Arts & Entertainment Show-Within-A-Show Former Detroiter is the producer behind cast recording of The Drowsy Chaperone's Tony Award-winning Best Score. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News A nyone leaving The Drowsy Chaperone humming the musi- cal-comedy score and ready to buy the original cast recording will find albums with a Detroit connection. Joel Moss, who performed in the Detroit- area Union Street 3 folk group with friends from Congregation Beth Aaron's United Synagogue Youth group, actually produced two recorded versions of the show run- ning through Dec. 26 at the Performance Network Theatre in Ann Arbor. The new revival, directed by Carla Milarch, stars Naz Edwards, Scott Crownover and Phil Powers. "Our recording concept was rather unusual because of the way the show is set up as a play within a play,' says Moss, who maintains a home studio in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. "We made a CD, which is the cast record- ing, and a vinyl album, which is, in essence, the pretend 1929 album the central charac- ter is playing in his apartment. "I'm also an audio engineer so I wear many hats for cast recordings. I do the editing and mixing besides producing." The Drowsy Chaperone, with book by Bob Martin and Don McKeller and music and lyrics by Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison, received 2006 Tony Awards for Best Book of a Musical and Best Original Score. It takes audiences back to the 1920s with lots of fantasy and glitz. The action spins from a man ("Man in Chair") sitting in his apartment and listen- ing to a cast recording. Magically, the show comes to life. The play within the play involves the star of the fictitious Feldzeig's Follies. After announcing she is leaving the show to marry a rich oilman, the star is wooed by a produc- er-hired gigolo to stop her departure. "The Drowsy Chaperone started as an engagement party skit for Bob Martin and his fiancee in Canada and went through several incarnations before becoming a show that debuted in Los Angeles and went to Broadway:' Moss recalls. "Once it was in New York, a date was set for the cast recording. The recording process is a chaotic experience because it all has to be completed in a day. It's done in a recording studio since the theater would be too costly Moss, who played banjo and clarinet while a student at Mumford High School, only attended classes three days a week. Mondays and Fridays were travel time to and from folk appearances. After earning a master's degree in archi- tecture at the University of Minnesota, where he kept up with some music inter- ests, Moss moved to Los Angeles and found technical work with many recording stars, including Michael Jackson, the Beach Boys and Patti Austin. Film music became his next venture, and he was executive director and chief engineer of the Record Plant Recording Studios on the Paramount Pictures lot before moving on to work with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. With the founding of Managra Music Inc., a multifaceted music production entity, Moss, 66, has continued to pur- Joel Moss on The Drowsy Chaperone: sue a wide variety of musical projects. "The music is so much fun." "In 2000, I met Kurt Deutsch and Sherie Rene Scott, who started Sh-K- Ann Arbor, share Moss' feelings about Boom Records:' says Moss, who regu- thoroughly enjoying work on the musical larly gets back to Michigan to see family, comedy. including his mother, Dorothy Moss of Hammen, 57, plays Mrs. Tottendale, a Southfield. "The subsidiary for Broadway pleasantly dotty character appearing in the musicals is called Ghostlight play. The full-time lawyer and hob- Records, and The Drowsy byist actress will be joined on stage Chaperone is on that." by her husband, Mark Hammen, Recent Broadway cast record- who portrays Jewish character ings include Legally Blonde and Victor Feldzieg. Next to Normal. "I hardly ever "Campy" is the way Rosenwald listen to most shows after the describes the musical comedy in recordings are made,' Moss says. which she plays Kitty, a flaky chorus "Once I've spent so much time Linda Rabin girl who wants to be the star but with them, I rarely put them in Hammell never can realize her dream. my car or the stereo at home. "This show is incredibly funny "Yet, I do find myself pulling out with over-the-top characters and The Drowsy Chaperone. The music jokes especially for theater lovers:' is so much fun, and the cast mem- says Rosenwald, 41, an actress for bers were all good friends. We just the University of Michigan Center had the best time working on it." for Research on Learning and Two local cast members, Linda Teaching, which uses drama to Rabin Hammell of Lathrup enhance instruction. "It's laughing Village and Eva Rosenwald of Eva Rosenwald nonstop." The Drowsy Chaperone will be performed through Dec. 26 at the Performance Network Theatre,120 E. Huron, in Ann Arbor. Performances are 8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays and 3 p.m. Saturdays, Nov. 27 and Dec.11. $27-$46, with discounts for members, seniors and students. (734) 663-0681; www.performancenetwork.org . Jews _a_ I Nate Bloom l vw Special to the Jewish News Oar New Flicks IC Based on the memoir of the same name by former CIA agent Valerie Flame, whose career was destroyed when her covert identity was exposed by a politically motivated press leak it out of the Bush White House, the film Fair Game opens Friday, Nov.19. Directed by Doug Liman, 45, the film stars Naomi Watts as Flame and Sean Penn, 50, as Wilson. Watts says that while shooting scenes in Jordan, she and her fiance, Liev Schreiber, 43, took a break and made their first visit to Israel, which they Doug Liman I 68 November 18 s 2010 really enjoyed. Flame wrote that the one happy benefit of her "outing" was that a Jewish relative got in contact with her; previously unaware of her Jewish background, she discovered her paternal grandfather — the son of a rabbi — was cut off by his family when he wed her Protestant grandmother. Love and Other Drugs stars Jake Gyllenhaal, 29, as a womanizer who is guided into a good job as a Pfizer drug salesman by his geek brother (Josh Gad, 29). Playing their parents are George Segal, 76, and the late Jill Clayburgh, in her last screen role. Directed and co-written by Josh Gad Edward Zwick, 58, the film opens Wednesday, Nov. 24. Clayburgh, who died of leukemia on Nov. 5 at age 66, was the daughter of a Protestant mother and a Jewish father. Her paternal great-great-great- grandfather was Major Benjamin Nones, a French Jew who was a military aide to both the Marquis de Lafayette and George Washington during the Revolutionary War. True Story Adam Lambert Last year at this time, season eight American Idol final- ist Adam Lambert, 28, caused quite a bit of controversy and fallout with his highly criticized performance at the American Music Awards. But look who's got the last laugh. Airing oppo- site the AMA telecast this year, at 9 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 21, on the E! Network is El True Hollywood Story, featur- ing none other than the multi-octave singer currently enjoying a sold-out world tour in support of his debut CD, For Your Entertainment. The program will feature Lambert's thoughts on his personal and profes- sional journey, along with interviews with his mom Leila, dad Eber and brother Neil. Says the singer, "My fans have been really supportive of my choice to be open and upfront about my sexuality and my lifestyle. I have come from the belief that hiding something from people and manipulating what they think of you is far more offensive and disrespectful than just being upfront and being who you are." El