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Diamonds in the D
Something old, something new at EMU
Comedian George Carlin pointed out years ago that baseball's
goofy, childlike soul (Caps! Parks!) contrasts starkly with
football's martial combat (Helmets! Stadiums!). And perhaps
the game's playful quality is what captures the imagination of
stage performers. While football frequently turns up as the subject
of film and TV treatments, from Knute Rockne All American to Friday
Night Lights, baseball is what seems to fire the theatrical synapses.
Last year the Purple Rose presented Honus and Me, and while this
baseball season winds down, you can get your baseball-theater fix
at Eastern Michigan University as the theater department reprises
its revue Diamonds in the D, which premiered in June.
Inspired by Diamonds, a 1980s New York baseball revue, Diamonds
in the D was written by Jeff Duncan (an English professor at EMU)
and R. MacKenzie Lewis (a former EMU student who just last year
turned faculty) as an homage to Tiger baseball. It's part
vaudeville, part game show, and part history lesson, something old,
something new, something borrowed (but nothing blue it's
squarely in family-entertainment territory). Abbott and Costello's
beloved "Who's on First" and Wayne and Shuster's
"Shakespearean Baseball Game" are such rollicking and
perfectly timed genius, you kind of wonder who let the air out of
everyone's tires on some of the other bits like "Pickup
Game" and "Bleacher Bums." The priceless archival
pictures of Tiger Stadium (formerly called Briggs Stadium) projected
on the set show you why baseball is almost (almost?) a religion in
some quarters. The three-piece band led by the multitalented Lewis
is stellar.
Huge talking-head reminiscences on Tiger baseball by governor
Jennifer Granholm and actor Dann Florek of Law & Order;
he's an EMU theater alum periodically project from on
high. Their reminiscences are perhaps no more poignant than those
of any Joe Sixpack off the street (though if you've ever watched
Law and Order, you won't be surprised to see Florek wringing
every last drop of bathos out of his). At any rate, you can't
help being impressed that they wanted to be a part of this
production.
Diamonds in the D returns for three nights, Thursday through
Saturday, September 6-8, at EMU's Sponberg Theatre. Bone up
on your Tiger history, because if you're brave enough to sign
up as an audience volunteer, you can win some great prizes.
Sally Mitani
[Review published September 2007]
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