Mike Markeverich and Jay Handelman Set for The Lynne Show, 3/26 & 4/2

By: Mar. 24, 2013
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

The Lynne Show welcomes jazz pianist Mike Markeverich and theater and TV critic Jay Handelman in March-April 2013. Hear podcasts at thelynneshow.com, and to download a podcast to any PDA, click "download" on the website.

3-26-13 If you live in or around Sarasota you and have probably heard extraordinary Jazz pianist Mike Markeverich play. Although blind from birth Mike was trying to play the songs he heard on the radio on his toy piano by the time he was three years old. A neighbor generously provided little Mike with his first piano but pursuit of the music that would become his life was very challenging. Listen to this extraordinary man describe the dedication with which he pursued his passion and experience his delightful sense of humor. Also listen to cuts from his CD "Solid" You can hear Mike play solo piano Thursdays & Fridays: 5 to 8 PM, @ Caragiulos Restaurant, 69 South Palm Avenue, 941-951-0866 and Saturdays & Sundays: 7:30 to 11 PM: @ Euphemia Haye Restaurant, 5540 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key 941-383-3633. On Wednesday April 17, 2013, the Munchtime Musicales Concerts will be presenting the Mike Markaverich Trio with Ernie Williford, Bass & Vocals & Johnny Moore on Drums, @ David Cohen Hall, from 12 to 1 PM.

4-2-13 Some think that critics are people who couldn't succeed in the art they critique, this is not true of Jay Handelman, Theater and Television critic for the Sarasota Herald Tribune. Jay is, and has always been a critic, "I am perfectly suited to being a critic" he says "it just fits me." Self-effacingly, Jay says that he is "not sure he is serving a larger purpose," but he loves the theater and "hopes that his work elevates the quality of what we see." Pointing to early experiences that led him to this career Jay remembers having seen, at 11 or 12 years old, a Broadway production of 1776, and rather than wanting to be in it or to have written it, he wanted to talk about it. Also standing out in his memory is his 11th grade American Literature teacher, Mrs. Joyce Garvin, who taught her class "Waiting for Godot." He says "we opened the script, the first line is 'Let us go,' and the stage directions say 'they do not move." She slammed the book shut and we talked about that line for two days." Listen to this sensitive and thoughtful man talk about his love of theater, his certainty that he was meant to be a critic and how he made a path to that goal where there was really none to follow.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos