Judas Priest! It’s that guy from Idol as Iscariot, with the singer from Almost Queen as Jesus (we kid you not)!
By TOM CHESEK
House is in reruns; the Basie’s about to go dark til autumn; you’ve got no gas to go any farther than the Arts Center, and the talent there just topped the $500 mark for the first time.
Is that what’s botherin’ ya, bunky? A dearth of entertainment options? Well, it’s time to take stock of the situation — community summer stock, that is, the season for which begins to heat up just about this time each year in the greater Red Bank oRBit.

Broadway bus trippers may not bat an eyelash at the prospect of Brooke Shields or Brady Bunch Brothers filling in for two-week runs in their favorite musicals, but when someone tells you that notorious American Idol runner-up Constantine Maroulis will be appearing as Judas in a local community production of Jesus Christ Superstar — with Jesus himself portrayed by the frontman for the tri-state’s pre-eminent Queen tribute act — well, you’ve just gotta spit-take your MiJovi.
It’s all true: veteran producer-director Mark Fleming (fresh off the Van Zandt-Milmore comedy Wrong Window at Brookdale Community College) will open the new summer season of his long-running Premier Theatre Company this Friday, with season-four finalist Maroulis and Freddie Mercury channeler Joe Russo in a new production of the early smash by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice.
The show, which runs nine performances through June 28, goes up at the Henderson Theatre (on the grounds of Christian Brothers Academy) off Newman Springs Road in Lincroft. As a special treat there will be opening pop/rock sets by such area performers as Rick Barry, Eric Ginsberg and musical director Anthony D’Amato. Tickets ($26 general admission) are sure to be snapped up by curious idolators; they can be reserved at the Henderson website, where you’ll also find info about upcoming Premier revivals of Damn Yankees and The Fantasticks.
Phoenix Productions returns with its smash staging of Disney’s High School Musical, just one of the summertime entertainments going up this weekend in and around Red Bank.
Well, it might not star Clay Aiken, or even Harry Connick Jr. (who toplined the cast in a recent Broadway revival), but George Abbott’s 1950s musical The Pajama Game — with songs by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross — is a fun outing that’s more than just a relic of its Mad-Men era.
Built around the unusual theme of love in the midst of labor unrest at a garment factory, the tunefest comes to the Barn Theatre at Thompson Park (just a note’s throw from the Henderson) as the first in the Monmouth County Parks System’s traditional summer slate of shows. It goes up next Friday (June 20) at 8p, it continues with six performances through June 29. Tickets ($15 general admission) may be reserved by by calling 732.842.4000, ext. 1. While you’re on the line, ask about their upcoming production of Seussical: The Musical, as well as their children’s theatre series.
It was just last year that one of the savvy moms at Red Bank-based Phoenix Productions convinced the board of the venerable nonprofessional company to try a one-weekend run with a little thing called Disney’s High School Musical, a TV-spawned sensation that most of the older folks in the troupe were completely unfamiliar with.
One sold-out run later, the board appears to have gotten the message that HSM is a force of nature to be reckoned with, one engineered to sell great big blocks of family-excursion seats. With producer Wendy Dobbs and director Tom Frascatore along for the ride once more, the tween-pop tale of cliques, clulessness and cleanybopper love takes to the Basie boards this Friday for a six-show run that continues through June 22. Tickets ($22-29) may be reserved at the Count Basie website.
Phoenix will return in November with a grand-scale take on another Disney property, Beauty and the Beast, at the newly refurbished Count.
More to come in the not too far-flung future, including the latest in director John Bukovec’s Summer Shakespeare Festival productions (this one a starlit look at the starcrossed lovers Romeo and Juliet) outdoors at Brookdale Community College; plus a promising production of the inside-out sex farce Noises Off at the underutilized Holmdel Theatre Company, where famed actor and educator John Astin will deliver a pair of one-man fundraiser performances later this month.




















Constantine Maroulis is a seasoned and trained theater professional. Unfortunately, American Idol did not highlight his varied talents so many people only know him as a rocker.
It should be an awesome show. I've seen him in two Broadway shows already, and he was amazing doing both comedy and drama.
Check it out. I think you'd be surprised. He is very passionate about theater, and particularly this musical.
Although I was a fan of Constantine Maroulis during his run on American Idol, I confess to having been astounded when I heard his beautiful, powerful 'theater' voice in "Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris" off-Broadway last year.
Nor is he a newcomer to JCS, having played both leading roles in his Boston Conservatory days.
This should be a terrific show.
Go see JCS and then come back and critique it. If then, you still think Constantine's not a powerful and passionate Judas, I'll respect your opinion as we are all entitled. But.. until then I don't think anyone has the right to set themselves up as judge and jury of an actor they've never seen perform.
hello how are you have you got any more freinds
helllo
Jay - anyone is allowed to judge anything they want whenever they want–before, after or during–and you are not the bestowed person to tell people what they can and cannot judge. You don't hear how assinine it sounds when you rush to his defense like that. The not so nice stuff must hurt him to read but the defensive comments must make him cringe and want to die a slow and painful death. Better to shut your mouth then act like his mommy.
I saw the show. Constantine is amazing.