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Award-winning actor/director/playwright Frank
Ferrante recreates his PBS, New York and London acclaimed portrayal of legendary
comedian Groucho Marx in this fast paced 90 minutes of hilarity. The two-act
comedy consists of the best Groucho one-liners, anecdotes and songs including
"Hooray For Captain Spalding," and "Lydia, the Tattooed Lady." The audience
literally becomes part of the show as Ferrante ad-libs his way throughout the
performance in grand Groucho style. Accompanied by his onstage pianist, Jim
Furmston, Ferrante portrays the young Groucho of stage and film and reacquaints
us with the likes of brothers Harpo, Chico, Zeppo and Gummo, Charlie Chaplin,
W.C. Fields, Greta Garbo, Marx foil, Margaret Dumont and MGM's Louis B. Mayer. A
show perfect for all ages!
Groucho Marx
The New York Times summed up the comedy genius as
“America’s most gifted funny man.” Born Julius Henry Marx on October 2, 1890,
Groucho was the third of five sons born to poor immigrant parents Sam and Minnie
Marx. Chico and Harpo preceded him. Gummo and Zeppo followed. Straight from
the streets of New York’s upper East side, Groucho was thrust onstage at age 15
as one third of the singing Leroy Trio. Eventually, brothers Harpo, Chico,
Gummo and Zeppo joined the act that began as the singing Four Nightingales and
evolved into the world’s funniest vaudeville act known as the Marx Brothers.
After twenty years of touring their act all over the country, the Marx Brothers
finally hit pay dirt with a musical comedy called I’ll Say She Is.
Audiences and critics went ballistic over the brothers’ irreverent humor, the
expert pantomime, the wisecracks, the physical shtick, and the outrageous
musical talent. Said one local Philadelphia critic about the show, “It was as
if a tornado hit town. We’ve never seen anything like the Marx Brothers.”
I’ll Say She Is moved to Broadway in 1924 and was an instant sensation
legitimizing the Marx Brothers as world-class talents. Two more Broadway hits
followed- The Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers introducing audiences
to Groucho’ s most renowned incarnation- Captain Spalding, the African Explorer.
In 1930, Groucho and his brothers moved to Hollywood and changed the face of
film comedy forever. There they made Monkey Business, Horse Feathers, Duck
Soup, A Night at the Opera, A Day at the Races, Room Service, At the Circus, Go
West, The Big Store, A Night in Casablanca and Love Happy between
1931 and 1949. The Four Marx Brothers appeared on the cover of Time Magazine in
1932. As a solo, Groucho landed a career on radio and television with his Emmy
Award winning work as the host of the comedy quiz show You Bet Your Life.
The show flourished for fourteen highly rated seasons from 1947 to 1961 on
ABC radio then NBC television. Groucho was a major fixture in 1950’s television
with his “secret woid” and a duck that dropped from the sky to pay wacky
contestants “an extra hundred dollars.” In the late 1960’s a renewed interest
in the anarchic hijinks of the Marx Brothers swept across the nation-
particularly among college age students. Fortunately, Groucho Marx survived
long enough to experience his renaissance. He made TV appearances, performed at
Carnegie Hall at age 82 and received a special Academy Award in 1974 for “the
brilliant and unequalled achievements of the Marx Brothers.” On August 19, 1977
Groucho Marx died at age 86. His final request? “Bury me next to Marilyn
Monroe.”
Frank Ferrante
(Groucho) is an actor, director, and producer described by The New York Times as
“the greatest living interpreter of Groucho Marx’s material.” Animal
Crackers and A Night at the Opera co-author Morrie Ryskind called him
“the only actor aside from Groucho who delivered my lines as they were
intended.” Discovered by Groucho’s son Arthur when Frank was a drama student at
the University of Southern California, Frank originated the off-Broadway title
role in Groucho: A Life in Revue (written by Arthur) portraying the
comedian from age 15 to 85. For this role, Frank won 1987’s New York’s Theatre
World Award and was nominated for an Outer Critics Circle Award. He reprised
the role in London’s West End and was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award
for ‘Comedy Performance of the Year.’ Frank played the Groucho role in the
off-Broadway revival of The Cocoanuts and has played Captain Spalding in
the several productions of Animal Crackers winning a Connecticut Critics
Circle Award for his portrayal at Goodspeed Opera House and a Helen Hayes
nomination in Washington D.C. at Arena Stage. In Boston in 1988, he played the
Huntington Theatre in the record-breaking run of Animal Crackers that
landed Frank on the cover of American Theatre magazine. His other regional
roles include Max Prince in Neil Simon’s Laughter on the 23rd
Floor at Philadelphia’s Walnut Street Theatre (which Frank also directed);
George S. Kaufman in By George (a one-man play written by Frank); Tom in
the farce Perfect Wedding; Oscar in The Odd Couple and leads in
The Sunshine Boys, Lady in the Dark, and Anything Goes. Frank
directed M*A*S*H star Jamie Farr in the Kaufman & Hart comedy George
Washington Slept Here and revivals of Simon’s The Sunshine Boys, Brighton
Beach Memoirs, Biloxi Blues, Broadway Bound and Lost in Yonkers. In
1995, he directed and developed the world premiere of the Pulitzer finalist
Old Wicked Songs. In 2001, Frank starred in, directed and produced the
national PBS television program Groucho: A Life in Revue. Frank
currently stars as the comic lead in the European cirque Teatro Zinzanni
in San Francisco and Seattle. In 2007 he became a question on the classic TV
program Jeopardy. “He took his portrayal of Groucho Marx to New York in
1986.” The answer: “Who is Frank Ferrante?”
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