KIRBY STARS SHINE BRIGHT
IN HIS HEART
On its 10th anniversary, assistant GM looks back on those that have graced the Kirby stage
By ALAN K. STOUT
Times Leader Staff WriterSeptember 15, 1996
One thing he makes clear,
however - the good experiences have far outweighed the bad.
Cardoni says he and his crew,
plus the union and road crew were discussing what to do when the star of the
show arrived on the scene. “Wayne came up with a pair of blue jeans on and a
crescent wrench in his hand and said ‘What can I do to help?’”
Rodney Dangerfield, says,
Cardoni, is just as zany off stage as on.
“There's always something happening
with him,” he says, telling the story of how he, Dangerfield and the show's
promoter were discussing Dangerfield's interest in opening a few comedy clubs
throughout the country. Dangerfield was asking about Wilkes-Barre, and Cardoni
told him about a recently vacated restaurant right on Public Square.
Cardoni says rumors of Diana Ross's rude behavior before her 1990 Kirby show are completely untrue.
“She was a lovely lady to deal
with,” he says. “She very much treasures her privacy - but other than that -
once she came into the building, she was demure. She introduced herself, went
down to the dressing room, came up, hung out with the crew for a while, did her
soundcheck - no different that the hundreds of artists that have been through
here.”
Cardoni names
pianist/comedian Victor Borge, who appeared at The Kirby in September of 1986,
as one his favorite performers to grace the stage during the venue's early
days.
“I've always admired Victor
Borge from when I was a child watching him on television,” says Cardoni. “To
actually have him here to perform was a wonderful moment for me, personally. He
was remarkably pleasant.”
Cardoni says Borge also had a
wonderful sense of dry wit and was obviously unimpressed with the Kirby's then
brand new 7-foot grand piano.
“He walked over to it, played
a few keys and said ‘Oh, look, a toy piano’ and walked away. That told me what
he thought of that particular brand.”
The unpretentious demeanor of mime great Marcel Marceau also left a deep impression.
“He behaved in such an
unassuming way,” says Cardoni, “yet this is somebody that was probably
responsible more than anyone for teaching the art of mime and mimicry in the
world. Here he was in Wilkes-Barre - he just walked in the stage-door carrying
his own suitcase.”
Cardoni says Bill Cosby
packed a bunch of Abe's hot dogs for his return trip to Philadelphia, and David
Copperfield's stage-smoke effects once set off the Kirby's fire alarms. “David
didn't realize they were going off,” he says. “He though it was another sound
effect from his show, so he just kept going.”
Of the hundreds of shows that Cardoni has helped produce at the Kirby, only two entertainers stand out in his mind as being extremely difficult. The first, he says, is rock 'n roll pioneer Chuck Berry.
Berry's contract, says Cardoni, was loaded with bizarre clauses designed to earn him extra cash. Berry required obscure musical equipment for each show, and if the venue didn't have it, they could rent it from him, which he conveniently carried on his tour bus. When Cardoni was able to come up with all of his demands, Berry seemed peeved.
“I admire Chuck Berry's music
very much,” says Cardoni, “but his whole approach to this facility was that
this was a backwater town and he was doing us a favor by coming in.”
Cardoni says Berry gave a shortened, generally lifeless performance and then stormed out of the building.
One performer went a step further in his rude behavior. Irish comedian Hal Roach actually struck Cardoni.
“He punched me flat in the
mouth in the lobby,” he says. “He didn't want to pay his merchandising
percentage of sales tax. The state of Pennsylvania requires tax to be collected
on non-clothing items. I don't have any control of that. That's the law. I was
about to turn to my house manager and tell him that we'd pay the tax and it
wasn't worth arguing with this guy, and as I turned, he slugged me, grabbed his
money, and ran to the dressing room and locked himself in.”
Still, Cardoni says that “two
(bad incidents) out of 10 years and over 1,500 shows isn't too bad.” He
describes the 1991 performance by the late George Burns as particularly
special. In March of that year, Cardoni underwent open heart surgery and nearly
died on the operating table. Following the operation, he was told he'd need up
to 11 weeks of recovery time at home. But George Burns was scheduled to perform
at the Kirby in April.
"I decided that this was an
opportunity I didn't want to miss,” remembers Cardoni, setting the Burns show
as his goal to return to work.
Without Cardoni knowing it, one of the stage hands had told Burns of his recent surgery and that it was his first night back at The Kirby. Soon, Cardoni was being summoned to Burns' dressing room.
“I heard you had heart surgery,” the nearly 100 year old entertainer said. “Have a cigar, kid ...
"You've got a long way to go."
(Originally published in The Times Leader in September of 1996 as part of the paper's coverage noting the 10th anniversary of the F.M. Kirby Center for the Performing Arts.)
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