66 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • AUGUST 16, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  buzz 
 SGTG Presents “Sister Act” the Musical 
 Queens College alum Jerry Seinfeld keeps us laughing  
 BY RUTH BASHINSKY 
 Long Island Press 
 Special to The Queens Courier 
 On a balmy June night at the Classic  
 Car  Club  in  Manhattan,  hot-rod  lovers  
 congregated to talk engines, horsepower, 
  carburetors and more. Amid the  
 fl eet of supercars — a 2015 Lamborghini  
 Huracan, 1963 Corvette Stingray, and a  
 ’66 Mustang convertible — stands comic  
 icon Jerry Seinfeld. 
 Dressed in a dark suit and dress shoes  
 and looking eff ervescently cool, Seinfeld  
 was clearly in his element. He was at the  
 car club to celebrate the new season of his  
 popular web series, Comedians in Cars  
 Getting Coff ee, since Netfl ix picked up  
 the show from Crackle in January. Th e  
 tenth season premiered on July 6. 
 As  the  creator,  executive  producer,  
 and host, Seinfeld takes the viewer on a  
 ride, literally, as he picks up a new guest  
 comedian in a vintage car he selects.  
 During the trip, there are lots of funny  
 stories, lots of laughs and lots of caffeine. 
  Guests on the new season are the  
 late Jerry Lewis, Kate McKinnon, Ellen  
 DeGeneres, Hasan Minhaj, Dana Carvey,  
 Neil  Brennan,  Tracy  Morgan,  Brian  
 Regan, Alec Baldwin, Zach Galifi anakis,  
 John Mulaney, and Dave Chappelle. 
 As the crowd buzzed about, checking  
 out some of the sleek automobiles  
 and enjoying the sunset views of the  
 Hudson River, Seinfeld was talking with  
 the media. Th  e Press was there too, ready  
 to chat with the man who made talking  
 about nothing so much fun. 
 At a youthful 64, Seinfeld is still  
 delivering the laughs and  getting  
 it right, traveling to diff erent  
 stages across the country  
 for his Jerry Seinfeld Comedy  
 Tour.  
 How  does  it  feel  now  that  
 your  show  is on  Netfl ix?  Being  
 picked up by Netfl ix  I  guess  
 is like being put on the  
 Yankees. You are  
 on the team that  
 is going to win.  
 It is very exciting  
 for me. At  
 this point in  
 my career, it  
 is very hard  
 in  show  
 business to get a second hit. A lot of people  
 are lucky enough to get one hit; to get  
 two hits is really hard. It feels pretty good. 
 As  a  car  enthusiast, what  would  you  
 say is your ultimate set of wheels? I love  
 a minimalist car. I love a car that is almost  
 like a motorcycle with four wheels. Th e  
 1958 Porsche 356 Speedster I think is the  
 greatest model you can drive. It is very  
 little. I love the openness and sleekness  
 of it. It is not that fast, but  
 it is  just an incredible feeling of  
 freedom. 
 With  the  name  of  the  show  
 being  Comedians  
 in  Cars  
 Getting  Coff ee,  I  need  to  ask  
 how you like your coff ee. Black?  
 Light and  sweet? I actually started  
 drinking  coff ee  a  couple  
 of years before I did  
 the  show. It is so  
 fun  to have coffee  
 with  people  
 I  fi gured  
 I  gotta  do  a  
 show  about  
 this. Now, I  
 love coff ee.  
 I  drink  
 coff ee all day everyday. I like any type of  
 coff ee: latte, espresso, cappuccino, cream  
 and sugar. 
 Was the character of George, Elaine or  
 Kramer based on any friends or anyone  
 you  knew  growing up on Long  Island?  
 No. Me and Larry David had a wonderful  
 staff  of writers. We were cooking up ideas  
 all day every day; that is all we did. 
 Of  all  the  episodes,  which  was  was  
 your favorite that still makes you laugh?  
 I really loved the marine biologist one  
 when Kramer hit the golf ball in the blowhole  
 of the whale and George found it trying  
 to save the whale pretending to be a  
 marine biologist. I thought that was the  
 best bit we ever came up with. Th at was  
 a funny bit. 
 Did you have a nickname growing up?  
 Seiny. I didn’t like it. People still call me  
 that even today. 
 Everyone knows you as Jerry, but your  
 formal name is Jerome. You don’t look  
 like  a  Jerome.  Does  anyone  call  you  
 that? George Wallace, the comedian, calls  
 me Jerome. 
 What is next for Jerry Seinfeld? I love  
 doing Comedians in Cars and I want to be  
 doing this  for a while. 
 ng ful he gettraveling  
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 A brassy night club singer accidentally  
 witnesses  a  coldblooded  murder.  
 To outmaneuver her pursuers she fi nds  
 safe haven in a convent. Th  e result is the  
 aff ectionately irreverent and very popular  
 musical comedy, “Sister Act”. 
 Director/choreographer  Kathy  Rollo  
 Ferrara owns almost four full decades of  
 theatrical leadership. As usual, she leads  
 an excellent cast of individual performers  
 and equally exuberant dancers and  
 singers. Charismatic Ruperta Nelson as  
 Deloris Van Cartier is abundantly talented. 
  Her character musically discovers new  
 and truer friends. Ultimately, she fi nds a  
 more meaningful, less superfi cial life.  
 Postulant Mary Robert (Hannah Pipa)  
 discovers a new sense of independence  
 with even greater spirituality as she follows  
 Van Cartier through paradoxically  
 secular locations. At Friday evening’s performance, 
  her solo “Th  e Life I Never Led”  
 absolutely brings down the house. You  
 can’t fake this kind of sincerity. Equally  
 moving  and  unquestionably  powerful  
 is the song “Raise Your Voice” which  
 appears in Act I and is reprised in the  
 fi nale by the entire company. 
 Th  e show’s bad guys are just too likable  
 to despise. Th  eir “tough guy” caricatures  
 are well played by Timothy F. Smith,  
 Zach  Russo,  Th  omas  Laskowski,  Paul  
 Th  omas and cabaret gals Shala Hunter  
 and Deanna Mayo. Th  e good guys include  
 “Sweaty Eddie” the laid back cop played  
 melodiously and humorously by Jeremy  
 Copeland. 
 The  convent’s  noble  denizens  
 include  community  theatre  veteran  
 Lori Santopetro as Mother Superior.  
 Her  onstage  performances  throughout  
 Queens  have  delighted  audiences  
 for decades. Mary Patrick (Kelly Ann  
 Connors), Mary Lazarus (Kelly Pipa) and  
 the entire group of singing and dancing  
 nuns are heartwarmingly entertaining. A  
 joyful Monsignor O’Hara is well played  
 by Gary Pipa. Bravisimo to one and all! 
 Musical Director Jon Riss and his musicians  
 never miss a note. Well-deserved  
 bows  to  the  entire  production  team  
 including Lydia Pastori, Monica Athenas,  
 Katie  Kuhle,  Todd  Wilkerson,  Amy  
 Costa,  Marjorie  Wilkerson,  Margaret  
 Richman, Alex Santullo, Noah Platte and  
 Mike Mayo. Kudos to the many members  
 of the ensemble and everyone behind the  
 scenes.  
 In the most magical moments of the  
 musical, several characters visibly display  
 tears of joy during the fi nale. Clearly the  
 troupe delivers the real thing! 
 For information on this and future productions  
 by St Gregory’s Th eatre Group,  
 call (718) 989-2451 or surf to www.sgtg. 
 org. As always, save me a seat on the aisle. 
 A VIEW FROM  
 THE CLIFF 
 BY CLIFF KASDEN 
 
				
/www.sgtg