Bye Bye Birdie revisits rock’s early times
Long before there was streaming and hundreds of cable channels, three networks ruled, and families gathered around the television like a hearth every Sunday night to watch the Ed Sullivan show. This is the world of Bye Bye Birdie, the latest performance from Community Players of Concord.
Opening Nov. 22 at Concord City Auditorium, the 1960 musical was inspired by Elvis Presley’s induction into the army, which sidelined him at the height of his career. It begins as Conrad Birdie (Travis Laughlin), his name a play on Presley’s rock rival Conway Twitty, goes to a small Midwestern town to kiss a fan on national television before shipping overseas.
This publicity stunt is the culmination of (ostensibly) a contest hatched by Rose Alvarez (Annie Lelios), the secretary and fiancée of Albert Peterson (Nathan Smith), who writes Birdie’s songs and needs a way to milk his cash cow a bit more. Rosie helps him pen a send-off tune called “One Last Kiss,” and the two decamp for Sweet Apple, Ohio, their star in tow.
Awaiting them are screaming teenagers, including Kim MacAfee (Holly Keenan), whose announcement of her resignation as President of the Conrad Birdie fan club was paused when Rose picked her name from a file drawer, and named her winner of the singer’s final smooch.
Kim’s leaving her post because at age of 16 she believes she’s matured past swooning for pop stars. This is one of many anachronistic touches in the show, like shared household phone lines — yes, kids, back then it was one to a family, attached to the wall and equipped with a dial.
It was also a time when having a steady was serious business, but Kim’s reassurances on that topic aren’t enough to placate her boyfriend Hugo (William Fogg). With help from a now-jealous Rose, set off by a showbiz climber (Emma Daley) making a play for Albert, he plots to sabotage the kiss.
Add to that brew Albert’s conniving mother (Valerie Kehr), who is intent on breaking her son’s engagement, and things heat up quickly.
Bye Bye Birdie is often performed by high schools and local theaters, but it’s Community Players of Concord’s first time doing it.
“It’s a good family show,” director Judy Hayward said by phone. “I found out after we decided that some of the people in Concord had wanted to do it for several years. I guess maybe the timing wasn’t right, and now it is.”
The musical is full of numbers brimming with joy and innocence, like “Put On a Happy Face,” sung by Albert to a high schooler, part of a Conrad send-off group in New York City who despairs that by the time her idol returns from his two-year military hitch, she’ll be too old for him.
Other standouts are “How Lovely to Be a Woman,” “A Lot of Lovin’ to Do” and “English Teacher,” the latter a reflection of Rose’s wish that Albert was in a different, more intellectual career than pop music. “Kids” is a charming complaint about wayward youth in the 1950s, while “Normal American Boy” is a slice of prehistoric public relations work.
Problems such as boys with too much Brylcreem in their hair and girls with shorn braces ready to conquer the world (and call mom and dad by their first names), all mad with rock ’n’ roll, are a welcome distraction at a moment when half of the country is loath to turn on the news.
Hayward is pleased with the progress of rehearsals, with both leads settling into their roles, and Laughlin finding his inner Presley. “They’re great, and they’re always prepared,” she said. “Annie was off book early on, which is always a plus, and Nathan’s doing a great job, and Travis is swiveling his hips just like Elvis.”
What’s her favorite part of this production? “Seeing it come together,” she said. “In the arts … there’s always something to improve. It’s not like making a costume — sewing something and having a finished product. Seeing this progression of things getting better and better, that’s what I like.”
Bye Bye Birdie
When: Friday, Nov. 22, and Saturday, Nov. 23, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 24, at 2 p.m.
Where: Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord
Tickets: $20 ($18 age 65 and up, 17 and under) at communityplayersofconcord.org
Featured image: Travis Laughlin as Conrad Birdie. Courtesy photo.