Steve Ross: An Evening with Steve Ross

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Steve Ross

An Evening with Steve Ross

The Gaslight Theater, St. Louis, MO, October 24, 2014

Reviewed by Chuck Lavazzi for Cabaret Scenes

Steve-Ross-Gaslight-Theater-Cabaret-Scenes-Magazine_212Mabel Mercer Award–winning cabaret artist Steve Ross has a long and happy relationship with St. Louis, going back to the early days of the Grandel Cabaret Series. He was one of the first performers to be featured by Jim Dolan’s Presenters Dolan organization when it got off the ground many years ago, so his appearance last weekend at Jim’s Gaslight Cabaret Festival had something of the feel of a homecoming.

Titled An Evening with Steve Ross, the show was essentially a cavalcade of the singer/pianist’s “greatest hits.” That meant plenty of Noël Coward and Cole Porter (always a welcome combination) along with some Jerome Kern, a brace of Great American Songbook standards, and even a bit of operetta towards the end. There was also the return of his trademark Edith Piaf instrumental medley (including classics like “La vie en rose,” “Milord” and “Non, je ne regrette rien” which I’m thinking of making my theme song), and a couple of tunes from Lehar’s The Merry Widow with the lyrics Lorenz Hart wrote for the 1934 film version.

In short: a veritable cornucopia. Yes, it ran a bit long at around an hour and forty minutes, but the packed house didn’t seem to mind. I think that’s because Ross is an engaging, elegant and charming performer in the mold of Coward, whose green velvet smoking jacket (or, as he refers to it, his “non-smoking jacket”) he now wears, courtesy of the Noël Coward Society. It’s axiomatic among cabaret performers that there’s no place to hide in this field; the audience will invariably see who you truly are.
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Ross is truly a smart, generous and generally nice guy, and that comes across on stage.

Those who have seen him during one of his dozen or so previous appearances in St. Louis know that he is not of the “this is my life” school of cabaret. For him, it’s all about the music. He intertwines his singing with erudite and amusing commentary on the songs and their creators. Did you know, for example, that Coward’s wistful waltz ballad “Some Day I’ll Find You” was the theme song for the long-running radio and early TV detective show Mr. Keene, Tracer of Lost Persons?* Or that the lyricists for that quintessential 1936 hymn to the City by the Bay, “San Francisco,” were a pair of refugees from Nazi Germany?

An evening with Steve Ross, it seems, is not only entertaining, it’s informative as well.
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*Or, for you Bob and Ray fans, “Mr. Trace, Keener Than Most Persons.”

Chuck Lavazzi

Chuck Lavazzi is the producer for the arts calendars and senior performing arts critic at 88.1 KDHX, the host of The Cabaret Project’s monthly open mic night, and entirely to blame for the Stage Left blog at stageleft-stlouis.blogspot.com. He’s a member of the Music Critics Association of North America and the St. Louis Theater Circle. Chuck has been an actor, sound designer, and occasional director since roughly the Bronze Age. He has presented his cabaret show Just a Song at Twilight: the Golden Age of Vaudeville, at the Missouri History Museum and the Kranzberg Center.