Last day of January, my friends. Did you ever have the feeling that before you know it, it's going to be New Years Eve again, and you're going to be saying to yourself, "Whoa, where the fuck did Y2K+1 go?!?" Dear Lord, please give me the sentience to not sleep through my life.
I've been thinking about that a lot, actually. I'm not one of those people who zones out in front of the TV each night after coming home from work, then gets up in the morning and repeats the drudgery all over again - I'm lucky in that I have the sort of job that offers something different every day, and I love it besides.
But even I occasionally find myself suddenly snapping to and realizing that I haven't exactly been paying attention as the world passed me by. I thought about it particularly in a coffee shop this afternoon, while I was killing time before going off to a voice-over session.
Sometimes I think our environment has a lot to do with it... I mean, clearly we are affected by seasonal changes in weather & such... look at all those people who get depressed in the gray light of winter, only to bounce back again once spring comes. It doesn't help that I live in Pittsburgh, which traditionally gets more cloudy, gray days than Seattle - and that's saying something.
By the way - the picture at the right is what your dog looks like when he's really sorry he just chewed your socks, and he thinks that's enough to get you to take him for a walk.

Check out what Ted Hoover had to say about Gavan's production of Joseph... in Pittsburgh's City Paper...I think he liked it:
I've been thinking about that a lot, actually. I'm not one of those people who zones out in front of the TV each night after coming home from work, then gets up in the morning and repeats the drudgery all over again - I'm lucky in that I have the sort of job that offers something different every day, and I love it besides.
But even I occasionally find myself suddenly snapping to and realizing that I haven't exactly been paying attention as the world passed me by. I thought about it particularly in a coffee shop this afternoon, while I was killing time before going off to a voice-over session.
Sometimes I think our environment has a lot to do with it... I mean, clearly we are affected by seasonal changes in weather & such... look at all those people who get depressed in the gray light of winter, only to bounce back again once spring comes. It doesn't help that I live in Pittsburgh, which traditionally gets more cloudy, gray days than Seattle - and that's saying something.By the way - the picture at the right is what your dog looks like when he's really sorry he just chewed your socks, and he thinks that's enough to get you to take him for a walk.

Check out what Ted Hoover had to say about Gavan's production of Joseph... in Pittsburgh's City Paper...I think he liked it:
And besides, after having just seen the Pittsburgh Musical Theater's production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, I had the desperate need for a simple tale of dismemberment and murder.
Joseph's director/choreographer Gavan Pamer has discharged his duties with such wattage, I swear I left the Byham Theater with 50 percent of my body covered in radiation burns.
If you could somehow take the essence of Lola Falana, Liberace, Juliet Prowse and Chita Rivera, toss in a few more spangles and neon, melt the whole thing down and shoot it up, the resultant high might come close to the entertainment overkill of this production.
Except it's not overkill because, given how mind-numbingly idiotic Joseph is, Pamer takes the only theatrically logical step -- he plasters over every inch of this musical with showmanship. Odd, certainly, for a story based on the Bible, but if you've gotta sit through it, it's a blessed relief.
Replicating the alacrity and punch of a lightning bolt, this is a ruthlessly precise production, and in no area does the show score higher than in its choreography: A little bit of Fosse, DeMille, Robbins and a whole lot of Pamer floods over the footlights at warp speed -- and when that doesn't work, Pamer has the male chorus strip down to their loincloths and sing.
Angela Bloomquist sings with a glorious voice marred only by the distortion of the sound system. Kevin Covert and Joe Pedulla unfurl their talents on two wonderfully funny numbers, and all of it is driven by Doug Levine's miraculous musical direction.
Pamer's final ace-up-the-sleeve is Peter Matthew Smith as the dream-deciphering Joseph. Smith sings and dances up such a storm that you can't help think that if his soothsaying ever bottoms out, Joseph should seriously consider a career as a go-go boy.
Though I personally believe that Andrew Lloyd Webber is exactly what the Bible deserves, I have to say it's doubtful that you'll ever see either performed better.

Not long ago I had the opportunity to have lunch with my dear friend Denise Pullen. It gave me a chance to reflect on just how lucky I am to have the friends I do, and wonder if other people feel this way. How often do we pause and think about what our friends mean to us? And what I really wonder is, do the people that I pass on the street have what I have? Do you have a Denise in your life? We all talk about our good friends, but I sometimes wonder if most of us, wrapped up in our own little worlds, struggling to make the mortgage payment, or feed the kids or please the boss know, I mean really know that there's someone out there who cares? And not just cares, but is often (not always, I'm not an idiot, you know) willing to make you as important in their lives as themselves. I think about the possibility that there are people out there who don't have someone like this in their lives and it actually makes me sad.






First, there's the a picture of two of my favorite Pittsburgh theater babes, Angela Bloomquist and Sharon Connelly-Schalller. Angela (on the left) plays "The Narrator" and Sharon's husband Tom Schaller is playing "Pharoah." Angela was great in the show - but that's not much of a surprise, since in my humble opinion she's always great. You should have seen her as Peggy Sawyer in 42nd Street!
Next comes a picture of Gavan and his best friend, John Burja - known affectionally to those of us who love him as "Bunj." Bunj is also in the show, playing "Simeon," one of the brothers. He also makes a cameo as "The Jailor." These guys have known each other longer than either would care to remember, I'm sure. Bunj just might possibly be the funniest man I know (granted there are some people who might give him a run for that title, given the crowd I run with, but you can always count on Bunj for the most hilarious understated delivery). He recently did one of my all-time favorite shows, The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940 and was (with apologies to the rest of the cast) the funniest thing in it. I hope I get to work with him on something someday!
Next here's a shot of Bunj with Danny Siford, who plays "Potiphar." Danny's another friend of Gavan's from way back. I'm not sure if they went to school together, or what. I can't say that I know Danny particularly well, but he's been a joy to have as a neighbor. Since Pittsburgh Musical Theater isn't exactly falling over itself with spare cash, Gavan & I are housing some of the out of town actors who've come in to do the show, and Danny's been staying in the small house that sits on our property. The other person we're housing is Kevin Covert (you'll see him below), who's staying in the Marjorie Poe Room of the main house. That's what we call one of our extra guest bedrooms - named for our dear friend Marjorie, who was the first ever guest to stay with us after we bought the house.









