Alan Safier as George Burns I Actor channels beloved comedy icon in one-man show. I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer A lan Safier might very well be as much a fan as an entertainer. A strong baseball aficionado devoted to the Cleveland Indians, he drove from Ohio with his brother to take a last look at Tiger Stadium in 1999, its final season. A longtime fan of the late comedian George Burns, he has become the legend's portrayer and will appear Sunday after- noon, Feb. 16, at the Macomb Center for the Performing Arts in Clinton Township. The one-man show, Say Goodnight Gracie, also pays tribute to the comedian's late wife and show-business partner, Gracie Allen, whose stage character is captured with recordings by actress Didi Conn (who played the childlike-voiced "Frenchy" in the Grease films). Film clips and pictures make the pro- duction a multimedia event. "This production goes from very funny to very touching" Safier says in a phone conversation from his New York home. "The audience very quickly goes from tears of laughter to tears of sadness. "Even though there is not a lot of sad- ness in the show, there are sections, especially when George Burns talks about Gracie and the heart condition that caused her death (at age 69):' The remembered humorist-actor, who reached his 100th birthday, visited Michigan in 1992 to open Livonia's George Burns Theatre, which hosted audiences for one year before closing. Burns, near- ing 100 then, recalled his vaudeville years touring the state as well as his radio, tele- vision and movie career. The play, written by Rupert Holmes, is based on Burns' remembrances. It premiered in New York in 2002, starring Frank Gorshin as Burns, and went on to become the third-longest-running solo show on the Great White Way. "Although the show is extremely funny, it's not just a constant yuck-fest" Safier says. "There's a lot of depth to the Holmes script. That's why the play was nominated for a Tony the year it was on Broadway" Safier, who is made up to look like Burns and assumes his vocal qualities, explains that Burns did not often bring his Jewish background into his act. But as George Burns (ne Nathan Birnbaum), Safier does talk about the humorist's reli- gious upbringing and references the star's father, who was a Jewish scholar and stu- dent of the Torah. "If I hadn't been acting for 50 years or so until the time I took on this project, I don't think I would be able to do it," says Safier, 64, who grew up in a Jewish home in Ohio and celebrated his bar mitzvah in Cleveland. "I really think it takes somebody who knows what he's doing to take on a one- person show and sustain the interest of an audience for an hour-and-a-half. In a way, this is sort of a product of everything I've done in my career up until now:' Safier knew he wanted to be an actor when he was in kindergarten and saw the Actor Alan Safier second-grade play performed for the school. Although he envisioned himself in a subsequent play, administrators canceled the program when he reached second grade. "I had to wait until fourth grade to do a play and then went away to summer camp and did a play there he recalls. "I did other plays in school and joined a teen theater group doing musicals in the sum- mer. I moved on to community theater. "I got a degree in education but couldn't find a teaching job so I decided to study acting. I went to graduate school at an acting conservatory at Ohio University (in Athens, Ohio) and got a master's degree" After moving to New York in 1975, Safier found parts Off-Broadway and thinks it comical that his first equity job was in a very different play titled Say Goodnight, Gracie, written by Ralph Pape. That early play had nothing substantial to do with Burns and Allen. It was about three guys getting ready to go to their 10th high-school reunion. "A lot of the play is about growing up in the 1950s, with references to The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show:' he says. "That's how the title was chosen" Safier, the only actor who has done both plays, has built a presence in television, including parts on Wizards of Waverly Place, Generations, Grey's Anatomy, Without a Trace and Days of Our Lives. Also a singer, he has recordings of his favorite standards available on iTunes, Amazon and his website, alansafier.com . Songs include "Here I'll Stay" "Angel Eyes" and "I'm in the Mood for Love:' Voiceovers also are an important part of his work. "Around Christmas, I do a musical ver- sion of A Christmas Carol," Safier says. "I play all 27 roles. I wrote the book with Sheldon Harnick (Fiddler on the Roof), who also wrote the lyrics. Michel Legrand wrote the music. "I'm working on Joseph's Gospel, the story of Joseph, Mary and Jesus told from Joseph's point of view. I think it's interest- ing because it has a Jewish perspective and gives a contemporary look at the story. "Being Jewish, I thought it was espe- cially interesting because it was written by a British Christian. We're looking to start touring this fall:' Safier, who is single, enjoys reading, going to theater and movies, and watching baseball games. "I've studied on and off with a New York teacher, Wynn Handman, who has been teaching for about 60 years" Safier says. "A biography of Wynn — Wynn Place Show — just came out, and that's what I'm reading. "The title comes from his name, the name of the theater he ran (American Place Theatre) and all the shows he did there. The picture on the cover is of Wynn and Richard Gere, who also was one of his students" As Safier prepared to portray Burns, he developed a friendship with Joan Benny, daughter of the late comedian Jack Benny, a friend of the comic couple. Burns' son had died, and Burns' daughter could not be located. "One time, when I was taking a curtain call for Say Goodnight Gracie, an older man in the first row reached out his hand to shake mine and said, 'Thank you for a wonderful evening, George:" Safier recalls. "To me, that was the ultimate compli- ment:" ❑ Say Goodnight Gracie will be performed at 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 16, at the Macomb Center for the Performing Arts, 44575 Garfield Road, in Clinton Township. $20- $48. (586) 286-2222; www. macombcenter.com . JN February 13 • 2014 39