By Edward Rubin
Three years ago, ex-New Yorker David Lefkowitz, now a Colorado
based actor, writer, playwright, and popular radio personality, brought his one
man show, Shalom Dammit: An Evening with Rabbi Sol Solomon, to New York
City. The overall thrust of the evening, wildly performed by the playwright
himself, was what it is to be a Jew in the 21st Century.
With a dizzying array of dance, song, and a plethora of double-entendres,
and vaudevillian-type jokes, Lefkowitz, as the fictitious Rabbi Sol, like
Picasso incarnate, tackled his subject cubistically, that is, from every
conceivable angle—political, social, cultural, sexual, and otherwise.
Well, the Whirling Dervish is back again, this time, for one night
only, as part of United Solos 2015, the world’s largest solo theatre festival. The
show opens with Lefkowitz announcing to the audience that he’d like to tell us
about the most embarrassing, uncomfortable, humiliating night of his life. And tell
it he did for one hour and forty five minutes without intermission.
In Part One, if you want to think of it as a two-part play which
it seems like, Lefkowitz gives us a nonstop, extremely detailed lesson cum
lecture, culled from his own personal two and a half decades of theatre going experiences.
We are instructed as to what it is to be a professional theatre critic, and
humorously regaled by some of the more tortuous theatrical productions, albeit none
referred to by name, that he indecorously suffered through.
We are also made privy to the Ten Commandments that reviewers are
expected to take into consideration when writing their reviews. They are the same
admonishments, more or less, that the ever-fair Roger Ebert followed when
reviewing film. Be
on time, be prepared, pay attention, be honest, be fair, be specific, be open,
be exacting, be at your best, and be ready for anything. Not
surprisingly, this is good advice to follow in all of your daily doings.
As
far as being tortured at the theatre Lefkowitz recalls sitting through comedies
that could only aspire to be Moose Murders. “I sat through tragedies
that were actual tragedies. I sat through musicals where a cell phone going off
was the best song of the night. I sat through a family drama where the entire
first act was a woman making gazpacho. And yet, somehow, the second act ended
with the father, accused of being a child molester, pulling down his pants and
screaming, “I’m clean! Look at my penis, mommy, I’m clean!”
We
are further informed, a revelation to some theatergoers but not to reviewers
like myself, that only one of out of some 600 plays – again no play is singled
out by name – emblazons itself on your brain. You get such a play once every
600 shows. “No, really,” Lefkowitz says, “I’ve done the math. If you’re a
practicing theater critic in a major city, you might see 200 shows a year.
Every couple of years, you get one, the one. Number 600. And that keeps you
going `til the next one.”
Quickly
following up on this observation, Lefkowitz playfully warns the audience that the
play they are now watching – The Miracle of Long Johns – is not The
One. “Sorry,” he says, “This is just a silly little monologue about the
most miserable night of my life.” Eliciting more laughs from the audience, in a
clever bit about standing ovations, Lefkowitz jests “Feel free to rise at the
end; I will not stop you. But don’t expect “Death of a Salesman”; this is
“Mortification of a Critic.”
For the play’s coup de grace, Part Two, if you will, Lefkowitz going
where very few performers go, other than the late great George Carlin who the playwright
cites a couple of times during the evening, reverts to a tale that involves the
playwright’s long johns and one big sloppy bowel movement, a story he claims he
had been wanting to tell for decades.
And tell it he does. Sitting on a chair standing in for a toilet we
are offered countless sounds, as well as a myriad of bodily and facial contortions
from the slow beginnings of a rumbling stomach to a final atomic explosion that
covers everything in the theatre’s tiny restroom.
Of course we are all shocked, as well as turning embarrassingly
red-faced when Lefkowitz’s story takes an abrupt turn to the scatological. However,
after accepting the fact, some of us faster than others, that we have all been
there, done that, and more than likely more than once – who hasn’t pooped in
their pants – the theatre audience, rollicks with laughter as a fusillade of referrals
to our various bodily parts and functions fly by fast and furiously.
Mentions of the rump, bum, fudge, feces, asshole, tootsie roles, farts,
breaking wind, a devil in my duodenum, shit slivers, lava, gravy, world war goo,
and drenched in dreck – more than a sack full of euphemisms – are liberally strewn
throughout the play. I might add, just when you think the story has hit below
the belt it goes a lot lower.
More than likely, The Miracles of the Long Johns – considering
this a preview - will return, as his last play did, for a longer run on theatre
row next year. Then you too can get the full blast. So to speak!
David Lefkowitz The Miracle of Long Johns, Studio
Theater/Theatre Row
410 West 42rd Street, NYC, Presented by United Solo
Festival
212-714-2442 One Night Only Friday, October 23, 2015 9PM
Website: www.studiotheatre.org
Running Time: 105 Minutes
Author: David Lefkowitz
Cast: David Lefkowitz