CHRISTMAS
with the
CRAWFORDS
Written by Richard Winchester & Mark Sargent
Back for its third (and last)
season
of
holiday
mayhem
Friday, December 16 through December 22
(Dec.
16
,17,18,19,20,21,22)
December 27-December 31(Dec 27, 28, 29, 30, 31).
12 performances only.
All performances except Sundays and NY Eve at
8PM. Sundays are at 6PM and NY Eve is at 7:30PM.
Cast & Staff Review
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Christmas with the Crawfords takes place on Christmas Eve, 1944. Joan has recently been fired from MGM, and is looking forward to the live radio broadcast from her Brentwood mansion, to be hosted by her friend Hedda Hopper, as a way of keeping herself in public eye as she vies for a role in a film noir piece entitled "Mildred Pierce" offered to her, somewhat reluctantly, by Warner Bros. Suffice it to say the broadcast does not go well. Joan is plagued by problems, including the never-ending arrival of uninvited celebrity guests who take over the spotlight to sing their favorite holiday song.
The broadcast itself ends in disaster, and a surprise present from the children puts Mommie Dearest over the edge. The final mother/daughter confrontation will likely make many of those watching reconsider their familial relationships and long for the bosom of their own family and home.
The legend of Joan Crawford. It has inspired countless books, articles, television documentaries, anda musical comedy? Yes, a musical comedy.
"Christmas with the Crawfords," is sort of a "Mommie Dearest the Musical" with a holiday theme, and has been packing houses for the last ten years (first in San Francisco, then in New York, and now in Omaha). It's a legend that would have horrified Miss Crawford. After all, she made 70 movies. She was glamour personified. She won an Oscar. So why is she remembered today as the bitch who beat up her adopted children, drank too much, and was forced to marry a Pepsi executive to save her from a failed movie career. Chock that up to her daughter Christina, whose infamous book "Mommie Dearest," and the eponymous movie starring Faye Dunaway, changed the course of the public's perception of Joan forever, fairly or not.
Creator Richard Winchester and writer Mark Sargent have fashioned both a parody of and a tribute to the Golden Age of Hollywood, when movies stars were the most important people on earth, and virtually the whole country flocked to their local movie palaces to see the next offering from MGM, Warner Bros., and Paramount. So there's a little Hollywood History 101 in the show which many find interesting. "Christmas with the Crawfords" features a top notch cast, and as in any musical, there's a lot of singing and dancing which anyone can enjoy, even those unfamiliar with the people and era covered.
The fact that it is mostly men impersonating Hollywood's leading ladies adds a certain "extra dimension" to the roles. And there are all the bitchy lines one would expect in a show like this. Don't we all love a good comeback or two? Perhaps the show's appeal is that it is just a lot of fun. "Christmas with the Crawfords" is a refreshing antidote for the anxiety-prone times that the holidays are for so many.
Where else these days can you see the likes of the Andrews Sisters, Judy Garland, Gloria Swanson, Hattie McDaniel, Carmen Miranda and Ethel Merman all in one room, singing their hearts out as if there wasn't a care in the world? Whatever the appeal of "Christmas with the Crawfords" is, it seems to be broad. Young, old, gay, straight, suburban and city dweller alike show up for a Christmas Eve with Joan and the children that they will never forget. Wire hangers? Forget about them. It's Christmas after all. And the legend continues!
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