The Storefront recently celebrated the grand opening of its new performance venue at the Metro Baptist Church, 410 West 40th Street. That event was followed shortly thereafter by The Storefront in Concert on two successive evenings. We were there the second night. Storefront producer/director, Phil Geoffrey Bond, presented a concert that generously mixed established cabaret artists with an equal number of new faces (and new voices) on the scene, all of whom impressed us with their talents. Among the familiar stars of the evening were Lennie Watts and Scott Coulter, belting out their version of the famous Judy/Barbra duet "Happy Days Are Here Again"/"Get Happy." Karen Mack and Michael Holland, whose hit show Gashole at Don't Tell Mama is a Storefront production, reprised their rendition of "Movin' Out"/"Jackie Blue" with a combination of precision and humor that actually induced the audience to start applauding in the middle of the number.
Some of the veterans on hand performed new songs; for example, David Gurland sweetly put over a Michael Holland tune called "Stowaway." Other singers, new to the cabaret scene, did a fine job with well-known material: Marina MacNeal turned Stephen Sondheim's ballad "Children Will Listen" into a stirring anthem, and Maureen Kelley Stewart gave a winsome performance of Peter Allen's "I Could Have Been a Sailor." Eric Pickering, so winning in his cabaret debut last year, scored again with his moving rendition of a new Karen Mack tune called "Never Who." Marcus Simeone sounded angelic when singing what is fast becoming his signature number, "He Must be Beautiful."
In the heavenly setting of the Metro Baptist Church, the Storefront has found a wonderfully open performance space. On the other hand, the concert was bedeviled by muddy sound caused by the high ceilings; this church, like so many of its architectural brethren, is an echo chamber. The Storefront will have to investigate ways, beyond praying, to deal with the problem.
With this show, The Genesius Guild offered cabaret an early and most welcome valentine. Here's looking forward to its next event.