‘No Business Like Show Business’ By Jerry Zezima |
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Jerry Zezima on the Great White Way
performing La Cage Aux Fool. |
By Jerry Zezima Stewart
F. Lane, the Broadway impresario who recently won his fourth Tony Award,
wants to break my leg. Wait, sorry, that’s not right. A lot of other people,
most of them readers, want to do that. Lane wants me to break a leg. That’s
because he plans to put me on the stage, after which he will probably tell
the driver to make the horse run as fast as it can and take me out of town. This
is the only thing, aside from a complete lack of performing talent, that can
prevent me from being a big star on the Great White Way. That
was the promise made to me recently over dinner and, especially, drinks at
the Friars Club in New York City, where Lane and Jules Feiler, the mad genius
at 5W Public Relations, plotted to put my name in lights. With my luck, the
lights will be above the 9th Precinct, which covers Manhattan’s
theater district, after I am charged with crimes against art for a planned
one-man show I may have to call "Bullets Over Broadway," because
when people see it, they’ll want to shoot me. I got
the idea (not to be shot, but to put on a show) after reading Lane’s
excellent new book, "Let’s Put on a Show!" In it, he tells great
stories about life on and off stage. One of the best is about the time Lane’s
mother walked out on one of his shows because he had turned off the
air-conditioning in the theater. "My own mother!" Lane writes. Mainly,
though, "Let’s Put on a Show!" provides invaluable tips for anyone
who wants to put on a show. Lane knows his stuff because he has won Tonys for
producing "Thoroughly Modern Millie," "The Will Rogers
Follies," "La Cage aux Folles" and, most recently, "Jay
Johnson: The Two and Only," in which Johnson recounts his career as a
ventriloquist. "I
could have played the dummy," I told Lane, who – I was very encouraged
by this – agreed. Lane
was even more encouraging when I said I am such a bad performer – can’t sing,
can’t dance, can’t act – that I couldn’t pass an audition for the role of
myself. "This
is the biggest challenge of your career," I said. "Can you make me
a star?" Lane
responded by telling an old tale about a king who asked his prime minister if
he could make the king’s dog talk. The minister said no, so the king had him
beheaded. The king then asked his grand wizard if he could make the dog talk.
"No," said the wizard, who also was beheaded. Finally, the king
asked a rabbi if he could make the dog talk. "Yes," the rabbi
replied, "but it will take 10 years." When the rabbi’s wife heard this,
she said, "How are you going to make the dog talk?" The rabbi said,
"I don’t know. But in 10 years, the king will be dead." "What’s
the moral of the story?" I asked. "Give
me 10 years," Lane promised, "and I’ll make you a star." In
fact, he added, it probably won’t take that long. There are roles, such as
Roxie Hart in "Chicago," in which the character is supposed to be a
bad performer. "Not that I would ever cast you as Roxie," Lane
said, "but in your case, having no talent could be an asset. If you play
a character who can’t sing, dance or act, you could pull it off. And you’d
get a great review in The New York Times." Still,
Lane added, I’d do better in a one-man show. "Because
nobody would want to be on stage with me?" I wondered. "No,"
Lane said. "Because you’re funny and you can talk. You’d have to do it
for an hour and a half, eight times a week, which is physically demanding,
but you could do it." Now I
have to think of a name for my show. I am leaning toward either "The
Jerry Zezima Follies" or "La Cage aux Fool." Finally,
and most important, I have to find someone who believes in me enough to
bankroll the show. "Is
your mother still alive?" Lane asked. "Yes,"
I answered. "And she won’t walk out because I’ll keep the
air-conditioning on." So
it’s all set. I’ll begin rehearsals in the bathroom mirror tomorrow morning.
Lane, who may never win another Tony Award after this, might want to break my
leg after all. ________________________________________________________ Jerry Zezima writes for
The Stamford (Conn.) Advocate, where this column first appeared. His blog is www.jerryzezima.blogspot.com. Copyright 2007 by Jerry
Zezima |