Photo by Martha Swo e Assoc iate/Ca rol Rosegg ister ct Faith and Jill Soloway. The Soloway sisters parody "The Brady Bunch" in a live reprise at the Strand Theatre. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS omewhere between a party and a play" is the way Jill Soloway describes The Real Live Brady Bunch, the theater piece she created and directed with her sister, Faith. Staged since 1990 and now at the Strand Theatre in Pontiac, the show pre- sents parodies of actual scripts from the long-run- ning TV series "The Brady Bunch," which captured experiences of a widow (Florence Henderson) with three daughters, remar- ried to a widower (Robert Reed) with three sons. The comedy derives from the all-adult cast, '70s music, a set-the-mood quiz show and a living- room feeling in the first three rows, where the seats have cushions. During the Strand engagement, continuing through Sept. 4, one of four different episodes is being performed each week. The current seg- ment, "Silver Platters," features the kids going on TV to sing "Sunshine Day." Beginning Sept. 1, the segment "Time to Change," pokes fun at one of the boys, whose matur- ing voice turns squeaky. "You go with a bunch of friends and see a bunch of friends," said Ms. Soloway, 27, who was a Brady fan with her sister, now 29, during their growing-up years in Chicago. "It is a way for our generation to feel a sense of community." The two never anticipat- ed how the production would change their lives. "We just started this as a lark," said Ms. Soloway, who was working with a documentary film compa- ny and whose sister was a musical director at comedy clubs. "We didn't think it was our career or our tick- et to anything big. It was a good time. "We were very lucky that it turned into some- thing that brought us so many other things. It got us agents and other deals. We were able to do more plays." The idea came about at a party when a friend imi- tated one of the characters in the sitcom. The sisters were so impressed that they built the idea into a play, choosing close friends to be in the first cast with- out conducting any audi- tions. "When we did it in Chicago, we did it without money," said Ms. Soloway, who has spent summer vacations in South Haven. "We only did it one night a week and went to thrift shops to get costumes. "We didn't need a pro- ducer until after it became a success in Chicago. Then, producer Ron Deosener approached us SISTERS page 98