Preparations for "The Underpants"

I can't believe I actually just sucked apple juice out of my mustache... My transformation to my father is almost complete. Next stop? Let the eyebrows grow into the Azalea bushes they wish to be. NEVER!!!

This is me a month ago looking like...

Kris Kringle.

See?

You think I look like "Kris Kringle" too, don't you? Don't lie...

It's okay...

Really. I'm cool with it.

No, I'm not.

Well...

It was better than my hair up in pins, bishes...

And a big crazy mustache and lambchop sideburns that are only getting bigger...

They haven't been clipped since March 1st. Thus, the stache being submerged in apple juice only to be sucked out. It's like eating and drinking through a wig.

This is what I'm doing to take on the character of the Jewish barber, Benjamin Cohen. Circa 1910. Yes, I end up (proudly) with a Jew-fro for show-time. And when I'm not in character, I just look like a porn star from the 70's.

See? Things can always get worse. And who the hell chiseled those lines in my forehead? Dang. It's like my face is a frickin' triangle with hair sprouting here and there and almost everywhere.

So, here's an interview with our illustrious director, Matthew Earnest about The Underpants:

Just fast forward through the crap to 4:50 to 6:53 and you'll see some images from our early rehearsals for this brilliant farce.

VIVA THE UNDERPANTS!!! Arrrrrrriba! Ondelay!

*** Showing now through April 23rd at The Beck Center for the Arts.

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The Underpants!

Okay, so you're going to have to forgive me. I've been extremely sidetracked lately with some work. I've been knee-deep in rehearsals for Steve Martin's adaptation of "The Underpants", which opened last night at The Beck Center for the Arts in Lakewood, Ohio. It's directed by one of my favorite people in the whole wide world, Mr. Matthew Earnest of "Wanderlust" fame. (Remember? The New York Times called me "saucy". Twice? Yeah, that one.) And the set and costume designer IS my favorite person in the whole wide world, my huubannd, bishes... Sir William Bezek.

Dang.

So, it's been A BLAST. (That's an underpants statement.)

Hardy-Har-Har. HEY! They can't ALL be good... Tough crowd, you people are...

A truly multi-dimensional farce, thanks to a multifaceted, gifted director, a fricking crazy brilliant set designer and costumer, and truly, truly kind, generous and talented, first-rate actors who aren't afraid to be lighting bolts on stage.

The whole experience is inspiring and I feel very fortunate to be a part of it.

SO, I don't want to say anything, but word on the street is...

Peeps from all over the world have been compelled to strip down to their panties and make tracks for the theater to see this comical, yet provocative and pertinent lighting storm on stage.

They're running if they have to...

They're on subways...

And waiting at airport restaurants for the next available flight...

They're standing on beaches pondering their next move to get here asap.

They're cheering one another on at train stations that this play is going to be the best thing since pita and hummus and bleach.

They're going to be looking to the sky for flights that are picking up hitchhikers (hitchflyers?) and pulling their man panties down just a little because they're so excited...

Speaking of being a little excited...

They're going to put humility aside and for the good of the planet, they're going to come as they are.

They're going to be dressed in nothing but the traditional panties of their nation or region.

And...

Yeah. That. (I have no idea what the fuck he's doing either... But, he's trying to get here.)

It's aalllll about "The Underpants", bishes!! Last night? Lightning. Tonight? More lightning. And that storm will be raging through April 23rd.

So, be there or be square.

(And you don't have to wear panties at all if you don't want to. It's cool...)

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More Images, Excerpts, Inspiration and Reviews From "WANDERLUST"

"I realized that the myriad discoveries one might make on a ramble are being replaced by the determinate, by speed. "I know that our technologies save time, and I use them myself - a truck, a computer, a cell phone - but I fear their false urgency, their call to speed, their insistence that travel is less important than arrival. I like walking BECAUSE it is slow, and I suspect that the mind, like the feet, works at about three miles an hour. If this is so, then modern life is moving faster than the speed of thought. Or thoughtfulness."

The Cakewalk In this image from L to R: Kevin Charnas (me, ho's), Adam Thatcher, Nicole Perrone, Alexis Floyd, Trae Hicks, Pandora Robertson and Jonathon Ramos. (Please feel free to click on the images to enlarge.)

In this image from L to R: Kevin Charnas (me again, ho's), Adam Thatcher, Nicole Perrone, Alexis Floyd, Trae Hicks, Pandora Robertson and Jonathon Ramos.

Inspiration.

The Walk to Selma In this image from L to R: Kevin Charnas (my bootie, ho's), Adam Thatcher, Nicole Perrone, Trae Hicks, Pandora Robertson and Jonathon Ramos. **************************

Rome... In this image from L to R: Kevin Charnas, Nicole Perrone, Jonathon Ramos, Pandora Robertson and Trae Hicks. **************************

Paris. Image L to R: Jonathon Ramos, Pandora Robertson, Nicole Perrone and the ankle biter - Kevin Charnas.

More Paris. In this image from L to R: Adam Thatcher, Trae Hicks gettin' down on the accordion, Pandora Robertson, Alexis Floyd, Jonathon Ramos, Nicole Perrone (in the blonde wig) and Monsieur Charnas (trying to distract himself for not being the one in the blonde wig).

And inspiration for Paris: ****************

And some reviews:

Power Walking Take your brain for a heady promenade at CPT's Wanderlust (She said, "Kevin Charnas drills his take on a sassy curbside whore." I'm pretty sure I can die now.)

Don't pass by inventive 'Wanderlust' at Cleveland Public Theatre (And he said, "in these inventive hands," - he's talking about Matthew Earnest -"it's a nonstop, highly choreographed dance-theater piece in which an indefatigable ensemble of seven walks this way, talks this way on a set (by Earnest and Curtis Young) consisting of a stage of dirt and a wall-size chalkboard on which history is writ." - He said we were "indefatigable", bishes... Dang. I didn't think NOBODY could be hearin' our farts out in the audience while we be runnin' around! Sshhiiittt...)

‘Wanderlust’ at CPT is a total immersion experience (She said, "Charnas is riotous as a gay hooker in high heels soliciting clients." - Okay, so I'm "gay", yes. And I played a "hooker", yes. But, I really wasn't suppose to be both at the same time. I'll have to work on that...

(Photo credits: Dan Schreckengost) ******************************

Images From "WANDERLUST: A History of Walking"

Jonathon Ramos in Wanderlust. ************************

Jonathon Ramos, Adam Thatcher and Pandora Robertson. ************************

Nicole Perrone, Kevin Charnas (that's me, bishes), Jonathon Ramos, Pandora Robertson and Adam Thatcher. ************************

Nicole Perrone, Kevin Charnas (me again, bishes) and Jonathon Ramos Photo Credits: Dan Schreckengost

Excerpts from WANDERLUST.

And inspiration...

Sing it, Miss Winehouse...

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The New York Times Called Me "Saucy"... Twice

I know I should've posted this before... Usually things need to percolate and back-fire and burn in my head awhile before I can really write about them. And even though I'm not completely ready, I might as well start somewhere... (Especially because Joe-In-Vegas is going to have a moo-moo cow if I don't.)

New York was HOT, bishes... And I don't mean sexy. Well, that too. But, that city was humida-humida-humida. To say the least. The heat index was 103 everyday - and with humidity, that's just a bit too much for me.

Of course the city is awesome. I always love visiting New York. I can feel the energy of the city before the plane even lands. And the subway just makes it so easy to get around. I MUCH rather take mass transit than drive. People are so much more tolerant of one another on mass transit systems. They have to be, they're standing right next to one another.

It's amazing how "brave" they get when there's thousands of pounds of metal surrounding them. People would NEVER have the guts to be so rude in-person that they have while driving a car. As though there still aren't lives in those other cars.

So, New York was great. Just hot, is all... And speaking of hot, the Ohio Theatre in Soho that we performed in was located in a building that had previously been an ice factory. Thus, the name "The Ice Factory" - cruelly named seeing how it didn't have air conditioning.

I didn't appreciate the irony.

Okay, maybe I did a little bit.

After every performance we were dripping with sweat. And I mean DRIPPING, BISHES! And because we were performing on dirt, it literally turned to mud on me. And after every show, I would actually have MUD in my belly button. And let me tell you, that shit is HARD to lick out. Just ask those homeless, crack-heads that I made do the licking for 5 bucks.

Performing in oppressive heat, covered in sweat and mud... and breathless because of it. (I think I just turned myself on.)

And I'd do it all again in a heartbeat. I. LOVED. IT.

I loved working on WANDERLUST with the whole cast. An extremely talented crew of people that I truly adore. And with Matthew Earnest's brilliant direction, the accessible, intellectual material and the spiritual message in the play? All of it combined, well... It was like an incredible dream. My spirit was singing... And I couldn't be more proud to have been part of such a collaboration.

Well, on opening night, someone from The New York Times came to review it. And in general, knowing how the Times can be, I thought it was a favorable review. And as you'll see, they called me "saucy", twice.

I took that as a compliment, but I was interested what others out there thought of the term "saucy". So, I did a little research.

Okay... Totally obvious. Hheellloooo... (That actually looks disgusting.)

So, speaking of bacon, there was this bish, who is DEFINITELY more saucy than me. "HHIII-YYAA!! KAA-RAA-TE CHOP!"

And this crazy Ho/Mechanic. Again... more saucy than me. Although, if I were dressed liked that and all bent over, you probably wouldn't know the difference. Until you pulled down my panties and saw all the hair on my butt. (But who knows? Maybe she'd surprise us.)

And again... more saucy. Little stripper dudes will ALWAYS be saucier than I am. Anyone that you can rip their clothes off and twirl them over your head will always get the saucier vote in my book. But, that middle one might take some huffing and puffing...

Oh please... She's not "saucy", just desperate. There IS a difference. Stop trying so hard, sweetheart. (Though I highly doubt any of my straight-male or lesbian readers will object.)

Don't ask me. I didn't label this as "saucy". But maybe the zebra skirt and heels make it by default? And I'd like to know just WHO he's holding above HIS head...

Okay... now we're getting somewhere.

So, the review...

This was the photo that they used:

Image: Steve Wagner From left, Jonathan Ramos, Kevin S. Charnas (that's me, ho's), Adam Thatcher and Trae Hicks in “Wanderlust: A History of Walking.”

THEATER REVIEW | 'WANDERLUST: A HISTORY OF WALKING'

A History of How We Got From Here to There

By CLAUDIA LA ROCCO Published: July 16, 2010

"Wanderlust is a good impulse for the Soho Think Tank to follow right now; after 16 years of cultivating some of the city’s most innovative theater artists at the Ohio Theater, this Obie award-winning company has to vacate its Wooster Street home. The Think Tank will soon begin a three-year residency at the 3LD Art & Technology Center in Lower Manhattan. After that, who knows?

"So it seems fitting that the final Ice Factory festival to be held at the Ohio should include “Wanderlust: A History of Walking.” Adapted, directed and choreographed by Matthew Earnest, after the Rebecca Solnit book, the play traipses from ancient Athens to modern-day Las Vegas, offering an extended meditation on human locomotion as it goes. In this context, what’s a little old move across town?

"Of course “Wanderlust,” which had its premiere at the Cleveland Public Theater in May, does its walking in place. Mr. Earnest and Curtis Young’s spare set, which enables a delightful surprise ending, consists of a rectangular stage of soft yellow dirt and a wall-size chalkboard with two entrances. The seven cast members skip, saunter and stroll in and out, writing down places and times on the wall as they move from one scene to the next, beginning with the 1974 discovery of Lucy, the famous skeleton of the species Australopithecus afarensis.

"What follows is a compendium of thoughts (many by famous writers) on the whys and hows of walking, narrated by different actors while the rest flesh out these musings. Pandora Robertson has a marvelously wild-eyed turn as Virginia Woolf (“To escape is the greatest of pleasures”), as her fellow actors whirl about her, evoking politicians, bootblacks and booksellers of 1930s London. Kevin S. Charnas is a saucy Frank O’Hara and, in heels, an even saucier streetwalker. The ensemble does a sweetly silly impersonation of penguins.

"But too many of these vignettes are heavy-handed and offered with a self-conscious stage presence that undercuts the production’s promise of time travel. More problematic, the central moralizing thread (open air good, technology bad) feels simplistic and dated. This terrain is far too familiar for a transformative ramble."

I was flattered. However, the "central moralizing" thread isn't so simple. And that's unfortunate for Miss La Rocco and the readers that are taking her word for it. She missed A LOT. So, as most things being communicated, her review says more about her than it does about "WANDERLUST".

I don't know if it's a little bit of New York bitterness, or the individual's need to be clever, or the need to be above a positive message - which to many seems naive... I don't know... I'm not going to try to know. Because I'm sure trying to figure out a stranger's take on a matter is too "simplistic" in itself.

So, what I do know is that if I just take what she said... How she mistakingly attempts to sum up the message in the play as "open air good, technology bad" and that this is "dated", she's missing the boat.

And I would venture to say that MOST people living in the modern world are missing the boat on where we came from and where we're going in such a hurry. They're too busy being busy.

Depression in the U.S. is at an all time high. As are the use of anti-depressants. (Not to even mention self-medicating with booze and illegal drugs, like I do.) People are becoming more and more isolated in their worlds - from home to car to office. All enclosed spaces. To communicating through machines rather than something more intimate like face to face. They're not really "out in the world anymore".

And even though New Yorkers walk much more than most of their American counterparts in urban settings, I still see them on their phones, texting, checking email, blah, blah, blah... They may be walking, but they're still in a bubble. Isolated.

So, no. It's not "DATED". It's pertinent to our society.

Even though acknowledging her bitterness is giving it legitimacy, I'm recognizing it as a flaw. A legitimate flaw. It's too easy to be bitter. And THAT "central thread" running through our society is a detriment to the immense possibilities of humanity's good nature. "The landscape is being paved over, where leisure is shrinking and being crushed by the anxiety to produce." (An excerpt from "WANDERLUST".) And in the process, the landscape of the human spirit is being paved over...

These notions are indeed "simplistic"... Or basic, to anyone paying attention. However, if someone is unable to acknowledge how reckless modern humans have become towards their own evolution of higher consciousness, they've got bigger problems than bitterness. That is after all, just a symptom.

If we're doing so well, why are so many people so miserable? If her whittled down topic is so "familiar", why isn't anyone listening?

I'm truly flattered that Miss La Rocco enjoyed my work enough that she actually called me out. However, I can't help but feel badly for her and others who are too bitter and "above" optimism. It makes me think they're dead far before their death.

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So, here we are in Antarctica. Cape Crozier, to be exact.

And those wonderful, heart-warming people behind me are those "sweetly silly" penguins she was talking about.

And that "saucy" streetwalker?

Well, there she is to the far right... Teetering on her heels.

I'm trying not to be upset over Miss La Rocco not mentioning the mule that I played (one of my favorite roles)...

Here's Pandora Robertson, playing the mule's keeper pulling him off the side of a mountain before an avalanche kills them at Montanvert in 1787.

And I'm also trying not to be offended over her failing to mention my chiseled abs, bulging biceps and dancing pecs as I hold on to Nicole Perrone, letting her gorgeous body hover just above the ground...

'Cause I was thinking that that was kind of "saucy" too, but nnnooooo...

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WANDERLUST in American Theatre Magazine!

(Please feel free to click above image to enlarge - I can't get the damn thing any bigger. Ooohhh, behave...)

Only TWO performances left of WANDERLUST: A History of Walking at Cleveland Public Theatre before we move our stank asses on to The Ice Factory in New York, bishes!

Opening Scene from "Wanderlust". From left to right: Nicole Perrone, Adam Thatcher, Pandora Robertson, Kevin Charnas (that's me, bishes), Alexis Floyd, Trae Hicks and Jonathon Ramos. (Photo credit: Dan Schreckengost)

So, if you're able to make it, I promise I won't be wearing

this. (Photo credit: Matthew Earnest)

Or,

this. (Photo credit: Matthew Earnest)

But, I DO promise I'll be wearing much less. Ooohhhh... Woof, Woof, meow...

ENOUGH of this tomfoolery, I say! I'll leave with you something invigorating - an extended excerpt from WANDERLUST. May it inspire you to take to your feet and be all you ever need.

"Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road, Healthy, free, the world before me, The long brown path before me leading wherever I choose.

Henceforth I ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune, Henceforth I whimper no more, postpone no more, need nothing, Done with indoor complaints, libraries, querulous criticisms, Strong and content I travel the open road.

The earth, that is sufficient, I do not want the constellations any nearer, I know they are very well where they are.

You air that serves me with breath to speak! You objects that call from diffusion my meanings and give them shape! You light that wraps me and all things in delicate equable showers! You paths worn in the irregular hollows by the roadsides! I believe you are latent with unseen existences, you are so dear to me.

The earth expanding right hand and left hand, The picture alive, every part in its best light,

From this hour I ordain myself loos'd of limits and imaginary lines, Going where I list, my own master total and absolute. I inhale great draughts of space, I am larger, better than I thought, I did not know I held so much goodness.

Allons! whoever you are come travel with me!

Be not discouraged, keep on, there are divine things well envelop'd, I swear to you there are divine things more beautiful than words can tell. Allons! we must not stop here, However sweet these laid-up stores, however convenient this dwelling we cannot remain here, However shelter'd this port and however calm these waters we must not anchor here,

Allons! the road is before us! Camerado, I give you my hand!"

~ Walt Whitman (1819-1892)

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Under Contstruction

Okay, so now the below post just seems stupid because I HAVE (actually, my pimp Jim Kukral did - Thanks, Jimmy K!) moved the website to WordPress and Blogger can suck it. And now, I don't know what I'm doing... I'm trying to find my way again, trying to renovate the website a bit and tweak its nipples and spank its bottom and have it call me "Daddy".

I have much to tell you about how "WANDERLUST" has been evolving, blossoming and exploding on stage (we've had standing ovations two nights in a row, bishes). And that doesn't even include all the band aids, bruises, how I almost broke my jaw, chipped my teeth, hit both the back AND the front of my head, threw my back out, and had my scrotum dragged across a table. That's right, I can now tuck my scrotum into my socks; left one in the left, right one in the right - and on special occasions, I'll crisscross 'em. I sound really pretty don't I?

Yes, it's certainly been a journey. An experience and opportunity that I am immensely grateful for (even with the stretched out ball sac that now doubles as a lasso), and like any fantastical adventure, one that I'm so much better for...

After all, nothing truly great and worthwhile comes easy. Does it?

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