|
Three Broadway luminaries — Don Pippin, Lee Roy Reams and Kevin Spirtas — will help emcee Jack Ford and local celebrities toast, roast and entertain at the Algonquin Arts benefit honoring Father Alphonse
Stephenson, at The Mill in Spring Lake Heights on Thursday, June 25.
The three stars have been friends of Father Alphonse since the days when the Roman Catholic priest was conducting an orchestra he founded at The Actors Chapel near Broadway, and when Father Stephenson
was the conductor for 3,000 performances of “A Chorus Line.”
The gala starts at 6 p.m. with a silent auction and open bar. Then, a grand dinner will be served at 7:15 p.m., followed by the star-studded entertainment.
Don Pippin is one of Broadway’s greatest musical talents, having been honored with a Tony, an Emmy, the Drama Desk Award and a gold record for the original cast album of “A Chorus Line,” for which he
served as musical director, conductor and vocal arranger.
Among numerous other successes, Mr. Pippin was the musical director for the original versions of such major musicals as “Applause,” “La Cage aux Folles,” “Mame” and “Oliver.”
For 14 years earlier in his career, he served as musical director for New York’s famed Radio City Music Hall.
And, among additional achievements, Mr. Pippin arranged musical performances for Bill Clinton’s inauguration and conducts frequently with the National Symphony Orchestra at the John F. Kennedy Center for
the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
Lee Roy Reams is a star on the stage and behind the scenes.
Among his shining moments were nominations for both the 1980 Tony and Drama Desk awards as Best Featured Actor in a Musical for his performance in the original production of “42nd Street.”
After making his Broadway debut in “Sweet Charity,” Mr. Reams went on to roles in some of Broadway’s best-loved shows, including “Hello, Dolly!,” “La Cage aux Folles,” “Beauty & The Beast” and “The Producers.”
In 1989, he starred in a Paper Mill Playhouse production of “Show Boat,” which was televised on “Great Performances” by PBS.
Among other concert, stage and cabaret appearances, Mr. Reams currently is serving as the resident director of the Theatre at Sea program sponsored by the Theatre Guild.
Kevin Spirtas is perhaps best known for his role as Dr. Craig Wesley on the soap opera “Days of Our Lives.”
TV audiences also have seen him on such hit shows as “Friends,” “The Young and The Restless,” “Married … With Children,” “Quantum Leap” and, most recently, in the role of Jonas Chamberlin on “One Life To
Live.”
But it was on Broadway that he met Father Alphonse, when Mr. Spirtas was starring in “A Chorus Line,” remembered forever for his acrobatic rendition of the song, “I Can Do That!”
Mr. Spirtas was also Hugh Jackman’s standby in the musical, “The Boys from Oz.”
Mr. Spirtas also has been on the big screen in films, including “Apt Pupil,” “Daredevil” and “Friday The 13th VII.”
Emcee Jack Ford was a Monmouth County prosecutor before more than two decades as a TV news personality. The recipient of Emmy and Peabody Awards, Jack Ford recently also became an author with the release
of his first book, a mystery thriller, The Osiris Alliance.
Father Alphonse Stephenson is the founder and conductor of The Orchestra of St. Peter by the Sea, the 45-member ensemble that performs three times each year at the Algonquin Arts Theatre in Manasqauan.
The orchestra also appears annually at the Festival of The Atlantic on the beach in Point Pleasant.
Tickets to Algonquin Arts’ annual benefit honoring Father Alphonse Stephenson are $125, tax-deductible to the extent of IRS law, and must be reserved in advance.
For more information, or to reserve tickets, please contact the box office at 732-528-9211 or boxoffice@algonquinarts.org. The hours for the box office,
located at 173 Main St. in downtown Manasquan, are Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The honorary chairs of this event are Tamar Tolchin and Diane Turton.
Algonquin Arts was founded in 1992 as a nonprofit organization to provide cultural enrichment and educational enhancement of the highest quality for the residents of New Jersey’s central region. Programming
of Algonquin Arts is made possible as a result of the continued philanthropic support of private citizens and organizations, such as New Jersey State Council on the Arts, OceanFirst Foundation, New Jersey
Cultural Trust, Horizon Foundation for New Jersey, PNC Foundation, Manasquan Savings Bank, Woman’s Club of Brielle, Bank of America, Frank and Lydia Bergen Foundation, Investors Savings Bank Charitable
Fund, Verizon Foundation, Janice & Jules Plangere III, as well as many generous individuals and local businesses.
|