“The Frame,” KPCC’s “daily report from the world of art, entertainment, and culture,” had me on as a guest today to talk about Louis Armstrong and the West Coast premiere of Satchmo at the Waldorf. The host, John Horn, had gone to see the first preview of Satchmo on Tuesday and was fabulously well prepared—something that just doesn’t always happen, even on public radio. He asked consistently smart and thoughtful questions, and I in turn did my very best to supply reasonably worthy answers.
KPCC broadcasts to the Los Angeles area, but no matter where you live, you can listen to the ten-minute segment, or download it as a podcast, by going here.
* * *
If you live in the New York area, CUNY-TV’s Theater Talk has a new episode in the pipeline in which Ben Brantley, Peter Marks, John Simon, and I chew over the Broadway season just past with co-hosts Susan Haskins and Michael Riedel. The fun starts on Sunday, June 7, at seven p.m. ET.

Whenever you write a book or play in which a famous person of the relatively recent past is portrayed, it’s more than likely that you’ll sooner or later meet somebody who knew the person in question and is eager to tell you what they thought of what you wrote. I’m used to that by now, but I admit to having been a bit unnerved—more than a little bit, truth to tell—by the West Coast premiere of Satchmo at the Waldorf, my play about the relationship between Louis Armstrong and Joe Glaser, his manager. No sooner did I take my seat last night at Beverly Hills’ Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts than I realized that I was sitting in the midst of people who had known Armstrong and Glaser. What’s more, I was introduced after the show to
With two performances of Satchmo under our belts, I can report that Gordon’s staging of the play is in excellent shape after the eleven-month layoff that followed the end of the off-Broadway run. If anything, John’s interpretation of the triple role of Armstrong, Glaser, and Miles Davis has actually grown in richness and subtlety since then. It’s strange to think that he’s appeared in highly acclaimed revivals of Eugene O’Neill’s The Iceman Cometh and Christopher Marlowe’s Tamburlaine in between productions of Satchmo. I’m keeping fast company these days.
CLOSING SOON OFF BROADWAY: