8:30 – Midnight NYE 2016

New Years Eve with Frank’s at the Meyer Theater!  All the best skits and bits from: ‘The Detention Club’, Kewaunee County Pickers’, 491/2 Shades of Frank’, ‘Frank & Pat’s Pizza’, Rattle those Pots Pats & Pans’! $70 a couple party favors and champagne or $40 per person. The complete package $160 formal four course meal (limited seating) in backstage lounge and the whole Kitten KaboodleFor tickets call 920-494-3401 or www.ticketstaronline.com

Five more great performances of “A Frank’s Christmas” this week December 19th, 20st, 21st, 22nd and the 23rdat the Meyer Theatre.  Monday-Friday 8pm tickets available at the door or call Ticketstar at 920-494-3401 or ticketstaronline.com

All shows at the Meyer Theatre of “A Franks Christmas” will go on this weekend.  Shows are Friday and Saturday at 8 pm and Saturday at 1 pm matinee. If you have tickets and feel unsafe please call Ticketstar to exchange tickets for another night of this Christmas that goes on every night till Friday December 23rd. If you would like tickets go to ticketstaronline.com or call 920-494-3401. Be safe and be merry!!!

Andrew Kruse and Frank Hermans will be signing their new book “Simply Frank” before and after Let Me Be Franks “A Frank’s Christmas” this Saturday December 17th.  Read about the start of Let Me Be Franks from the Sports Corner to the SC Grand and then to the Meyer Theatre.  Andrew takes an in-depth look at the man, and the brand of Let Me Be Frank Productions.  Andrew and Frank will be signing the book from 6:30-7:30 pm and after the show.

http://www.wearegreenbay.com/critic-at-large-wearegreenbay/warren-gerdscritic-at-large-review-franks-christmas-truly-outside-the-box

Think outside the box.

It’s a familiar phrase that plays a role and a ROLE in Let Me Be Frank Productions’ “A Frank’s Christmas,” which opened a long run with a matinee performance Thursday at Meyer Theatre.

The phrase is used as a line in the show. In that role, the phrase is a clever play on words: Toys come in boxes. The toys in the show are human-like, with brains. The toys have a problem they need to solve. The best way to solve it is to think outside the box. Get it?

As a ROLE, the phrase applies big time because the show as a whole is a case of thinking outside the box – going the untraditional route to get something done. Some of the Christmas songs and carols that you hear your grandmother sing are in the show but in updated interpretations. Other songs are from pop stars’ Christmas albums. Christmas is in the air, all right, but in different ways.

Mostly, the show is a singing showcase with a with-it band. The highly developed, offbeat story sets up the singing. A song sampler:

– A highlight is “Silent Night” for female trio. The piece starts with the singers singing with music from the band and then turns to a cappella – and terrific – by way of Lisa Borley, Kasey Corrado and Amy Riemer. Great harmony, good chemistry.

– “Let It Go” features the voice of Amy Riemer – tight, strong, rounded vowels, smooth shifts – in the meaningful song from the Disney movie “Frozen.” It is better than the soundtrack original by Idina Menzel because it is live, with a live band, by a singer whose voice lives.

– “It’s Christmastime,” an original by troupe namesake Frank Hermans that fits right in with the “Christmas, updated” flow of the show. Hermans sings it in character as Stuperman, a take on Superman with a singing voice often that is of Elvis Presley.

***

Creative: Writers – Frank Hermans, Pat Hibbard; music director – Dennis Panneck; vocal director – Amy Riemer; sound – Kelly Klaus; lighting – Tracey Cook; costumes and props – Linda Groskopf and Bev Riemer

Cast: Lisa Borley, Kasey Corrado, Frank Hermans, Heath Hermans, Pat Hibbard, Michael O’Malley, Amy Riemer, Tom Verbrick

Band: Adam Cain – drums; Pat Hibbard – bass; Dennis Panneck – guitars; Tony Pilz – keyboards

Running time: Two hours, 10 minutes

Remaining performances: Meyer Theatre: 1 p.m. Dec. 2, 8, 15, 17; 8 p.m. Dec. 2, 6-10, 13-17, 23. Algoma Performing Arts Center: 7:30 p.m. Dec. 3

Info: letmebefranks.com

***

This show is high-concept. The premise is Santa Claus has such a thing as a rehabilitation center for toys that have been either neglected or discarded. The aim is to get them shaped up and into the hands of kids who’d love to have them. The toys have personality disorders. Leading their counseling are Stuperman (Frank Hermans) and Hugo, the man of 1,000 faces (Pat Hibbard). Therapy includes the toys doing role-playing – as Santa, a toy and a child. I told you this was high concept. In the great lengths that Let Me Be Frank Productions goes to set up songs, variations on famous (mostly) Disney animated cartoon characters are created, thus:

Lisa Borley is Rapunzel from “Tangled.”

Kasey Corrado is Belle from “Beauty and the Beast.”

Heath Hermans is Baby Herman from “Who Framed Roger Rabbit’”

Michael O’Malley is Ken of the many Barbie Doll movies.

Amy Riemer is Ariel from “The Little Mermaid.”

Tom Verbrick is Doody (Woody) from “The Toy Story.”

Now, just like the characters are, the costuming is just a bit off from the originals.

Song interpretations range. Kasey Corrado is straightforward sweet in The Carpenters’ “Merry Christmas Darling” by way of “Glee.” Lisa Borley embraces a slowed down “Glee” version of “We Need a Little Christmas,” which was festive in the movie “Mame.” Pat Hibbard pours on the rock drive for “Hark the Herald Angels Sing” that would have Beethoven and church choir masters rolling in their graves. All this is to repeat that the show is non-traditional

As part of high-concept things, prior to each character/singer taking his/her highlight solo, the performer gives a highlight of the history of his/her toy’s creation and arrival on the big screen. There’s a taste of toy history. Again, high-concept.

All of the show’s characters are kooky in a Let Me Be Franks Production way. Darkest and grossest by a long shot is Baby Herman, whose “my-diaper-needs-changing”/poo jokes are endless – and, at least for me, over the edge. Other little dicey things assure this is not a kiddie Christmas show.

The climax is a surprise. All the characterizations and colorful presentation of songs/singers does lead to somewhere. There will be no spoilers here, though.

Side trip: The matinee performance I saw was not listed on the original public schedule. The audience was primarily from bus tours – a private show kind of thing. When the theater opened up single-ticket sales, I bought mine as an opportunity to lighten my time load of Christmas shows ahead. The performance was fascinating. Most audience members were from outside the area and unfamiliar with Frank Hermans and Let Me Be Frank Productions. From my perspective, the audience did not know what to make of the show. Thus, it was basically unresponsive aside from the patter of polite applause. Showbiz being showbiz, onward the performers went like everything was normal. They stayed in character, delivered songs and jokes and did the show without much audience action or interaction – just like a rehearsal. So the show ends. Hermans doesn’t do his usual performer introductions, I think to be done with this experience. Surprise! – the last thing expected: The audience gets up and gives the show a standing ovation! It seems the folks liked what they saw, they just didn’t show it. For once, Hermans seemed nonplussed.

***

Musical selections

Act I

“Nut Rocker,” B. Bumble & The Stingers – Band

“Christmastime (Is Here Again),” The Beatles – Frank Hermans, Pat Hibbard

“Santa Bring My Baby Back to Me,” Elvis Presley – Frank Hermans

“This Christmas,” Tori Kelly – Amy Riemer

“2000 Decembers Ago,” Joy Williams – Lisa Borley

“Merry Christmas Darling,” from “Glee” – Kasey Corrado

“Mary’s Boy Child,” Roger Whittaker and the Black Gospels – Tom Verbrick

“One Child, One Day,” Reba McEntire – Amy Riemer

“Let It Snow,” Dean Martin – Michael O’Malley

“All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth,” LeAnn Rimes – Heath Hermans

“It’s Christmastime,” Frank Hermans original – Frank Hermans

Act II

“Run, Run Rudolph,” Kelly Clarkson – Lisa Borley

“Breath of Heaven,” Amy Grant – Kasey Corrado

“Silent Night,” Kelly Clarkson/Trisha Yearwood/Reba McEntire – Lisa Borley, Kasey Corrado, Amy Riemer

“Let It Go,” from Disney’s “Frozen” – Amy Riemer

“We Need a Little Christmas,” LeAnn Rimes – Lisa Borley

“Santa Claus is Coming to Town,” The Band Perry – Kasey Corrado

“Merry Christmas Baby,” Elvis Presley – Frank Hermans

“Hark the Herald Angels Sing,” The Fab Four – Pat Hibbard

“Do They Know It’s Christmas,” from “Glee” – All

Join us at the Algoma PAC (Algoma middle school) for an off-site performance of “A Frank’s Christmas” Saturday December 3rd 7:30pm.  For tickets call Algoma PAC at 920-487-7001.  This is an all new show and features the figures of Belle, Ariel, Rapunzel, Doody, Hugo the man of a 1,000 faces, Stuperman and Baby Herman.  Watch as they go to Santa’s re-hab to be rehabilitated into become new Christmas presents on Christmas Day.  Go to algomapc.com for tickets.

Coming to Equity Hall-Bar Saturday November 26th “Frank’s All Girls Tribute”. Cher, Reba, Ann Wilson of Heart, Barbra Streisand, and Patsy Cline. Get your tickets now by calling 715-789-2147. Instead of Strippers on Widow’s Weekend check out the Ladies of Frank!

Diamonds and Gold and Green Bay Rebuilders present ‘A Frank’s Christmas’

 

The seasonal favorite “A Frank’s Christmas” comes to the Meyer Theatre with an all-new story, runs Dec. 2 – 23.  December 3rd Algoma PAC.

 

Green Bay, Wis. (Oct. 19, 2016) – Have you ever wondered what happens to all the used toys in the world? No they don’t all go to the Island of Misfit Toys like in “Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer”; they actually go through Santa’s Toy Rehab and are given to the less fortunate children around the world.

Stuperman is a counselor at the Santa Center for Toy Rehab, he is trying to rehabilitate these toys into thinking some child out there really wants them. Some of the rehab center’s high profile toys are the Disney princesses Belle, Ariel and Rapunzel. Stuperman knows these three don’t need much counseling, it’s the three other toys that need some help. First there’s Baby Herman, nobody wants a chain-smoking baby with whiskers. Can Stuperman help this toy? Then there’s Hugo the man of a 1,000 faces, Hugo wasn’t the hottest toy even in 1976 when he was released. Just saved from a toy chest and not opened since 1977, Hugo needs to get with the times. Goodie the rip-off version of Pixar’s Woody is going to be a tough sell. Intensive therapy is needed at Santa’s Toy Rehab. At least Ken doll should be an easy transition.

Sit in and hear the warm-hearted, yet funny stories of each figurine that was once loved by a child and hopes only to be loved once again this Christmastime. There’s a show almost every day in December.

 

A Frank’s Christmas at the Meyer Theatre

Dec. 2 – 23 at 8 p.m.

Matinees Dec. 1, 2, 8, 15, and 17 at 1 p.m.

Tickets available by calling (920) 494-3401 or online at ticketstaronline.com.

 

Starring: Frank Hermans as Stuperman, Amy Riemer as Ariel, Kasey Corrado as Belle, Lisa Borley as Rapunzel, Michael O’Malley as Ken Doll, Heath Hermans as Baby Herman, Tom Verbrick as Goodie and Pat Hibbard as Hugo the man of a 1,000 faces. GI Joes: Dennis Panneck, guitars; Tony Pilz, keyboards; and Adam Cain, drums.

Songs:

“One Child, One Day”

Reba McEntire

 

“This Christmas”

Tori Kelly

 

“Let it go”

From Disney’s ‘Frozen’

 

“Let It Snow”

Dean Martin

 

“Mary’s Boy Child”

Roger Whittaker and the Black Gospels

 

“Christmastime (Is Here Again)”

The Beatles

 

“Hark the Herald Angels Sing”

The Fab Four

 

“Nut Rocker”

  1. Bumble & The Stingers

 

“All I Want for Xmas Is My Two Front Teeth”

LeAnn Rimes

 

“We Need A Little Christmas”

LeAnn Rimes

 

“Run, Run Rudolph”

Kelly Clarkson

 

“2000 Decembers Ago”

Joy Williams

 

“Santa Bring My Baby Back to Me”

Elvis

 

“Merry Christmas Baby”

Elvis

 

“It’s Christmastime”

A Frank Hermans Original

 

“Silent Night”

Kelly Clarkson/Trisha Yearwood/Reba McEntire

 

“Merry Christmas Darling”

from “Glee”

 

“Santa Claus is coming to Town”

The Band Perry

 

“Breath of Heaven”

Amy Grant

 

“Do They Know It’s Christmas”

from “Glee”

 

LMBF’s comedy, musical, mystery show is coming to the Engler Center for the Performing Arts Saturday October 22!  Al Capone and his sweetheart, The Lady in Red, are vacationing in Chilton and staying at the Central House Hotel.  Well bad guys Baby Face Nelson and John Dillinger just happen to be there too.  Mayhem happens and well, Al is shot dead.  Who did it?  Elliot Ness is sent to solve the crime, could it have been one of the gangsters or one of you in the audience?  A who done it musical!  You have to see it to believe it!  For tickets call the Engler Center for the Performing Arts at 920-849-2880 or at englercenter.com

If you don’t get a chance to see Rattle those Pots & Pans, Mirro Style at the Meyer Theatre you can catch an encore performance at the Capital Civic Center in Manitowoc.  Wednesday October 19th 7:30 showtime.  For tickets call 920-683-2184 or go to ccshows.org or https://itkt.choicecrm.net/templates/CAPC/