Perspectives of a Writer and Musician

Issues related to writing, publishing and playing jazz music: One man's muse.
by Al Stevens

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Location: Florida, United States

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Big Fred Has Arrived!

Big Fred arrived in England yesterday. Here are some pictures.


Opening the box...


Dieter-Lee and Big Fred meet for the first time.


Throwing his voice


Getting a kiss


Along with the pictures came this message.

Dear Al, well we finally got Big Fred after the Post Office had held him hostage for a few days !. Our Customs and Excise Office is probably as bad as your IRS !. Dieter-Lee has been bouncing with excitement ever since we "sprang" Fred from the "Big House" !!. He very soon got the idea about the controls for Fred, and started talking with him straight away. He used one of the longest sentences I've ever heard him say, "Hello, I'm Big Fred,what's your name?. I'm Dieter-Lee,how are you?.". For Dieter-Lee that is a very long speech,so it bodes well that his use of language will hopefully improve with Fred.They are both now settling down for sleep,we have had to make a bed for Fred from a suitcase with pillows and a sheet !,in the next few days I've got to make a Fred sized bed for him to sleep in !.That's one very happy little boy.On your website could you please post a very big thank to everyone who helped and sent him birthday wishes.I will start to read the books that were sent and show Dieter-Lee how to do it,he learns best by immitation.We've had fun already this evening practising with Fred.Once again a huge Thank You to everyone involved in the project,we are so grateful to you all.We will keep you up to date on everything.Attached are a few photo's.

Yours sincerely with many,many Thanks,
Michael and Susan

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Music and ventriloquism

It's been over two weeks since I posted here. Part of that time I'm getting over eye surgery and can't read or type for any length of time. That is going well, and I thank those of you who expressed concern.

The rest of that time I'm busy writing arrangements for a small dance band I've booked for New Year's Eve.

Music is a big part of my life. I remember fondly the dance bands in which I played piano and trumpet in high school. That was in the 1950s, and we played for sock hops, proms, PTA dances, church socials, community picnics, and so on. That was before DJs. Times were better then.

Remember the band in the movie, Picnic? That was the kind of band I played in as a teenager. Purple jackets, out-of-tune upright pianos, drummers who couldn't read music, a leader who could only wave a baton, which is how he got to be leader, those old stock arrangements, and on and on.

Whenever I hear Moonglow today, all I can think of is Kim Novak coming down those concrete stairs. Sigh. But, I digress...

My New Year's Eve gig this year needs to recapture that time. The patrons are from that era and before. Of course, they can't afford a 17-piece big band, so I'm trying to recreate the sound with six instrumentalists and a chick singer.

When I write an arrangement, I also record it, playing all the instruments myself. This allows me to hear whether I got the notes right. That might sound tedious, but it's really a lot of fun. Here's an example:









Click the Play button...


But, you ask, what does that have to do with ventriloquism?

Nothing at all.

But the gig is being held in a Holiday Inn Express. Really.

So, to get back on topic, I am proud to announce that I have been chosen to present a workshop at the 2007 Convention at VentHaven. My workshop is about how to use music as an integral part of a ventriloquist act.

Music has been closely associated with ventriloquism for as long as I can remember. Winch was a talented musician, and he and Jerry sang quite often on their TV shows. Danny O'Day had a beautiful falsetto voice with vocal phrasing that brings to mind jazz singers of the day. Shari Lewis used music as does Willie Tyler.

Bill DeMar plays the banjo. I bet you didn't know that.

Pete Michaels does Pavarotti and Sonny and Cher. Stephen Knowles does Julio Iglesias and Willie Nelson.

Many ventriloquists who are not also musicians do not know how to employ music in their shows, and if they do, they don't know how to acquire and include professional accompaniments for their shows. Many don't know how to use entrance, interlude, exit and background music. Or where to get suitable audio clips for such purposes.

My workshop addresses those questions and answers questions about the legal side of a musical show—copyrights, royalties, performance licenses, and so on.

Of course, I'll use some of my own figures to demonstrate how I and other ventriloquists use my own compositions and recordings during our shows.

If there is a music-related subject you'd like me to address, please let me know.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Big Fred's Big Adventure Begins

Here's Big Fred, ready to be shipped to Dieter-Lee in England. Our Post Office is closed tomorrow thanks to ol' Chris Columbus, so Big Fred gets underway on Tuesday.

Along with Big Fred go ventriloquist teaching materials and more clothes donated by our many ventriloquist friends. Big Fred came in way under budget thanks to the generosity of the community, so Dieter-Lee will have some money, too, to buy whatever he and his Mum want.

Thanks to all who helped with this project.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Dieter-Lee, JoJo and Family

Please meet Dieter-Lee Watson and his family. Dieter-Lee is the boy in England who is getting Big Fred for his birthday.

You have to love that priceless picture of Dieter-Lee "throwing his voice" with his present puppet named JoJo.




The following photo is of Dieter-Lee's family.



Left to right: Dieter-Lee, JoJo, Susan, Michael, and Dane, who is 13. Not shown is Sebastian, who is 23 and a chef on a cruise ship.


Sunday, October 01, 2006

Jeff Dunham at the Improv

This is a three-part story. It begins with a surprise donation. Then it is about an opportunity to see Jeff Dunham in a live comedy club setting. Finally it is about a visit to some old stomping grounds.

Part 1. The Surprise


Yesterday I opened my email to a wonderful surprise. Jeff Dunham read my account of the autistic boy in England for whom I am building "Big Fred." Jeff sent me a whopping big donation. I looked at the screen in disbelief. Not in disbelief that Jeff is a generous guy—I've seen him at work collecting money for VentHaven and seeding it with his own money. Not surprised that Jeff would send a donation to a guy he doesn't really know all that well—several other folks I don't know did that. I was floored by the amount, which I will not disclose lest his heirs have him declared incompetent. I just want folks to know what a great and generous guy we have among our midst.

Part 2. Jeff at the Improv


Along with the donation came an invitation. Jeff is appearing this week at the Orlando Improv about 50 miles away. He invited me to come see his show. The show is, in a word, great.

You've heard the rule about one laugh every ten seconds? Try every five or six seconds. And not just a laugh. A huge laugh. Every time. The kind of laugh the rest of us would call a home run for a show-closer. At least ten laughs a minute in a one-hour show is 600 laughs the strength of which any of us would be grateful to get once a show.

How does he do it? First, it was clear from the applause that most of the audience already knows Walter and Peanut. They are established as being very funny guys. That's the secret. Some of us have to do it every show. Get the audience loving the character. Walter has a strong personality and a great face. With that in place, and with Jeff's expert manipulation, when the people know and love the character, anything the figure says gets a laugh. A simple "Dumbass!" brings down the house. A stare at a member of the audience does, too.

Not that the basic material wasn't funny. It was. And Jeff's timing is superb. But when the audience loves the players, it all falls into place.

I got to see what we didn't see on Letterman and a lot more. Who else can do ten minutes about his website URL and keep the crowd in stitches? Peanut says, "Jef-f Dun-HAMMM dot commmm." That's mostly all he says. Over and over. With various voice changes. I'm falling out of my chair. So is everyone else.

Nobody works an audience that well. Jeff outdid himself with the ringside folks and especially with an obnoxious heckler in the balcony.

The heckler. What a jerk. He heckled the warm-up comedian, a very funny tall skinny black dude by yelling out "KKK!" from the balcony. That threw the young comedian for a few seconds. He didn't quite know what to do. Then throughout Walter's segment in Jeff's show the heckler keeps yelling stuff that Jeff just ignores. But it got to be too much.

During the "Dear Walter" segment, the jerk yells out to Walter, "Can you still get it up?" Walter answers, "Ask your mother." Huge round of applause. Audiences don't like hecklers either. But the heckler is too stupid to shut up. So Walter proceeds to crucify the guy. Merciless, relentless, total annihilation. So funny I miss some of the words because I am laughing so hard. The guy was quiet after that.

Don't screw with Walter.

Jeff and I met privately for a while after the show. We talked about many things including controversial comedy and how far you should go. We talked about his appearance on Letterman. He asked about my work as a ventriloquist. He was interested in the project for the boy in England and how it came to be. He was interested in the Mike Brose kit that I'm using to build the figure. He was interested in the old building in which he was performing, and that brings me to part 3.

Part 3. Rosie O'Grady's Goodtime Emporium



The building that houses the Orlando Improv used to be a hotel. It is often said to be on the National Register of Historical Places, but a search of their database does not turn it up. Just a local urban legend, I guess.

Between being a hotel and becoming the Improv, that room was Rosie O'Grady's Goodtime Emporium, a night club that featured live entertainment seven nights a week. I was one of the piano players who worked there during the 1990s until they stopped having a full band. I was eager to go inside and see what changes they'd made.

The space that is the club was the hotel lobby. When the room was Rosie O'Grady's, a wall that is now behind the stage did not exist. The bandstand was where the stage is and there was a narrow wall behind the bandstand but it was open on either side. The audience could see past the band to the big stairway and up into that bar area. What is now the staging area for customers waiting to get into the club was open, too, and was part of the club. Rosie's could seat more people than the Improv can. There were long bars under each of the two balconies and the upstairs bar, which are still there.

The upstairs corridors were lined with pictures and newspaper articles about the founder of the Church Street Station entertainment complex, Bob Snow, a retired Navy aviator, skywriter, entreprenuer, and occasional Dixieland trumpet player. The first Rosie O'Grady's was in Pensacola, and he opened a Las Vegas club in the 1990s, which failed because it was too far off the strip.

When I worked at Rosie's in Orlando, the old hotel rooms were used as dressing rooms and a bandroom. From the bandroom we went into a closet that had the firepole down onto the stage with which the band and can-can dancers made our entrances.

We did four shows a night. Each show started with a loud siren and the bell clanging while we slid down the pole or came up from the two sides of the stage. It was an eight-piece Dixieland show band. High energy stuff. We had can-can dancers, a soft-shoe tap dancing duo, a red hot mama, and a song-and-dance man. At the end of each show we did a patriotic number with military and patriotic tunes, Uncle Sam on stilts, a lady volunteer from the audience as the Statue of Liberty, and a huge American flag that descended from the ceiling about where the video projection screen is now. We ended with the siren and bell again.

Church Street Station, of which Rosie's was a part, was a huge entertainment complex that started in the mid-1970s and went into the late 1990s. with several live-entertainment clubs, a shopping mall, and frequent street performances by name entertainers. It was supported by tourists who'd come in the evenings after a day at the theme parks. When the theme parks opened their own entertainment complexes, tourists naturally went there instead of coming all the way into town. Given that and the inadequate parking facilities at Church Street, the complex eventually died out.

Some of the Rosie's alumni got together for a 30th reunion in 2004. I'm the cornet player in the white sports jacket.