‘Always . . . Patsy Cline’ a musical, comic hit
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Tom Titus
When you were young, or maybe not so young, did you ever dream of
spending a weekend with your favorite entertainer?
Probably; most of us have. But few of us can match the experience
of Louise Seger.
Houston divorcee Seger’s idol was legendary country singer Patsy
Cline, who stopped off for a one-night stand at a Houston club one
day in 1961. Naturally, Seger and two of her friends were first in
line -- and what happened then forms the factual premise of Ted
Swindley’s
“Always...Patsy Cline,” now playing through August at the Laguna
Playhouse.
With Christa Jackson employing a spectacular singing voice as the
singer and Sally Struthers chewing up yards of scenery as the
megafan, “Always...Patsy Cline” will knock your socks off both
musically and comically. .
The two-woman extravaganza, imaginatively directed by Sharon
Rosen, is an evening alternating between Jackson’s superb song
stylings and Struthers’ hilarious antics.
Struthers -- who broke into the big time as the fourth banana on
TV’s “All in the Family” -- has long since come into her own as a
comic actress, as evidenced by her outrageous comic turn as Miss
Hannigan in a touring production of “Annie” glimpsed a while back at
the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Here, she has the stage virtually to herself -- except, of course,
for Jackson’s inspired belting of nearly two dozen numbers from the
Patsy Cline songbook. And, much like Jerry Lewis used to ham it up
while Dean Martin was singing, she occupies a good bit of Jackson’s
time as well without thoroughly upstaging the singer.
Struthers, her voluminous blond locks flying this way and that,
plays her yee-haw character to the hilt, narrating her story to the
audience and keeping the five-piece orchestra behind her in line.
Jackson is simply incredible in her recapturing of Cline’s vocal
presentation. Jackson should convert every non-country music fan in
the audience with her dynamic, throaty assaults on songs like
“Crazy,” and “Your Cheatin’ Heart.”
Providing superlative musical backup are the Bodacious Bobcats.
With all the high-voltage comedy and glorious music, you might
expect “Always...Patsy Cline” to have a happy ending. But, as most
people know, the singer died in a plane crash two years after the
events depicted in the show.
The tragedy hardly casts a pall, however, as Jackson emerges as
the spirit of her character to sing the “High Society” number “True
Love,” then joins with Struthers for a rousing finale of “Bill
Bailey.”
“Always...Patsy Cline is one of those rare magical moments in the
theater that you wish could go on and on -- although its two-hour
running time, sans intermission, would exhaust lesser performers.
It’s a show, and experience, you’ll remember. Always.
* TOM TITUS writes theater reviews for the Coastline Pilot.
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