Anita Gillette



Extra! Extra

Anita Gillette: After All…

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

by Alix Cohen

Baby June* had nothing on this 5’2” (well almost) red headed bundle of dynamite. With fifty

years in theater, television, and film under her pave sash (undetectable by either appearance

or energy level), the formidably talented Anita Gillette has finally gotten around to

presenting her first cabaret act. It was worth the wait. “Sometimes before you see where

you’re going, you have to see where you’ve been…so we’re here to do that…and settle a

few scores…” she begins with a twinkle in her eye.

The immensely likeable Gillette shares a cavalcade of career memories, each leading up to or

illustrated by a musical number. Sequencing is so seamless, we’re listening to a song before

realizing patter has stopped. In fact, sometimes, it hasn’t. The skill with which wickedly

funny, anecdotespecific wisecracks are integrated into performance is completely

captivating. Bravo, Director Barry Kleinbort.


This is an actress and comedienne as well as a singer. Her timing is pitch ‐perfect. Whether

offering an exaggeratedly hammy Italian street song (with artful, deadpan vocal back

‐up by Paul Greenwood) or mimicking an old woman whose landlady she was briefly (one of Rue McClanahan’s 7 husbands talked her into buying real estate when work was scarce), she

nails each character and moves on with nary a ba dump dump needed to punctuate.
John Kander and Fred Ebb’s “Don’t Tell Mama” from Cabaret is the first of several saucy

numbers to which Gillette does full justice. The honey ‐cured “Nightlife” (Charles Strouse/Lee

Adams from “All American”) and Joe Williams’s “He May Be Your Man” but he comes to see

me sometime, are equally frisky.Gillette moves with innuendo and expresses with implication,

utilizing the full stage, locking eyes with her audience. Bawdy remarks are buoyant. The lady’s
still got it‐ in spades. “I met my first husband, Dr. Gillette, over an autopsy… he tried to
educate me…” is the lead in to“Teach Me Tonight” (Gene DePaul/Johnny Mercer) delivered with very pretty vibrato and spiked with personal commentary.

After “Extra! Extra” (Jule Stein/Stephen Sondheim), we learn that Ethel Merman saved her

understudy job in Gypsy when Gillette was pregnant. Demonstrative gymnastics are a

scream. Her rendition of “Mira” from Bob Merrill’s musical Carnival personifies the ingénue

she must’ve been. It’s a darker arrangement than the original, more suited to her vocal

abilities, but completely effective. Accepting another offer, Gillette quit only to successfully

step in for the hospitalized Anna Maria Alberghetti just before leaving. A grudging David

Merrick hired her back when the other show quickly closed. Alberghetti received plastic

roses “How do you order those?!” Gillette received a bill for the blow‐up (photo) of herself

outside the theater. “The Secret Service” (from Mr. President) and a medley of “How Deep is the Ocean” and “Remember” follow. First cute as the dickens, Gillette sings the second two songs with wistful elegance. All three are by Irving Berlin “Mr. B.” with whom she had a long friendship.

Just as we settle into a quiet moment, her hysterical story of an inadvertently drunken

evening at the Lyndon Johnson White House has us again rolling in the aisles. “Oh Gee!” (Bill

Jacob/Patti Jacob from Jimmy‐the musical about Gentleman Jimmy Walker) puts a cherry ontop with a 1920s number that even has the band grinning. A clever duet (with Paul Greenwood) of “Yesterdays” (Jerome Kern/Otto Harbach) shows the difference between what Gillette was singing and what she was thinking on the occasion of being the shiksa** asked to sing at Otto Harbach’s funeral. (special lyrics by Barry Kleinbort) There were 14 Broadway shows. Then came film and television. “Besides being dance instructors and floozies, I’ve been everybody’s mother. Believe me, they’re all good kids.” ‘Not to mention the quiz shows. And back to Broadway. Well chosen numbers elaborate.

Anita Gillette’s encore, “Are You Having Any Fun?” (Sammy Fain/Jack Yellen), is completely rhetorical. We’ve laughed, clapped, and swayed our way through a warm, expertly executed evening by a top notch thespian. No one wants to go home.

Paul Greenwood’s arrangements and  musicianship are positively symbiotic, and he sings!


*Baby June – Louise’s sister (Gypsy Rose Lee’s sister in  Gypsy

 

** “Shiksa usually refers to an attractive (stereotypically blonde) gentile girl who might

be a temptation to Jewish men or boys”

Wickipedia

Anita Gillette: After All…

Anita Gillette - Vocal

Paul Greenwood  Piano/Music Director

Steve Doyle   -   Bass

Steve Bartosik   Drums

Directed by Barry Kleinbort

Birdland  ,315 West 44th Street

January 30, 2012