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In the heyday of '40s radio
By BARBARA L. FREDRICKSEN
Published December 15, 2006
TARPON SPRINGS - The 1940s Radio Hour is a show within a show that includes the audience in the show that includes the show. All clear on that? The musical comedy continues tonight through Sunday at the Tarpon Springs Performing Arts Center inside City Hall. The show, which opened on Broadway in 1979, is set on the night of Dec. 21, 1942, in the Hotel Astor's Algonquin Room in New York City. The Mutual Manhattan Variety Cavalcade is getting ready to broadcast live on the 5,000-watt radio station WOV. Members of the theater audience get into the action as they take seats in the auditorium and become the studio audience for Cavalcade. The actual cast members work around them and include them in the preparations for the fictional radio broadcast. It's the height of World War II, and the songs are from that era: I'll Be Seeing You, That Old Black Magic, Love Is Here to Stay, Blue Moon and traditional Christmas tunes. There are also commercials and jingles from that era that will sound familiar to anyone who remembers the 1940s. The cast includes John Austen, Tom Bronson, Michael Bruno, Susan Carr, Amanda Depin, John Fudens, Abbott Morgan (who is also the director), Katherine Russo, Trey Ryan and Dave Wladaver. Music director Stella Gaukhshteyn leads a seven-piece orchestra. Hen Campbell made the 1940s-style costumes.
[Last modified December 14, 2006, 21:13:07]
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