skipper Celebrates Life in the Theatre

When and Where:
Sunday, May 20th - 1 PM, Doors open 12:15

THE LAURIE BEECHMAN THEATRE, 407 West 42nd Street (lower level of the WEST BANK CAFE) Producer: Russ Woolley $30 ticket plus $20 food/beverage minimum - exquisite and reasonably priced food and drink

Richard Skipper has assembled a great cast to Celebrate and honor … RICHARD SKIPPER has become synonymous with “feel good entertainment of the highest quality”. For decades Richard has entertained thousands and celebrated the careers of many of Theatre Row’s finest and most honored stars… The afternoon will prove to be an event where all will arrive and leave with smiles! This will be similar to the old-fashioned TV specials and series where we get to chat with and honor this Entertainment Icon.

So — Order your tickets now online…
RESERVATIONS A MUST!

https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pe.c/10248067
A Few Audience Testimonials about Richard Skipper Celebrates
I love Richard Skipper so much and his shows are beyond your expectations!!!!!!! Xo
-Rose Apuzzo

I was so happy that we attended Richard Skipper's Christmas cabaret on Sun. 12/3, thanks to Arlene Jacks, who recommended it very highly. What a great experience - it was fun, heartwarming and sentimental.
Great performers and great audience! What a treat to see Kathryn Crosby - that really took me back in time to all the Bing Crosby Christmas specials. I can't wait to attend future celebrations. Richard: you and your team are a class act!
Diane Merklinger, Briarwood, New York

I was so happy attending the wonderful event on Monday, October 30th, with Richard Skipper interviewing my old friend Joyce Bulifant at the Drama Book Shop. Richard's knowledge of show business and his infectious good humor were ideal to bring out the best stories from Joyce's terrific new book. Richard has the ability to make every event a very special occasion. I look forward to attending the next special night when Richard Skipper celebrates another remarkable person.
Joel Vig, NYC

This Show Is Also Made Possible by  Wright Bros. Real Estate, Nyack New York



With grateful XOXOXs,

 

Please LIKE (if you do!) and SHARE!

NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED.  FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY!

Please do what YOU can to be more aware that words and actions DO HURT...but they can also heal and help!  
  Keeping America great through Art!     

Here's to an INCREDIBLE tomorrow for ALL...with NO challenges!
Please leave a comment and share on Twitter and Facebook
Keeping Entertainment LIVE!

TILL TOMORROW...HERE'S TO AN ARTS FILLED DAY

Richard Skipper, Richard@RichardSkipper.com