Background: |
“A Really Big Shew”
is billed as “The too-big-for-TV tribute to the number
one variety show of all time.”
Starring Jerry Hoban (“Pulp Fiction”) as ‘Ed
Sullivan,’ this ultimate variety show is a staged recreation
of a national television broadcast, with the local theatre
audience playing the role of the studio audience.
In addition to Hoban, “A Really Big Shew” features
a cast of musicians, singers, dancers, comedians, impressionists
and specialty performers including:
• The Amazing Dario – International juggler Dario
Vazquez
• Gailyn Addis as ‘Marilyn Monroe’ and ‘Liza
Minnelli’
• Cameron’s Magical Comedy
• Scot Bruce as ‘Elvis’
• Contortionist Extraordinaire Leslie Tipton
• Ed Alonzo, The Misfit of Magic
•The Comedy and Adagio Dance Team of James & Kathy
Taylor
• Topo Gigio, the Italian Mouse
To further augment the “broadcast,” “A
Really Big Shew” will include screenings of vintage
commercials from the era.
This production has been showcased in such venues as the
Las Vegas Hilton, Reno Hilton and the Atlantic City Tropicana
as well as theatres and arts centers across the country.
The original television variety show hosted by Ed Sullivan
ran on CBS for over two decades from 1948-1971. It was unparalleled
as a showcase for popular arts and culture. A sampling of
the people who made their American television debuts on his
show includes Bob Hope, Lena Horne, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis,
Dinah Shore, Albert Schweitzer, Irving Berlin, Fred Astaire,
and. probably most famously, The Beatles. Sullivan made a
ratings coup for the appearance of young, hip-swiveling Elvis
Presley. His show was an undisputed American institution.
Often, television hosts are charming on camera, but Ed Sullivan
was just the opposite: pasty in the bright lights, shifty
in his stance and notorious for bungling introductions and
monologues. But ironically, that high discomfort factor created
a novelty effect and strengthened his TVQ persona. Off-camera
Sullivan was a brilliant tracker and arranger of talent. A
“variety show” always has variety, but nothing
was as eclectic as the mish-mash that Sullivan put together,
from puppet shows to grand opera. Beginning his media career
as a sportswriter, he took over famous gossip man Walter Winchell’s
syndicated column and then hosted live benefits, shows and
his own radio broadcasts. In 1948 CBS hired him to host its
first variety show endeavor, a new format that combined vaudeville
and television, nicknamed “vaudeo.” The show was
called “The Toast of the Town.” It literally showcased
“something for everyone.”
The critics were rough on Ed Sullivan. They lambasted him
for his wooden hosting style and the scattershot tone of his
guest menageries. But the show did well anyway, and in 1955
its names was changed to “The Ed Sullivan Show.”
It continued its CBS run for another 16 years. |