Lincoln Center Theater
 
 
 
Backstage Blog

by Brendan Lemon, Author

Re-Living the Run

Aug 19, 2010

Live From Lincoln Center

Aug 6, 2010

Paulo on The Nose

Jan 4, 2010

Five Till Curtain

Dec 15, 2009

Catching Up With Kelli

Dec 3, 2009

Saying So Long

Jul 29, 2009

Mr. Snow

Jul 14, 2009

Reversal of Fortune

Jul 3, 2009

Catching up with Laura

Jun 26, 2009

First-Class Photographer

Jun 15, 2009

Presenting the Conductor

Jun 5, 2009

The New Guy

May 28, 2009

The Fleet Is In

May 22, 2009

A Dog's Life

May 14, 2009

South Pacific at the Mets

May 4, 2009

Up on the Roof

Apr 29, 2009

Brunch Bunch

Apr 13, 2009

Old and New

Apr 3, 2009

Professor Matt

Mar 26, 2009

At Ease with Captain Brackett

Mar 20, 2009

Kelli O'Hara's Farewell (For Now)

Mar 11, 2009

The Biggest Fan

Feb 25, 2009

Head Nurse

Feb 17, 2009

An Evening with Olivia

Feb 9, 2009

Stage and Film

Jan 30, 2009

Working the House

Jan 26, 2009

Giving Props to the Props Men

Jan 13, 2009

The New Stew

Jan 5, 2009

Cable's Exit Interview

Dec 23, 2008

Sci-Fi Gypsy

Dec 9, 2008

The New Emile

Dec 1, 2008

Over the Kitchen Sink

Nov 17, 2008

Election Night Backstage

Nov 7, 2008

A Brush with Gauguin

Nov 3, 2008

Guardian Angel

Oct 24, 2008

Homecoming

Oct 17, 2008

The Gift of Scarves

Oct 14, 2008

A Talk With Samonsky

Oct 3, 2008

Playing the Field

Sep 19, 2008

Liat in Paradise

Sep 15, 2008

Blowing His Orange Horn

Sep 5, 2008

String Fellow

Aug 25, 2008

Stage to Screen

Aug 13, 2008

Musical Dreams

Aug 4, 2008

The Captain of Costumes

Jul 28, 2008

Restoration Project

Jul 18, 2008

New Kids

Jul 14, 2008

Play-Dates

Jun 27, 2008

As Thousands Cheered

Jun 16, 2008

Generations

Jun 12, 2008

Maslon's Companion

May 30, 2008

Graduation Day

May 28, 2008

Students in the House

May 16, 2008

Tony Tony Tony

May 13, 2008

A Class Act

May 8, 2008

Overheard in the Lobby

May 2, 2008

Sailor Bonnets

Apr 25, 2008

Making the Cast Album

Apr 16, 2008

Success Goes On Line

Apr 10, 2008

A Happy Landing

Apr 4, 2008

Harping on the Harp

Mar 26, 2008

Gotta Dance!

Mar 20, 2008

Showing Up

Mar 11, 2008

Curtain Up

Mar 4, 2008

Enter the Orchestra

Feb 25, 2008

Billis is in the House

Feb 20, 2008

A Question of Sacrifice

Feb 14, 2008

Coming Home

Feb 8, 2008

Wall-to-Wall History

Jan 31, 2008

All Hands on Deck!

Jan 24, 2008

The Biggest Fan

Feb 25, 2009

In one way or another, everyone in the cast of South Pacific is a trouper, and that goes doubly so for Laurissa Romain, who plays Ngana, and Andrew Samonsky, who plays Cable: until earlier this month, each had amassed a perfect attendance record. In other words, for almost a year (the first anniversary of LCT's South Pacific first preview will be this Sunday), neither of them missed doing a show. Rain or shine, they were there.


If no performer can now claim perfect attendance, at least one audience member can, in a manner of speaking. Carol Brown, of Astoria, Queens, has bought a ticket to South Pacific once a week for the past 52 weeks. I learned of her story as I was walking through the Beaumont lobby the other day and quite literally bumped into her. Brown was looking smart, all turned out in a purple cloth coat and black knee-high footwear with heels. ("I hate Ugg boots," she said. "They look like bedroom slippers, which should only be worn at home!")


Brown is a widow, of indeterminate age. ("What's the line from Mame? she said when I treaded -- discreetly, carefully -- in the direction of her birth year. "Between 40 and death.") She grew up in Hawaii, where she knew from palm trees. Her father was in the Navy.


"It isn't the military connection, though, or the tropical-island upbringing," Brown said, "that really explains why I love South Pacific. I just love the music, I guess. The first show I saw on Broadway was Two on the Aisle, with Bert Lahr and Dolores Grey. Everybody remembers Bert Lahr from The Wizard of Oz, but Dolores Grey's reputation is as faded as old newsprint. That show whetted my appetite."


Brown, whose family moved to New Jersey after her father retired from the Navy, says she was a stage-struck college student. "I used to take the bus in to the city every weekend, and see a couple of shows. Standing room cost nothing. I saw everything from the early 1950s onward. I don't see everything anymore. I'm not a fuddy-duddy: I love Obama, and Milk was my favorite movie from this year's Oscars. But I like big romantic musicals, preferably with adult characters in evening gowns, not teenagers in leather. South Pacific fits the bill."


Brown usually sees South Pacific on a Saturday or Sunday matinee. "It's my ritual," she says. "Some people go to church on the weekend; I go to Rodgers & Hammerstein. It's easier for me to go on Saturday or Sunday, even though the weekend subway, because of construction, slows things down a bit. I don't have just one section of the house that I sit in. I like to see things from every angle; that way I don't get tired of the production. Honestly, I think I'm happiest in the loge. You get the full sweep of everything up there, and the orchestra sounds so lush. I think the biggest reason I come every week is because I like to hear a musical score with a real orchestra. People have gotten too used to hearing a musical accompanied by just a banjo and a kazoo."


How does Brown afford her theatergoing? "My husband left me comfortably off," she responds. Does she have a favorite song from the show? "It changes," she replies. "Right now, I hum 'My Girl Back Home' a lot when I'm taking a bath." How about a favorite performer? "I know all the blue-haired crowd swoons over Paulo Szot, and, don't get me wrong, I think he's terrific. But I prefer Cable -- first Matthew Morrison, now Andrew Samonsky. I've always favored younger men, and, even at the age of 'between 40 and death,' I still do!"


BRENDAN LEMON is the American theater critic for the Financial Times and the editor of lemonwade.com

 

Comments

[2]

  • This woman is my hero!

    Nina, Feb 26, 2009

  • And here I thought I had seen it a lot! Wow...and I understand completely.

    Cheryl, Mar 5, 2009