A
Monty Fall
The prolific and daring playwright Terrance
McNally is up to his old tricks. Having stirred controversy before with male nudity in
"Love, Valour, and Compassion," and depicting Christ as homosexual in last
years "Corpus Christi," McNally is certainly not a one-note, sexual
provocateur. His homage to the great opera diva Maria Callas was a Tony Award-winning
triumph.
On his latest project, though, McNally
apparently dabbles again with sexual content certain to challenge social and artistic
taboos. McNally has penned a stage adaptation to the hit movie "The Full Monty."
The raucous musical is receiving word of mouth praise among critics, nightly full houses,
and standing ovations not unlike the films rollicking, bare- all finale.
This production of "The Full
Monty" is being developed at The La Jolla Playhouse near San Diego, the same place
that nurtured "The Whos Tommy" before it came to Broadway.
Unless any unforeseen complications arise,
McNallys "The Full Monty" will reveal itself to New York audiences in the
fall.
Significant Other?
Maybe its the heat, or lack of
excitement in the Magnolia State. According to Governing magazine, Mississippi
State Senator Hillman Frazier acknowledged his inability to recall the lyrics to
the state song: "Most Mississippians dont know the state song, state insect,
state bee, state mammal or state beverage. We have a long list of things that are
insignificant."
For the record, New Yorks significant
features are: Motto: Excelsior (Ever upward); Flower: Rose; Bird: Bluebird; Tree: Sugar
maple; Song: I Love New York.
New York City does not have an official
list of significant items. However, an unofficial 2000 version might include: Motto:
Fuggedaboutit. No way is there a motto. Song: New York, New York (Sinatra version); City
animal: rodent (rat or squirrel); Bird: Pigeon, sparrow, or West Nile Virus carrier;
Sports: Baseball and politics; Insect: roach.
Email us your list.
Chelsea Chat
A friend of Chelsea Clinton told the
Washington Post shes tired of hearing the first daughter continually referred
to in the media as a pre-med student. "Shes no longer pre-med," says the
source. "Shes dropped that and takes mostly history and poli sci courses now. I
think shes either pre-law or going into politics maybe both but
Ive never asked her." The White House had no comment.
Vagina Monologues
Dialogue over the controversial
Off-Broadway play "The Vagina Monologues" continues to generate heat. The latest
scene involves the dubious circumstances that proceeded the hiring of a new member of the
cast.
The on-again, off-again casting of Mayor Giulianis
wife Donna Hanover is on again, amid the recent lull in media coverage of their
doomed marriage.
Hanover announced last week that she is
going to appear in the play after all, in October. Meanwhile, a new threesome of
actresses take to the West Side Theater stage this week, most notably Gloria
Rueben of "ER" fame.
A year ago, Rueben left the hit NBC series
to fulfill a dream come true. Rueben got the chance to sing back up to Tina Turner
on Turners latest and possibly final North American tour.
NYConfidential has learned that the
TV star "didnt adjust well to the rigors of overnight bus rides, and her
singing was getting progressively worse as the tour rolled on."
As the tour recently reached its last leg,
Turner fired the neophyte Rueben and replaced her with Lisa Fisher, who had
previously toured with Michael Jackson. Rueben reportedly was in shock, went into
denial, badmouthed Turner, and plotted her own starring solo turn with her music industry
beau.
When Turner, the great Rock 'n Roll diva
comes to town in a couple of weeks, Rueben will be taking the stage and performing at
another venue in town. Rueben has decided to dip her toes back into the acting pool and
has signed on to appear as one of the "Vagina Monologue-ists."
Cooper Dis-Union
NYConfidential has learned that the
tenure of Cooper Union President George Campbell is in jeopardy over a parking lot
and a hotel.
Its the sort of dubious fate that
takes Joni Mitchells prophetic lyrics about "paving paradise, put up a
parking lot" one step further.
Campbell helped strike a deal with Ian
Schrager Hotels to build a hotel on the sight where a parking lot exists. The location
is at the center of Astor Place between the Bowery and Lafayette St. Schrager retained the
services of the firm of Herzog de Meuron, and cutting-edge architect Rem Koolhaus,
to develop the sight.
We were told Campbell believed that the
revenue earmarked for Cooper Union would go towards ensuring full scholarships for the
students enrolled there. The Board of Trustees favored the financial transaction and its
incentives, but had misgivings about Campbell going along with an outside designer
developing the site. The old guard preferred that the design stay "in house" as
a testament to the excellence of their institution, and giving Schrager the say on the
architect spelled doom for the plan.
Ever since, the Cooper Union Board of Trustees has been
biding time before dismissing Campbell. Koolhauss design is to be submitted to the
Board shortly. Not etched in stone: whether Campbell will still be sitting president when
the project finally breaks ground.
Media Rats
If it is true that you are what you eat,
maybe people are right when they call reporters rats it seems that some newsroom
cafeterias around town are failing Health Dept. inspections.
The agency has been posting its inspection
of the citys restaurants on its web site. While you wont read about it
elsewhere, we at NYConfidential dont have an in-house eatery, and nothing to
fear in one regard, at least.
The fashionistas at Conde Nast, who now eat
at the best publicized cafeteria in town their top-floor lunchroom is known among
media types as the place to be was cited for serving food that was prepared with
bare hands. The cafeteria for the New York Times had vermin, and canned food that
"looked swollen, rusted or leaky." Viacom, which just bought CBS, ought to
instead invest in some detergent, perhaps they also had vermin.
Maybe the people on "Survivor"
are not the only CBS folks eating rats these days, eh?
See: http://www.nyclink.org/html/doh/html/rii/index.html.
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