Gambit New Orleans

Page 54

StAGE LISTINGS page 49

REVIEW

Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill

COMEDY OPEN-MIC. 12 Bar, 608 Fulton St., 212-6476; www.12barnola.com — Jackie  Jenkins Jr. hosts the weekly  event. Free admission. 8 p.m.  Tuesday. COMEDY SPORTZ. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 231-7011; www.nolacomedy.com — The theater hosts an  all-ages improv comedy show.  Tickets $10. 7 p.m. Saturday. FEAR & LOATHING WITH GOD’S BEEN DRINKING. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 231-7011; www. nolacomedy.com — A double bill  of sketch and improv comedy.  Tickets $10, $5 with drink  purchase. 8:30 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY NIGHT COMEDY SHOWCASE. The Maison, 508 Frenchmen St., 371-5543; www.maisonfrenchmen.com — Jackie Jenkins Jr. hosts a

stand-up showcase featuring  New Orleans comedians. Free  admission. 8 p.m. Friday. KEVIN LEPINE. Hard Rock Cafe, 415 N. Peters St., 5295617; www.hardrock.com —  Lepine presents his R-rated comedic hypnotism show that he’s  performed in Las Vegas. Tickets  $25, or two tickets for one with  a local I.D. 8 p.m. Friday.  LAUGH & SIP. Therapy Wine Lounge, 3001 Tulane Ave., 784-0054; www.therapynola. com — A weekly event featuring  Louisiana comedians and live  music. Visit www.pissyopants. com for details. Tickets $7. 8  p.m. Thursday. THE MEGAPHONE SHOW. The New Movement, 1919 Burgundy St.; www.newmovementtheater.com — Each show  features a guest sharing true  stories, the details of which

are turned into improv comedy.  Tickets $5. 10:30 p.m. Saturday. SATURDAY NIGHT LAUGH TRACK. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 2317011; www.nolacomedy.com — The theater hosts a stand-up  comedy showcase. Tickets $5.  11 p.m. Saturday. STUPID TIME MACHINE PRESENTS. The New Movement, 1919 Burgundy St.; www.newmovementtheater. com — The improv comedy  troupe presents improv, sketch  comedy, videos and guest  performers. Tickets $5. 10:30  p.m. Friday. TONY FREDERICK CD RELEASE. La Nuit Comedy Theater, 5039 Freret St., 2317011; www.nolacomedy.com — The comedian releases his latest album. Tickets $10 (includes  CD). 9:30 p.m. Sunday.

World Cocktail Week! SWING BALL! (free lesson with Keith Marszalek) in the Main Barroom and a Piano Bar in the Casablanca Room. Delicious food provided by the Windsor Court Hotel, Cure, and Cafe Adelaide. Cocktails from Nola’s best bartenders, including Chris McMillian, Chris Hannah, Wayne Curtis, Rhiannon Enlil, Kim Patton-Bragg, Nick Detrich and Steve Yamada. Plus Special Guests: Dale DeGroff & Beach Bum Berry!

Featuring: Meschiya Lake and her Little Big Quartet!

Friday, May 18th

6:00pm ‘til 9:00pm at the Southern Food & Beverage Museum Riverwalk Marketplace (at Julia Street) 500 Port of Orleans Pl. Suite 169, New Orleans

Tickets $30 when you

purchase online at www. americancocktailmuseum.org

$40 at the door for more info call 646-696-0862

FRIDAY, MAY 18TH • 6:00-9:00PM EAT! DRINK! DANCE! CELEBRATE!

Proceeds Benefit the Museum of the American Cocktail. www.MuseumOfTheAmericanCocktail.org

Tasha Warino Hebert PARTNER

Hebbler & Giordano, L.L.C. Attorneys at Law

(504)833-8007

Family Law • Practicing since 1998

Gambit > bestofneworleans.com > may 15 > 2012

Lanie Robertson’s Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill by shows us the great  and tragic vocalist Billie Holiday in the final days of her  career. The show is simple  but by no means easy to do.  It’s basically a monologue  woven around some of Holiday’s famous hits.     Director Tommye Myrick  staged an excellent production of this biography at JuJu  Bag Cafe, an attractive little  cabaret space on Franklin Avenue. John Grimsley designed the 1950s nightclub with a standup microphone, flanked by a bar and a three-piece band.     After the band plays a few numbers, Buster the Emcee (Bobbie Johnson)  announces Lady Day, who does not appear. Finally, he goes backstage to get  her. Holiday (Sharon Martin) is drunk. She goes to the onstage bar, where club  owner Emerson (Alton Smith) fills her glass. Playing a drunk is a fine line and  Martin walked it with assurance. She was simultaneously charming and pitiful.  She sang beautifully and she has an unusual timbre in her voice that suggests  Billie’s distinct, haunting lilt.     Holiday says she’s glad to be back in Philadelphia. We later learn her New  York cabaret license was revoked, preventing her from performing in any Big  Apple bar. The once-wealthy star has fallen on hard times, but she had already  survived hard times. She started poor, spent time working in a brothel and got  her first singing gig by luck. She went into a joint that had a sign looking for  a dancer. When the owners saw how pathetic Holiday was as a dancer, they  asked her to sing. Then they gave her a job.     She spent time in prison because of a problem with heroin, and she blamed  the hard drugs on her first husband. She often laughs as she tells her tales,  caught between amusement and hysteria.     This tragicomic mood pervades her story of touring with Artie Shaw’s band.  Shaw and the band members were white. Southerners did not like to see a  black woman on stage with white men, but Shaw and his musicians sympathized with Holiday. If she had to go in the back door of a hotel, they went in  the back door too. Everything came to a head one evening when Billie had to  use the bathroom. The manager said there was no bathroom for black women.  After considerable squabbling, Holiday urinated on the floor.     Humiliation was not the only thing African Americans had to face. Holiday  underlines racial terrorism in the South by singing “Strange Fruit.”     Myrick kept the show entertaining and involving. She may extend the run and  it’s well worth a trip. — DALT WONK

Come Celebrate

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