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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1999)
Reviving ‘Lives’ By Jack Clifford Oregon Daily Emerald There’s a well-worn adage in show busi ness that says you should give the people what they want. Well, the Actors Cabaret of Eugene has heard the clamoring and this weekend brings back a local favorite. “For some time now, all I’ve heard from people is ‘When are you going to do ‘Paral lel Lives’? When are you going to do ‘Paral lel Lives’?’,” the play’s director Joe Zingo said. “This is one that people really love.” Theatergoers get a chance this weekend to reconnect with “The Kathy and Mo Show: Parallel Lives,” as it begins a run Fri day night at ACE in downtown Eugene. Kathy Najimy and Mo Gaffney first wrote and produced “Parallel Lives” in mid-1985 while living in San Diego. After a wildly successful stint there, the women took their show to New York City in No vember of that year. The play has been staged in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco, among other cities. Gaffney and Najimy each won Obie Awards for their performances and last year the show became an HBO special. For the ACE gig, Eugene actors Erica Krause and Becky Croson-LaChapelle reprise the approximately 30 roles, ones they know well. They were the first two ac tresses besides Gaffney and Najimy to do the show. “The play sort of takes a slice of life from a lot of different characters that are almost cartoony, yet you’ll find a lot of realism in every single one of them,” Krause said. “Even though they’re outrageous and they’re very ‘out there,’ with just about every character, you’ll say, ‘I know some one like that’ or ‘That reminds me of my uncle.’” The two actors gender-bend throughout the play and one scene might have them as ’* " a_ms Scott Barnett Emerald Erica Krause and Becky Croson-LaChapelle bring back their multitude of roles in “The Kathy and Mo Show: Par allel Lives,” opening this weekend at the Actors Cabaret of Eugene, 996 Willamette St. angels discussing creation, while another portrays them as young girls. Switching from role to role can be draining, Croson LaChapelle said, but her partner pointed out that a lot of the play depends on famil iarity just as much as energy. “We don’t have a lot of costume changes, only because it goes so fast, but sometimes it’s a simple matter of putting on a hat, some glasses and carrying your purse fun ny and the transformation happens,” Krause said. “Putting on a real simple cos tume piece is almost like muscle memory — you feel the weight and it becomes really natural, because we’ve been doing it for so long.” Croson-LaChapelle and Krause have per formed “Parallel Lives” off and on for sev en years, and the last time was in Oct. 1995. Since then, Croson-LaChapelle, a nurse with PeaceHealth Medical Group in the pe diatrics unit, got married and Krause re turned to George Fox University to finish a bachelors degree she started at the Univer sity. The two have also kept busy in vari ous plays. “Last year I moved back to Eugene, called Erica and I said ‘Mattie — that’s one of her favorite characters in the play — I think it’s time to do the show again,’” Cro son-LaChapelle said, using the voice of Syvie, short for Sylvia, her favorite charac ter in “Parallel Lives.” Zingo has been far from a slacker him After a much anticipated wait, two Eugene actors bring the nationally-acclaimed ‘Parallel Lives’ to town self. He’s currently working on three other productions, and just finished with “Wiz ard of Oz” at South Eugene High School. That play utilized 186 actors, ranging from elementary school age to high schoolers. Now he’s down to two actors for “Parallel Lives.” “It was sort of like herding people there, because [‘Wizard of Oz’] is that large a scale,” he said. “When you get to two, you can really home in on what they’re doing, rather than on what ‘it’ looks like. We’ve done the show before, so they know what I’m after.” Zingo said that while people may think that he can go on cruise control, consider ing the smaller cast, he instead has a more defined and just as crucial job. “What happens is that the director needs to really focus in more because there’s fewer things for the actors to be distracted by,” Zingo said. “I’m pulling it back, because you give two very competent actors the reins and they’ll go with it As we all know about ac tors, actors sometimes have a tendency to do their own things, and sometimes it’s not ‘the’ thing that should happen.” For Croson-LaChapelle and Krause, one may not always know exactly where the other one is going, but with such a close working relationship, they know how to re cover. “We work so well together that if I screw up a line, Erica’s right there,” Croson LaChapelle said. “If she misses something, I’m right behind her.” With or without miscues, “Parallel Lives” has returned. Performances this weekend are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. The show continues Nov. 26 and 27, and additional perfor mances will be added in December. Ticket prices are $14 in advance, with a limited number of student and senior tick ets at $10. Call the ACE box office at 683 4368 for more information.