Livin’ la vida Lucy
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Kim Pennachio stomped Monday the way Lucille Ball did in Episode 150
during the fifth season of “I Love Lucy” -- the grape-stomping segment in
which Lucy tries to win a part in Vittorio Philippi’s film by crushing
grapes.
Pennachio also sped through a 30-second Vitametavegamin spiel, just as
Lucy did in Episode 30 of the show’s first season, and stood along a
chocolate-packing conveyor belt throwing as many candies as she could
into a hole.
Just as Lucy did. Except in this episode -- No. 39 during the show’s
second season -- Lucy resorted to stuffing chocolates in her pockets,
blouse, even her mouth.
Giving new meaning Monday to the adage that imitation is the greatest
form of flattery, visitors to the Orange County Fair’s “I Love Lucy”
interactive exhibits reveled in three Lucy activities that blasted them
for a few fun minutes back into the 1950s.
“They get to live a little bit of TV history,” said Joe Thompson, tour
manager of the exhibits. “They get caught up in the whole spirit of the
experience.”
The chocolate game has proven the most popular so far, he added. The
game harkens back to the episode in which Lucy and friend Ethel want to
prove that housekeeping is harder than having a job. They get hired at a
chocolate-wrapping factory and, in true Lucy fashion, cause a slew of
comical mishaps trying to keep up with a speedy conveyor belt.
Shirley Piper, a self-proclaimed Lucy fan, yelled “Speed it up a
little bit!” and “Let it roll!” Monday at the prompting of an exhibit
staff member while her friends had a go at the belt.
That’s what the candy boss yelled on the show, Piper said.
“We’ve been through the exhibit but keep coming back again,” she said
with a laugh.
Pennachio and her crew of six also kept coming back, loitering for
more than an hour at the same three exhibits.
They each stumbled through the “I’m your Vitametavegamin girl. Are you
tired, rundown, listless . . .” speech, some clocking in under the
required limit of 30 seconds and some not finishing in time.
In the episode, Lucy tries out for a commercial promoting a vitamin
product but gets tipsy on the alcohol that the mixture contains.
Lucy barely gets through her tongue-twisting lines. Modern-day
fairgoers have been trying to fare better for the last three days.
“It’s the allure, the long-term endurance of Lucille and the show and
her persona,” said Maureen Tierney, a staff member at the fair.
In Pennachio’s group, son Andrew proved the biggest winner. He scored
850 points on the stomping game -- where you stomp and get measured on
the number of stomps and the one who stomps most wins -- and got his
score put up for passersby to see.
“But my favorite is the candy one, because it’s the most Lucy-like,”
the 12-year-old said.
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