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Sharon McNight at the Metropolitan Room
Sharon McNight may well be the funniest woman in
the world! Judging from the gales of laughter emanating from the Metropolitan
Room last night, I think that’s a safe
assumption to make. In a delirious
hour and forty minute show, she generates a cacophony of chuckles, giggles,
guffaws, whoops and downright belly laughs. And that’s not all, folks!
“Gone, But Not Forgotten” is
Along the way, she manages to channel Madelaine
Kahn channeling Dietrich singing Mel Brooks’ loony “I’m Tired” from “Blazing
Saddles.” And later, hardly exhausted after tributes to Betty Hutton singing
“Rumble, Rumble” and Ethel Merman singing “Some People” (complete with Merman’s
trademark high C), she conjures up “Tired,’ the song which brought fame to
Pearl Bailey.
Before the evening is over, we’ve also been
treated to Sophie Tucker belting “The Man I Love,” Hildegarde warbling
“Darling, Je Vous Aime Boucoup” in her fractured French, and a brilliant imitation
of Bette Davis, almost on key, croaking Frank Loesser’s “They’re Either Too
Young Or Too Old” complete with a punch bowl-sized martini glass and garnished
with a gargantuan olive. All of this, of
course, with the right amount of memory-invoking patter and outlandish ad libs.
Think you had enough? Think you’ve already
laughed until your sides are splitting? Get ready! Sharon begins singing the
plaintive verse to “Over The Rainbow” and segues into the entire Munchkin scene
from “The Wizard Of Oz” where she manages to portray Judy Garland, Billie
Burke, Margaret Hamilton and an entire cast of Munchkins, houses falling on
witches, broomsticks flying through the air, waltz clog steps, and side quips
in quick succession. It’s an amazing feat and she still isn’t tired!
Last night she closed with “Bacon,” a zany
homage to her favorite food, but I’m so tempted to return to hear her sing Noel
Coward’s bittersweet “If Love Were All.”
The wonderful Ian Herman is
April 26, 2008
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