--Saturday, May 26, 2007--

"All That Jaws" debuts at the Westside Eclectic

"All That Jaws" debuted Friday, May 25, 2007 at the Westside Eclectic Theatre in Santa Monica as part of the Out of Bounds West Improv Festival. The show was so good that no recordings of it exist, but here are some photos from the last month of rehearsals.

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--Tuesday, May 22, 2007--

The process, pt. III

We are getting ready to debut this thing for producers and some friends, and the rehearsals are crazy.

Because "All That Jaws" is a rock opera, we're paying special attention to the music, which means 180 miles round-trip to the mountain town of Wrightwood, CA from Los Angeles. In Wrightwood lives most of the musicians and Wrightwood is the location of The Analog Cabin where the band rehearses.

We also rehearse the actors, most of whom live in L.A., at the Reseda Jawserie of Duke Santos. I think there is no other construction like the previous sentence anywhere on the Internet.

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--Monday, May 21, 2007--

The process, pt. II: The Cast

We got the cast and crew from a variety of sources, from personal calls to Craigslist.

Brittan Egnozzi plays Ellen Brody. She was sort of familiar with the movie. One of her lines is "You're gonna need a bigger tote" and it was fun explaining it to her. To Brittan belongs the show's only power ballad, "Eating Me Softly". We knew we needed one and we knew we wanted to femme-up what was essentially a boys-only production. Brittan sings like an angel. A lambrusco-drinking angel.

Jason Sechrest plays Bruce. At first we conceived Bruce as being like Lenny in "Of Mice And Men", and on the poster he definitely has an oafish, earnest look about him. But the songs just evolved into Bruce being a more predatory character, like Frank'n'Furter in "Rocky Horror Picture Show" mixed with Joel Grey in "Cabaret". Jason, who knows his way around cabarets and happens to be the #1 chronicler of the gay side of the porn industry (NSFW) made the part his own from the first rehearsal.

After several trips back and forth to Wrightwood, hitting an unique confluence of Las Vegas and L.A. traffic, Jason remarked: "You know, I'm paying to be in this show." Welcome to Hollywood, Jason!

David Kaufman is a dark horse. We found him on Craigslist and it was only after he auditioned the Quint song as both Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan that we found out how many lives he leads. He happens to be a leading George Harrison in Beatles tribute bands, the latest being Ticket to Ride. He told us that the John Lennons are traditionally difficult to deal with. We asked him if the Eric Claptons from Cream tribute bands ever tried to steal his wife. Start stalking David online here. You'll be glad you did.

Marc Antonio Pritchett speaks with a manly baritone. As "All That Jaws" counts as a special influence "Jesus Christ Superstar", we long ago thought that it would be cool to have a Man of Color play Hooper, in the same way Carl Anderson played Judas (in the rock opera, we have Hooper rising out of the ocean on his anti-shark cage the same way Carl Anderson descended at the end of "Jesus Christ Superstar" ... and Hooper's final song is called "Jesus H. Christ, Hooperstar" after all...)

But we did colorblind casting. It just so happened that the best person for the job was a brother from another mother.

Meet the cast here.

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--Tuesday, May 15, 2007--

"All That Jaws": The process

Brian Descheneaux and I came up with the idea for a "Jaws"-based rock opera called "All That Jaws" independently of each other a few years ago. We'd both lived on the island of Martha's Vineyard, where the first movie was filmed, and we'd seen the film dozens of times. Brian was the one who suggested we write the musical together. This was in 2005.

I quickly registered AllThatJaws.com, thinking a title that good wouldn't go unclaimed for long. It wasn't until this month that we found that there indeed had been musicals based on Jaws and a short film called "All That Jaws" dating back to 1988. In this case, it was helpful that we operated in a vacuum.

We got together in June, 2005 at the Red Lion in Glendale, CA, a German bar. Brian was born in Germany; I just drink products of that nation. Every time I go there it seems like the waitresses hate me. They love Brian. Anyway, we wrote a short outline of what the musical should be like. One of the original lines was "You're gonna need a bigger Croat". I don't know how we planned to work that in.

Quint's song, "Show Me the Way to Indianapolis", was written immediately. It is a distillation of the most famous speech from the movie. "Don't Close the Beaches!" came quickly after. We recorded demo versions of both, with my wife, Rebecca, playing violin.

I knew I wanted to be in the show from the beginning. I just didn't know what part I wanted to play.

Over the next 18 months the website lay fallow, Peter Benchley died, and we did nothing with the show. Then an improv festival called Out of Bounds, at which I'd performed for two years in Austin, announced that it would be launching an L.A. brand. The organizer, Mike D'Alonzo, asked me if I'd perform and I said, "What about 'All That Jaws'?" and he immediately agreed.

The show was in two months and we only had two songs and an outline that involved Croatians. But it was really important to get the show written, and a deadline torpedoed the procrastination. So our timetable dictated that we would write the rest of the show during the month of April, including the script, and then rehearse it throughout May.

Writing the rest of the show proved to be great fun; we got together several times a week and batted ideas around. We made Hooper into sort of a supernatural character, amplifying his weird Deux ex Machina characteristics in which he seemingly returns from the dead. We were especially keen on comparing the book and the movie at opportune moments, so we threw in references to the novel's affair between Hooper and Ellen Brody, and that more or less required that Hooper die on the page.

We also realized that Brody was not given much of a reason to hate the water, other than drowning. We toyed with the idea of his having been raped by a duck. Finally we came up with a much more palatable cause of his hydrophobia.

Brian had read and loaned me "In Harm's Way", an excellent book about the sinking of the U.S.S. Indianapolis, the subject of Quint's monologue. Turns out that The Indianapolis didn't deliver the atom bomb the day when Quint/Robert Shaw said it did in the movie, and from that we created a character for Quint in which he laid claim to having been on every famous shipwreck, including that of the Edmund Fitzgerald.

The show was written by April 30; we now turned to casting and finding a band to perform it. That proved difficult.

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