An old-fashioned Christmas musical

1940s Radio Hour at Harlequin Productions

By Alec Clayton on December 27, 2018

Christmas might be over, but Harlequin Productions continues celebrating the season until New Year's Eve. For this year's holiday show, Harlequin dove deep into their archives to re-stage their first holiday show, The 1940s Radio Hour. First performed in 1993, this is the one that inspired the theater's Stardust series, the ever-popular series that has run for 22 seasons.

It is Dec. 21, 1942, one year into WWII, in the Algonquin Room of Manhattan's Astor Hotel where the radio show The Mutual Manhattan Variety Cavalcade is being broadcast. Station manager and show host Clifton Feddington (Bruce Haasl) is frantic because most of the performers and band members are late or are not doing what they're supposed to do. House manager Pops Bailey (Gerald B. Browning) is running a bookie operation in the station, featured singer Johnny Cantone (James Dean) is nowhere to be found, and young and pesky delivery boy, Wally Ferguson (Xander Layden), is begging him to let him sing on the show.

But the show must go on, and go on it does, complete with a cavalcade of hit 1930s and '40s songs including "I Got a Gal from Kalamazoo," "Blue Moon," "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," "I Get a Kick Out of You," and Christmas standards including "Jingle Bells," "I'll be Home for Christmas," "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," with on-air commercials and a live broadcast of A Christmas Carol complete with sound effects by sound man Lou Cohen (Nathan Rice). Drummer Biff Baker (Andy Garness) provides a note of sentimentality and patriotism because he is in the Air Force and it is his last night. Tomorrow, he is being shipped overseas to fight in the war.

Throughout the broadcast, there are endless miscues and other silliness, and star Johnny Cantone gets increasingly drunk.

The play is lighthearted, shmaltzy and outdated. The Cantone character is a shame, because drunkenness ceased being funny a long time ago, and Dean is too good an actor and singer for that unfortunate role. His voice is clear, deep and resonate -- a crooner to equal the best of the big band era or any other era.

Compensating for the dated script, the music is outstanding, the commercials are funny, and the radio play-within-a-radio-play is a joy to behold. Singers Carolyn Willems Van Dijk as Connie Miller and Christie Murphy-Oldright as Ginger Brooks both have strong and melodious voices, Miguel Pineda as singer B.J. Gibson is outstanding, and Layden as Wally is the comic hit of the show.

As always, the band is outstanding with Garness on drums, Rick Jarvela on bass, David Steadman on trumpet, Aaron Wolff on saxophone, and show Director/Musical Director Aaron Lamb on piano.

1940s RADIO HOUR, 8 p.m., Thursday-Saturday; 2 p.m., Sunday, through Dec. 31, State Theater, 202 4th Ave. E., Olympia, $49 general, $45 senior/military, $25 student/youth, 360.786.0151, harlequinproductions.org/