Always ready to take a chance, Christine Alexander, Sarasota’s uncrowned but not unappreciated Improv Queen, launched SaraSolo 2016, two weekends of solo performances with a Betwixt Week of workshops, tutorials, and performance development. In this gig, Christine Alexander becomes a radio hostess taking a chance on (maybe) audience Twitter feeds, call ins, and call outs. Just in case she needs a script, she’s brought along her imaginary diary from age 18. Would you blame Christine for finding her family trip to Stone Mountain, GA, b-o-r-i-n-g? All those stony guys’s faces? So who wants to know how she’ll find interesting people to call in now? Well, she hears from an old guy, Rip Van Wicked. Or whoever. Interruption for Commercial. To break the routine, from the moment she turns her head Christine gets visitors. There are high schooler Janet who only knows one prolonged sound and big breather Darth Vader and a four-year-old who’s famous for eating a whole cow by himself. A message from the sponsor cuts off each. And so goes Christine’s broadcast. But there are questions from the audience! 1} Do you enjoy oral sex with your Grandpa? “Well, if that’s the only door that’s open, if you know what I mean.” 2) Do you take showers with your Grandpa? “That’s a closed door.” 3) How do you boil a lamb? “First you find a boy named Lamb,” etc. She wishes all of us in Sarasota a good night to close as if we were in a movie about Vietnam and listening to Robin Williams. But we’ve had our fun enjoying Christine’s comic improv.
Images:
Opened:
January 23, 2016
Ended:
January 23, 2016
Country:
USA
State:
Florida
City:
Sarasota
Company/Producers:
SaraSolo 2016 Company & Gotta Van Productions
Theater Type:
Regional
Theater:
Crocker Memorial Church
Theater Address:
1260 Twelfth Street
Phone:
941-323-1360
Website:
gottavan.org
Running Time:
45 min
Genre:
Improvisational Comedy
Director:
Ann Morrison
Review:
Cast:
Christine Alexander
Miscellaneous:
At the close of her performance, Christine Alexander was congratulated by audience member Dick Smothers, who said he was amazed by how well she handled the development of her humor. “It’s hard to go through this usually slow process,” he said, “and you did it quickly and all by yourself!” She fell to her knees and bowed her head down. (Always improvising well!)
Critic:
Marie J. Kilker
Date Reviewed:
January 2016