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Archive for the ‘Theatre’ Category

Bruce Vilanch Joins The Bev Leslies For Performance In Queens Theatre in the Park, May 7

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010
A Grand, Gay Marshall
Image by zizzybaloobah via Flickr

Playbill
Christine Ebersole, Adam Pascal, Bruce Vilanch Will Perform at Queens Theatre in the Park
By Adam Hetrick
25 Aug 2010

Tony Award winner Christine Ebersole, Billy Stritch, Adam Pascal and Bruce Vilanch have been announced to appear during the 2010-2011 season at the Queens Theatre in the Park.

Comedian Jackie Mason will perform his new solo evening of comedy Oct. 23 at 8 PM and Oct. 24 at 3 PM; Tony nominee Tsidii (The Lion King) will offer her tribute concert to Odetta, Nina Simone and Miriam Makeba, To the Rising Sun, Oct. 24 at 3 PM and Nov. 13 at 2 PM; and Robert Royston’s dance musical One Ride will be presented Oct. 29-Nov. 7.
Rent star Adam Pascal and Larry Edoff will present meandlarry, a concert of original songs and music from Pascal’s stage career, Nov. 13 at 8 PM.

The 1960′s-themed musical The Bikinis, featuring “It’s In His Kiss” and “Under the Boardwalk,” will run Dec. 2-12. Ray Roderick will direct the musical he co-wrote with James Hindman. The Ma Yi Theatre Company will present I_NY, which explores the lives of immigrant New Yorkers, Dec. 18 at 8 PM.

The new musical Slow Dance with a Hot Pickup, with a book by Tony nominee John Pielmeier (Agnes of God) and a score by Emmy winner Matty Selman, will run March 18-27, 2011, under the direction of Nancy Robillard.

Tony winner Christine Ebersole and Billy Stritch will perform highlights from their concert careers and their album “Sunday in New York” April 16, 2011, at 8 PM; Neil Berg will bring offer Broadway Showstoppers April 22-May 1, 2011.

Award-winning writer and Hairspray star Bruce Vilanch will join the Bev Leslies for an evening of comedy May 7, 2011, at 8 PM, and TheatreworksUSA will perform the Lynn Ahrens-Stephen Flaherty musical Seussical May 28, 2011, at 11 AM and 1 PM.

For tickets phone (718) 760-0064 or visit QueensTheatre. The Queens Theatre in the Park is located in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Flushing, NY.

“Platinum” Opens Tonight!

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Well the reason this  fabulous show is here at Glamwire Television is that famous Emmy winning Tv Writer Bruce Villanch wrote the book for this along with Tony award Nominee Will Holt With music By Tony Nominee Gary William Friedman, who composed the theme music for television’s legendary show “The Electric Company” and lyrics by Mr. Holt, this new version features revisions and direction by Ben West (How Now, Dow Jones).

An electrifying story of ambition and survival, Platinum follows Lila Halliday (Larsen), a dazzling Hollywood legend trying to make a comeback in the explosive music industry of the 1970s. Determined to reignite her career, she turns to rock star Dan Riley and finds herself falling for him as they both fight to stay in the game.

This new one-act version of Platinum will be performed by a cast of five and feature two new songs (”This One’s for Me”, “Moments”), with four other musical numbers and eight characters having been eliminated. The productionis choreographed by Rommy Sandhu (How Now, Dow Jones, Mary Poppins) with musical arrangements by Mr. Friedman (”The Electric Company”) and musical direction by Fran Minarik (Sessions, The J.A.P. Show).

Said director Ben West: “Platinum is an extraordinary project on which I began working four years ago. In addition to focusing the story, we have redefined the musical language of the show by eliminating four songs and adding two new numbers, one which was cut prior to and another which was written after the original run. The time has also shifted to 1976, the year in which the Recording Industry began issuing platinum certifications. With its unique concept and its exhilarating original material, I am thrilled to be further developing this project as part of the New York International Fringe Festival and look forward to returning Platinum to the stage.”

Theatre, dates and additional casting for this FringeNYC developmental production will be announced shortly. Tickets are available starting July 23 by visiting www.FringeNYC.org or calling 866-468-7619. For more information, visit: www.PlatinumTheMusical.com. FringeNYC 2010 runs August 13 – 29.

The original Broadway production of Platinum opened at the Mark Hellinger Theatre on November 12, 1978 starring Alexis Smith under the direction of Joe Layton. The production played 33 performances and received two Tony Awardnominations for Smith and co-star Richard Cox. It has not been seen since. An earlier version titled Sunset was directed and choreographed by Tommy Tune at the Studio Arena Theatre in 1977. The authors, Holt and Friedman, revisited their original Sunset in 1983 at the Village Gate. The cabaret production starred Tammy Grimes.

LIZ LARSEN Broadway: Hairspray, The Rocky Horror Show, The Smell of the Kill, The Most Happy Fella (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle noms; LA Drama Logue Award), Damn Yankees, A Little Night Music, Starmites, Fiddler on the Roof, Blues in the Night, Annie. Other NY: Such Good Friends (NYMF – Outstanding Performance Award), A New Brain, Bingo, Him and Her (FringeNYC Excellence Award), Newyorkers, Loman Family Picnic, Personals, Little By Little. Regional: Sunday in the Park with George (Helen Hayes Award), Baby (Helen Hayes nomination), Falsettos, Guys and Dolls, The Value of Names. TV: “My Guys” (series regular), “Law & Order“, “Law & Order: SVU“, “Third Watch”.

SARAH LITZSINGER is Broadway’s longest running Belle in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast. Other Broadway credits include Marilyn: An American Fable, Oliver!, Les Miserables and Amour. Sarah also played Eva Peron in the 25th anniversary tour of Evita and starred as the Narrator opposite Donny Osmond in Joseph…. Some of her other favorite roles are: Cathy in The Last 5 Years, Susan in Tick, Tick…Boom! and Cordelia in Falsettos (George Street Playhouse). Sarah is also the recipient of the 2007 Breakout Award at the HBO Aspen comedy Festival (for her comedy act she wrote and starred in with partner, Kate Reinders). She also performed this act at the TBS Comedy Festival at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas in 2008.

WILL HOLT Broadway: Come Summer (Agnes de Mille, Ray Bolger), The Me Nobody Knows (Gary William Friedman; Tony nomination, Drama Desk and Obie Awards), Over Here! (The Andrews Sisters; Tony nomination, Best Musical), Me and Bessie (Linda Hopkins), Music Is (George Abbott), Platinum (Alexis Smith). Off-Broadway: Taking My Turn (Outer Critics’ Circle Award; PBS Great Performances Series), Signs Along the Cynic Route, That Five A.M. Jazz, A Kurt Weill Cabaret. Other work: A Walk on the Wild Side (L.A. Dramalogue Award), Jack (Goodspeed Theater). Mr. Holt is a member of ASCAP and the Dramatists Guild.

BRUCE VILANCH has written for the Oscars, the Emmys, the Tonys and the Grammys, winning six Emmy Awards in the process. He has starred on Broadway in Hairspray and has graced the cover of his book, Bruce! My Adventures in the Skin Trade and Other Essays, and his documentary, Get Bruce! He is also appeared on “Hollywood Squares” for four seasons and in his one-man show as well as “It Nearly Wasn’t Christmas”, “The Morning After”, “Bosom Buddies”, “The Ice Pirates” and “Call Me Claus”. He devotes endless hours working with such charitable organizations as the Anti-Defamation League, National Foundation for Jewish Culture and numerous AIDS organizations.

Tonight – “Platinum” Returns To The Stage

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Playbill
Broadway Musical
Platinum Polished at FringeNYC Beginning Aug. 17
By Adam Hetrick
August 17, 2010

A revised incarnation of the 1978 pop musical Platinum, starring Donna Bullock and Sarah Litzsinger, begins performances Aug. 17 as part of the New York International Fringe Festival.

Ben West, who directed and adapted the streamlined production of How Now, Dow Jones for the Fringe last summer, has also revised Platinum, which he also directs. Performances will take place Aug. 18, 19, 20 and 21 at the Lucille Lortel Theatre.

Platinum has a book by Will Holt and Bruce Vilanch, with music by Gary William Friedman and lyrics by Holt. Rommy Sandhu choreographs with musical direction by Fran Minarik.

Jeff Award winner Bullock (Take Me Along) stars as Lila Hallidy opposite Litzsinger (Beauty and the Beast, Amour) as Crystal Mason. The cast also features Bruce Sabath (Company), Wayne Wilcox (Coram Boy) and Jay Wilkison (Rent).

The one-act Fringe production features two new songs, “This One’s for Me” and “Moments.” A cast of five (down from the original 13) performs the latest version that has excised four songs and eliminated eight characters.

According to producers: “An electrifying story of ambition and survival, Platinum follows Lila Halliday (Bullock), a dazzling Hollywood legend trying to make a comeback in the explosive music industry of the 1970s. Determined to reignite her career, she turns to rock star Dan Riley (Wilkison) and finds herself falling for him as they both fight to stay in the game.”

Platinum ran only 33 performances on Broadway at the Mark Hellinger Theatre in 1978. The musical garnered Tony Award nominations for Smith and her co-star Richard Cox. The musical was revived Off-Broadway in 1983, reverting back to its original title Sunset, and ran for 14 performances.

Holt and Friedman are also the writers of the Tony Award-nominated musical The Me Nobody Knows.

Visit FringeNYC.

A ‘Platinum’ Polish

Monday, August 16th, 2010
Bruce Vilanch, Writer
Image by Sharon Graphics via Flickr

Theatermania
Ben West Is Polishing Platinum
by Peter Filichia’s Diary
August 16, 2010

Ever hear of Platinum? It was a 1978 musical with book by Will Holt and Bruce Vilanch, lyrics by Holt and music by Gary William Friedman. New Yorkers had 45 chances to see it, thanks to 12 previews and 33 official performances.

With a run such as that, you might be surprised to hear that it even got two Tony nominations. One went to Alexis Smith, in her first musical since you-know-what, for playing Lila Halliday, a faded Hollywood star who was trying a pop music comeback. The other was bestowed on Richard Cox as Dan Danger, a rocker who might become her boy toy. Both lost.

Even if you have heard of Platinum, you probably haven’t heard the score, because it yielded no official original cast album. Still, it was a show that caught the interest of Ben West. Once he learned of it, he wanted to read it, hear it and savor it. Once he did all of the above, he wanted to rework it. The fruits of his labor will be seen in FringeNYC for five performances this Tuesday through Saturday at the Lortel.

Last year, West adapted another underappreciated Broadway musical, but one that ran seven times as long and did get recorded: How Now, Dow Jones, the 1967 tuner about a false stock market report. Still, you wouldn’t expect that show to interest a guy who wasn’t even born when Platinum debuted. West is a mere 27, but his heart is in musicals of yore.

He knows he’s atypical for his generation. “Some years ago when I was an actor and auditioning,” he says, “it’d drive me crazy when I mentioned Comden and Green to the other auditioners and so many wouldn’t have a clue who I meant. Many people of my generation don’t understand that Spring Awakening happened because somebody else laid the groundwork for it 50 or 60 years ago.”

West was born out west in Minneapolis, then spent some time in Chicago where in kindergarten he staged his own puppet show. “The Weisslers were considering moving it,” he jokes.

After he moved to Miami, he of course did school plays; favorite roles include The Emcee in Cabaret and Mrs. Drudge in The Real Inspector Hound. He studied at NYU’s CAP 21 for a couple of years, and later appeared in Paper Mill’s Of Thee I Sing. Later he became assistant director to Gordon Greenberg for Breaking up Is Hard to Do, a Neil Sedaka jukebox musical.

All the while, however, West was reading every book he could on musicals, with Steven Suskin’s and Ken Bloom’s ranking among his favorites. They led him to Cy Coleman, whose music greatly delighted him. Once he decided to track down every Coleman score, that led him to Wildcat and Little Me. Through them, he became even more entranced with Coleman’s lyricist on those projects, one Carolyn Leigh.

“She’s the best!” West exclaims, with the exuberance of youth. “I made a vow to track down everything she wrote, too, and that led me to How Now, Dow Jones. I loved her lyrics and Elmer Bernstein’s music, too.”

West doesn’t add that he loves Max Shulman’s book for the show. He obviously didn’t, for he soon started making changes. “I got in touch with Samuel French,” he says, “just to see if they could point me in the direction to get the rights so I could really do something with it. They didn’t answer for months, but somehow I never ever thought it wasn’t going to happen. Eventually they contacted me and told me how to reach June Silver, Carolyn Leigh’s surviving sister; Eve Bernstein, Elmer’s widow; and Max Shulman’s agent. They all gave me the go-ahead to do an adaptation.”

West eliminated some songs, added others that had been dropped from the original 1967 production, wisely moved “Step to the Rear” to the rear of the show as an eleven o’clock number – and staged the show as a taut 90-minute presentation. The result was one of the major hits of last year’s FringeNYC — “although,” West concedes, “nobody from any of the estates decided to attend.” Nevertheless, the response was so successful that West says that we just might just see How Now again. “Oh, not at the Shubert,” he admits. “but the Little Shubert isn’t out of the question. That’s what I want for these shows. Maybe a summer run in an off-Broadway house.”

That goes for Platinum, too, which has a less-than-platinum history. It started out as Sunset at the fondly missed Studio Arena Theatre in Buffalo in 1977, and then morphed into Platinum at the more fondly missed Hellinger. In 1983, it was revamped and revised without Vilanch and returned to its original name. But Sunset rose and set on Nov. 7 at the Village Gate.

Still, it got a cast album, a copy of which West saw one day in the also fondly missed Tower Records. “After doing extensive research,” he says, “I’ve been able to combine the first Sunset with Platinum and have come up with something that I believe works.”

What he’s also done is pare down the 13 characters Platinum had to a mere five. Lila and Dan (now surnamed Reilly) are joined by Jeff Leff, the recording studio head with whom Lila has shared a professional relationship and perhaps a romantic past. Also on hand are Crystal Mason who used to be Dan’s back-up singer, but who has now broken out on her own – as Dan is becoming broken-down – and Jamie, who runs the recording sessions but wants so much more from life.

West’s other future projects include Seesaw — “although no one from any of the estates knows I’m working on it,” he says. “It’s just what I do in my spare time” — and Barefoot Boy with Cheek, the 1947 musical that Max Shulman adapted from his own hilarious novel about fraternity life. “It got great reviews in Boston,” reports West, “and while the New York reviews were favorable, they suggested that everybody had seen this life-in-college musical before. Well, I say we now haven’t seen one for a while, so the time is right for it again.”

If West really has his way, we’ll eventually see an unproduced Leigh show, too. “I have June Silver’s permission to do The Great Gatsby and an okay from the Hugh Wheeler estate, too. What I don’t have is clearance from the F. Scott Fitzgerald estate — but I’m working on that.”

Don’t be against him. He’s a young man with his feet firmly planted on the stage. When I asked him what he’d go back and see if there were a time machine, he gave me an answer I’ve never heard from the hundreds of people I’ve asked that question. “I wouldn’t want to see any of these shows as they were originally done,” he says, “because then I’d know for sure that I couldn’t begin to top what was originally put on stage.”

Then he pauses. “Though I guess I would like to see the original Follies.” Pause. “And any Ziegfeld production,” he adds with a little more excitement in his voice. Pause. “Oh, and Little Me – and …”

You may e-mail Peter at pfilichia@aol.com. Check out his weekly column each Tuesday at www.masterworksbroadway.com.

Reminder: “Platinum” Debuts Aug 17 At The New York International Fringe Festival

Monday, August 16th, 2010

http://www.PlatinumTheMusical.com
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
UnsungMusicalsCo. Inc. presents
a developmental production as part of the 2010
New York International Fringe Festival.

An electrifying story of ambition and survival, Platinum stars Donna Bullock (Ragtime, City of Angels, A Class Act) as Lila Halliday, a dazzling Hollywood legend trying to make a comeback in the explosive music industry of the 1970s. Determined to reignite her career, she turns to rock star Dan Riley and finds herself falling for him as they both fight to stay in the game.

Written by Emmy Award winner Bruce Vilanch (Hairspray, “Hollywood Squares”) and Tony Award nominees Will Holt and Gary William Friedman (The Me Nobody Knows), this new version features revisions and direction by Ben West (How Now, Dow Jones). The musical is choreographed by Rommy Sandhu (How Now, Dow Jones, Mary Poppins) with musical arrangements by Mr. Friedman (“The Electric Company”), musical direction by Fran Minarik (Sessions, The J.A.P. Show), costume design by Janine Marie McCabe (Waiting for the Moon) and lighting design by Joe Hodge (Perfect Crime).

The original Broadway production opened November 12, 1978 at the Mark Hellinger Theatre starring Alexis Smith under the direction of Joe Layton. The musical played 33 performances and received two Tony nominations for Smith and co-star Richard Cox.

NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL FRINGE FESTIVAL
August 17 – 21, 2010

TO BUY TICKETS: CLICK HERE

ONLINE: www.FringeNYC.org
PHONE: (866) 468-7619

Tickets: $15 (advance) / $18 (door)

LUCILLE LORTEL THEATRE
121 Christopher Street
(btw. Bleecker & Hudson)

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:
Tuesday, August 17 @ 5 PM
Wednesday, August 18 @ 7:15 PM
Thursday, August 19 @ 11:30 PM
Friday, August 20 @ 2 PM
Saturday, August 21 @ 9:15 PM

Join Platinum on FaceBook: Click Here

I Got ‘Fringe’ In Low Places

Thursday, August 12th, 2010
Image of Bruce Vilanch from Facebook
Image of Bruce Vilanch


New York Post
Fringe in low places
By BARBARA HOFFMAN
August 12, 2010


How does a drama about the massacre in Mumbai and “Hip Hop High: The Musical” sell out without ad campaigns or a single premiere?

When they play the Fringe, folks.

The 14th annual New York International Fringe Festival kicks off tomorrow with 197 shows — a few of which have already commanded enough word-of-mouth to make them instant hits.

“It’s the only show from India this year, and they reached out to the Indian community, which really responded,” says Fringe artistic director Elana K. Holy of that hot ticket, “A Personal War: Stories of the Mumbai Terror Attacks.”

As far as “Hip Hop High” is concerned, she credits its cast of energetic teenagers, “tweeting and Facebooking,” with getting the word out.

With tweets or without, there’s always the hope of another “Urinetown,” the only Fringe show so far to make it all the way to Broadway.

This year’s fest, running through Aug. 29, offers the usual: a sprinkling of Shakespeare (a streamlined “As You Like It,” the teen-friendly “Hamlettes”); oodles of camp (“Friends of Dorothy: An Oz Cabaret”) and titles that might have come from Max Bialystock himself — take “Jew Wish” and “Invader? I Hardly Know Her!” Please.

New this year: posh digs for Fringe Central, where you can buy tix and see trailers (1 E. Eighth St., off Fifth Avenue, across the street from Otto), plus a show-finding app you can download for free from iTunes.

With $15 tickets and all the free A/C you can soak up, it’s worth a gamble. Here are a few of the more promising contenders:

* Bruce Vilanch, who’s written for the Oscars, the Tonys and the Emmys, is no quitter. He’s retooled his 1978 flop musical “Platinum,” about a comeback-hungry Hollywood climber named Lila Halliday, and cast it with Broadway stalwarts Liz Larsen (“Hairspray”) and Sarah Litzsinger (“Beauty and the Beast”).

* A real Hollywood cutie’s the centerpiece of “Just in Time: The Judy Holliday Story.” Billed as “a fast-paced romp through the life of the Original Dumb Blonde,” it’s full of songs and the starry crew Holliday hung with: Orson Welles, Katharine Hepburn and Jimmy Durante among them.

* Ah, Michelle Dessler: “24” diehards still mourn her passing. So it’s nice to discover the woman who played her, Reiko Aylesworth, in “Lost and Found,” one of the fest’s few dramas, this one about a cop’s dysfunctional family. Another familiar face: Geraldine Librandi, who played Patty Leotardo in “The Sopranos.”

* Cinephiles should turn out in force for “Burning in China,” directed as it is by Caleb Deschanel, the cinematographer better known these days as the dad of Zooey and Emily Deschanel. Gary Moore’s show is about an American professor in China who follows his students into that pre-Twitter showdown at Tiananmen Square.

Can the Fringe be serious? This year, it just might.

Reminder: Bruce Vilanch Plays Durham, NC 8/13

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Carolina Theatre of Durham

address: 309 W. Morgan St., Durham, NC 27701
phone: (919) 560-2736
parking: Durham Centre Garage; Chapel St. Garage; Corcoran St. Garage
Website: www.carolinatheatre.org/

Upcoming Events

Bruce Vilanch

Stand Up Comedy
Bruce Vilanch has become a recognizable face, thanks to the feature-length documentary ‘Get Bruce!’ (1999) and his stint as a regular on ‘Hollywood Squares’ (1998), for which he also served as head writer.

Tickets: 919-560-3030 or 888-241-8162, www.carolinatheatre.org
Information: (919) 560-2736
Price: $27-$37

Schedule
• Fri 8/13 at 9:30pm

August 13 – NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL FRINGE FESTIVAL

Monday, August 9th, 2010

NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL FRINGE FESTIVAL
The eclectic festival mounts nearly two hundred works in two weeks at twenty venues across downtown Manhattan. Highlights include the musicalPlatinum,” with a book by Will Holt and Bruce Vilanch, music by Gary William Friedman, and lyrics by Holt; Stephen Padilla’s “Picking Palin”; Mary Dimino’s solo comedy “Scared Skinny”; “Monetizing Emma,” by Felipe Ossa; Bert Hana’s comedy “Daddy Day”; and “South Pathetic,” a comedy by Jim David. For a full schedule, visit fringenyc.org. Opens Aug. 13. (Various locations. 866-468-7619.)

After The Show: Bruce And Florence In The Hamps

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

ExploreLI.com
Florence Henderson, Bruce Vilanch comes to East Hampton
Monday July 26, 2010 11:31 AM By Steve Parks

Photo credit: Barry Gordin Photography

The John Drew Theater at Guild Hall event, titled “A Bipolar Evening With Friends: Florence Henderson and Bruce Vilanch,” benefited, in part, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, as Henderson literally passed the hat near the opening of her portion of the show.

Promising to “tell the truth” in this musical revue of her life story, Henderson — best known as the wife and mom on the hit ’70s TV seriesThe Brady Bunch” — dished about her apparently squeaky clean personal past. She says she was a virgin when she married Ira Bernstein, the father of their four children. She never had an affair with Richard Rodgers, her womanizing mentor who discovered her during an audition for the national tour of “Oklahoma!” She “probably could have,” but didn’t have an affair with Frank Sinatra. And, at 76 — she’s in terrific shape: “I do Pilates three times a week, but what happened to the men my age?” — the twice-married widow of eight years is open to dating again.

When asked at a reception after the show, Henderson said that while no one could top Christine Ebersole in the lead role of “Grey Gardens” (Ebersole comes to Guild Hall for a concert this weekend), the John Drew Theater should “deifnintely do ‘Grey Gardens,’ ” the Tony-winning musical set in East Hampton.

Bruce Vilanch, who connected with Henderson in the ill-fated “Brady Bunch Variety Hour,” which lasted all of nine episodes, opened with a standup routine about his career as a writer for beauty pageants, and for the last 21 years, the Academy Awards broadcast. He recalls introducing Sophia Loren to Jack Black. “She had no idea who he was and started talking in menu Italian. That’s when you know you’re in trouble.”

Despite his joke about Montauk Highway traffic — “I got a house out here in April and I’m still trying to get there on [Route] 27″ — Vilanch, who lives in California, doesn’t have a place in the Hamptons. He brought along his mother, Henrietta, for the show.

Henderson, who also lives in California, said the Guild Hall show brought her to the Hamptons for only her second time. “It’s lovely,” she said, “except for the humidity.”

“A Bipolar Evening with Friends” – Bruce Vilanch and Florence Henderson

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Hamptons.com
“A Bipolar Evening” with Disparate Friends
By Tiffany Razzano

Just when you think that you’ve seen everything in the Hamptons, East Hampton’s Guild Hall is bringing together an unlikely duo on July 24 in an event dubbed “A Bipolar Evening with Friends.”

The two performers on the bill, longtime friends, couldn’t be more different from one another. Comedy writer and performer Bruce Vilanch is best known for his raunchy one-liners and writing for just about every awards show you can think of, while actress Florence Henderson, who has starred on stage, television and in film, is best known for her role as the squeaky clean Carol Brady on TV’s “The Brady Bunch.” The two go back to the 1970s, when Vilanch worked as a writer for “The Brady Bunch Variety Hour.”

It was Vilanch who coined the event “A Bipolar Evening,” to Henderson’s delight. “Nobody expects the two of us together,” he said. “I have a much spicier reputation than Florence. But I plan on changing that for her. It’s not too late for her to be Joan Rivers.”

In the two-part show, Vilanch will take the stage first, telling tales from his career and tackling tabloid fodder. “My half of the show is about my bizarre life behind the scenes, writing for everybody else,” he said. For those quick to consider it a stand-up act, think again. “I like to call it sit-down. I just tell stories.”

Following Vilanch, Henderson will perform her one-woman autobiographical musical, All the Lives of Me, touching upon everything from growing up during the Great Depression to her years as America‘s favorite TV mom. And Henderson says you can expect Vilanch to make a special appearance during her segment and vice versa. “Usually Bruce would work alone or I would work alone,” she said. “This should be a tremendous amount of fun for us and the audience.”

Growing up in Kentucky, Henderson knew she wanted to get into show business at a young age. “Ever since I can remember, I wanted to be an entertainer,” she said. After high school, she received sponsorship to study at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, and never looked back.

She debuted on Broadway at 18, with a small role in Wish You Were Here, capturing the attention of the legendary Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein. She was then cast in Oklahoma! in the lead role for its last national tour, leading to many other Broadway roles.

However, Henderson didn’t limit herself to the stage. “My goal always was to have longevity [in this industry.] So I diversified early,” she said. “I loved theater and I still do.” She became the first woman to guest host “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” in 1962 and became “The Today Girl” for NBC’s morning show.

Then, in 1969, she landed the iconic role of Carol Brady on “The Brady Bunch,”-a role she still embraces. “I can’t ignore it,” she said. “It’s the elephant in the room.” But she’s never felt pigeon-holed because of it, like many actors known for portraying legendary characters. “For me it’s part of the fabric of my career, not the whole thing.” Carol Brady is a role Henderson revisits. She has lovingly skewered the character in various comedy sketches, made a cameo in the first Brady Bunch parody movie and participated in the reality show “My Fair Brady.”And her career continues to thrive in other ways, with the many charitable organizations she represents, as well as being a product spokeswoman and motivational speaker and appearing at events as varied as singing the national anthem at the Indianapolis 500 to hosting wrestling matches.

As for Vilanch, recently nominated for an Emmy for his role as a writer for the 82nd Annual Academy Awards, his career has been vastly different from Henderson’s, but no less successful. Studying theater and journalism, he began his career covering music for the Chicago Tribune. This is how he met Bette Midler. He began writing bits for her, and slowly built up the list of performers he wrote for: Cher, Eartha Kitt, Diana Ross.

From there he moved on to Hollywood, writing for various variety shows, most notably “The Donny and Marie Show,” and many awards shows. He’s written for 21 consecutive Academy Awards. But he was able to move from behind the scenes and into the limelight while a head writer for “Hollywood Squares” in the 1980s. He was asked to sit in one of the squares, which, as a performer, he says he jumped at. “I got to sit next to Whoopi [Goldberg] for four years and crack wise,” he said. “I think they just wanted someone to tame her. I got lucky.”

This opportunity kick-started his performance career, leading to engagements around the country at various events and venues, performing a one-man off-Broadway show in 2000 and starring in Broadway’s Hairspray as Edna Turnblad. “I had to shave for that,” Vilanch said. “I couldn’t talk them into a bearded lady.” And many of the stories he’ll be telling on July 24, could very well find their way into the book he’s working on about his career.

“A Bipolar Evening with Friends,” featuring Bruce Vilanch and Florence Henderson, John Drew Theater at Guild Hall. Saturday, July 24, 8 p.m. For tickets, go to guildhall.org.