THE KERMOND
3 GEN VARIETY SHOW
The Dunstan Playhouse. Adelaide Festival Centre. June 18-19 2014
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Warren, Alexander and Wayne Kermond |
Times change. Styles come. Styles
go but star talent never dies. It may lose its limber but The Kermond 3 Gen
Variety Show is living proof of enduring brightness and the power to light up
an audience’s life and bring a smile to their lips. 124 years of professional
show biz sparkles in the song and dance of father, Warren Kermond, son Wayne
Scott Kermond and grandson Alexander (Zan) Kermond. As their opening number
attests There’s No Business Like Show
Business and they should know. The remarkable 78 year old Warren comes from
two generations of theatre family, and he himself played the old Tivoli and
shared the stage with legendary comedian Roy Rene (Mo). Son Wayne shook the
hand of Sammy Davis Junior, who congratulated him on his dancing and said that
the business need cats like him. What chance did he have? And as for Zan, the
lithe and limber Tap Dog, well, his dye was cast from the time he was “ born in
a trunk.”
There is schmaltz and schmooze in
this showcase of song and dance with corny gags, some sleight of hand and
slapstick routines. For just over an hour and backed by a three piece band on
piano, double bass and drums father, son
and grandson strut their stuff with highlights from their years upon the stage
in a performance that revives the very best of vaudeville in an atmosphere of
family affection that swamps the audience with admiration, exhilaration and
sentiment. There is a sense of a fading art in their reminiscence, of the need
to preserve an entertainment that never sought to do more than delight and wipe
away the woes. Throughout the cavalcade of songs from Gerschwin (Crazy For You) to Hamlisch (Chorus Line); from Harnick and Bock (Fiddler On The Roof) to Bricusse and
Newley (Stop The World I Want To Get Off)
the three Kermonds take the chiefly senior audience through a century of love
and pain, struggle and success, laughter and tears and the joy that a song and
dance man brings to the world.
Titanium hips cannot quell
Warren’s tap routines. Wayne’s forward and backward flips might take his breath
away for the higher registers of Kiss
Today Goodbye from Chorus Line
but he shows what he’s got with What Kind
of Fool Am I from Stop The World I
Want To Get Off. Zan, the youngest and the tallest of the three is able to
put on the Ritz as well as any and his time with Dean Perry’s Tap Dogs has made
him a full- fledged Candy Man along with his Dad and Pop.
Audiences who recognize the songs
will feel impelled to sing along or tap their feet to the beat. There is an
infectious joy to this show, and a sentimental tribute to the song and dance
and crazy banter and magic of the old days of Vaudeville. Musical Comedy, Tap
and Showbiz have been the lifeblood of three generations of the male members of
the Kermond Family. We don’t get to see the women who also played their part in
a dynasty of song and dance. At the matinee performance before a house of
senior gen audiences, the transitions could have been slicker and the banter
quicker, but this did nothing to detract from the sheer thrill of seeing these
three top- notch hoofers tap their stuff and sell the songs the audience loved
to hear.
The Kermond 3 Gen Variety Show
is a feel-good tribute to far more than the shining talents of the three
performers. It is an accolade for the arts of Vaudeville and Variety and the
need for the Candy Man to be a part of our lives as he and she leave their footprints in the sands
of time.