Skip to content

A town square for an unsquare town

redbankgreen

Standing for the vitality of Red Bank, its community, and the fun we have together.

PHOENIX: ‘ANYTHING’ FOR A LAUGH, AND LOVE

Clockwise from center: Jennifer Grasso, Kelsey Susino, Torie-Marie Gigante, Carly Nelson and Taylor Wallace are Reno Sweeney and the Angels, as the shipboard romp ANYTHING GOES marks the maiden voyage for a new season of Phoenix Productions musicals. (Photos courtesy Phoenix Productions)

By TOM CHESEK

The way Gary Shaffer sees it, “this is the best time of year to do a show — you work all winter, then suddenly it’s spring. People are energized and ready to come out and be entertained.”

If it’s mid-April in Red Bank, it simply must be time for a new season of musical entertainments from Phoenix Productions, the borough-based troupe that’s made a 25-year habit of putting on shows at that classiest of “community theater” venues — the Count Basie Theatre.

With pretty much the entire tri-state region endeavoring to shake off an epic winter of our collective discontent — and the irritating remnants of Sandy still being winkled from the Shore’s cracks and crevices — producer Tom Martini and company have rightly deduced that ours is a community in need of a little levity, a dose of laughter and a love song or two. The result is a 2013 season that favors a set of four feelgood Broadway classics over some of the edgier fare (Sweeney Todd, Rent, Miss Saigon) put forth by the Phoenix phalanx in recent years — a season that kicks off in style  Friday, April 19.

The vessel for this maiden voyage of 2013 is none other than Anything Goes, Cole PorterÂ’s rousing romp of romance and rhythm on the high seas, and a crowdpleaser that director Shaffer describes as “a good, solid show with a funny book –and the cherry on top is the Cole Porter songs.”

Jennifer Grasso is a shipboard showgirl, while Kelsey Seaman and Michael Santora are a demure debutante and a stowaway stockbroker, as the Phoenix Productions staging of ANYTHING GOES docks at the Count Basie for two weekends. 

The Toms River resident — an actor, producer, writer, PR man and college professor whose idea of “taking a break” is to spend the St. Pat’s month of March gigging up and down the Shore with his popular Celtic-rock combo The Snakes — cites the Depression-era tunefest as one of his favorite shows, a standing that’s boosted by the presence of such effervescent Porter perennials as “It’s De-Lovely,” “I Get a Kick Out of You,” and “You’re the Top.”

“He wrote about sophisticated things, but for everyman, and when youÂ’ve got such rich lyrics, you have to act them,” says the stage veteran, whose own leading-man experience with the show convinced him only that “I was NOT a song and dance man.”

For his hat-trick project with the Phoenix company (following Thoroughly Modern Millie and Annie), the director who upholds the “Comedy Rule of Threes” works with a ship’s manifest of some three dozen performers, topped by Michael Santora and Kelsey Seaman (as the show’s young lovers Billy and Hope), plus Jennifer Grasso as evangelist turned showgirl Reno Sweeney, and Anthony Preuster as “Public Enemy No. 13,” Moonface Martin.

Revised extensively after its initial previews in the wake of the Jersey Shore’s SS Morro Castle maritime disaster (and revamped again for its Broadway revival runs in 1987 and 2011) Anything Goes retains its seafoam-frothy storyline of confused identities, comical gangsters, and love between a bored heiress and a savvy stowaway — and, according to Shaffer, features production values befitting Phoenix’s residency at one of the Garden State’s premier theaters.

“The other day, the scenery people brought in the shipÂ’s smokestack, and it was enormous. It almost didnÂ’t fit,” he said. “But then you realize how you need that sense of scale when youÂ’re sitting at the back of the Basie, taking it all in.”

“They have literally and figuratively raised the bar in that big theater,” Shaffer said. “They donÂ’t look at things like, ‘we canÂ’t do it.’ The producerÂ’s reflex is, how do we make that work?”

Running for two weekends, Anything Goes also represents what Tom Martini calls “a respite from reality” for two Monmouth County-based members of the cast — Bob Brown and Michele Kakalecz, both of whom lost their homes to the ravages of Hurricane Sandy. The company’s co-founder has announced that Phoenix is planning to offer free Anything Goes tickets to any and all people who were rendered homeless by Sandy.

Opening Friday night at 8 pm, Anything Goes continues with five more performances through April 28. Tickets are priced between $22 – $32, and can be reserved right here. The 2013 Phoenix season continues at the Count Basie with productions of The Music Man (July 12-21), Damn Yankees (September 20-29) and Irving Berlin’s White Christmas (November 15-24).

Remember: Nothing makes a Red Bank friend happier than to hear "I saw you on Red Bank Green!"
Partyline
NOT SO SCARY
Twenty times? Fifty times? How many times did we drive by this home on the corner of River Street and Shrewsbury and do a double take before ...
LOCAL 9 TAKE TROPHY
After a long hot two days of baseball, the Red Bank area-based Jersey Shore Raiders emerged as champions of the United States Amateur Baseba ...
RHAPSODY ON ICE
RED BANK: On a cool-ish summer evening, keyboardist NGXB entertained customers of Strollo's Italian Ice with renderings of 'Bohemian Rhapsod ...
PUDDLE BE GONE
A work crew was out this week attacking the site of the notoriously persistent puddle at the corner of Broad and Mechanic Streets. This phot ...
SMALLS FOR MAYOR?
We at redbankgreen remain neutral in political affairs and never make endorsements. But we have to say Borough Clerk Laura Reinertsen’ ...
CRASH ON LEIGHTON
The driver of this car was headed north on Leighton Avenue when they it hit an SUV pulling a work trailer headed in south in the opposing la ...
CAR VS STREET SIGN
The driver of this Mercedes hopped the curb and toppled the street sign at the corner of South Pearl and Drs. James Parker Boulevard Wednesd ...
SKETCHES OF RED BANK BY LOCAL ARTIST MICHAEL WHITE
Sketches of Red Bank scenes have been floating around on social media and we thought they deserved some spotlight. First appearing in our fe ...
POLE DOWN
Utility pole falls on English Plaza shop Forge after being struck by SUV shortly before noon. No injuries reported, though 86-year-old drive ...
YO, ADRIAN!
It’s a tough turn for our hero as Rocky Balboa is relegated to the curb for trash pickup on Locust Avenue. We’ll have to go back ...
“EL PALOMO” IS IN THE HOUSE
Jesus Rios, a mariachi singer who performs under the stage name “El Palomo” (The dove) pauses for a moment before entering a bac ...
CROC SPOTTED IN RIVER
Frighteningly hideous and green, a solitary Croc lurked ominously amid the flotsam and foam in the Navesink River alongside the Red Bank Fir ...
KISS ICON REFLECTS ON BROADWALK
A Swarovski crystal-bedazzled self-portrait painting of Paul Stanley, longtime singer and guitarist for the rock band Kiss peers out from a ...
CHISELIN’ AWAY
Marcelo Garcia Lopez works with hammer and chisel on a new feature for his flower garden on Shrewsbury Avenue: a hollow in a carved log in w ...
STORM CLEANUP CONTINUES
  Saturday’s storm sent a tree toppling on this house on Bank Street, damaging the roof. Workers Wednesday could be seen removing ...
SNAPPING IN THE BREEZE
RED BANK: Blustery winds had the flags in Riverside Gardens Park snapping Monday evening.
POWER LINE DOWN
Red Bank firefighters were on scene at Manor Drive dealing with a live power line Monday afternoon. There was no immediate report of fire. T ...
TAR BEACH SOLSTICE
Aldo Quiroz of Ocean Township came ready with his beach chair and found a shady spot to spend his lunch hour in a parking lot off Broad Stre ...
GOING GREY
Workers painting the stone facade of the PNC Bank at the corner of Broad and Harding Thursday morning. An upgrade? Maybe it’s just pri ...
COFFEE & WILDLIFE
RED BANK: The best wildlife show in town can be taken in from a waterfront bench outside the public library, and it's totally free.