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Donna Sachet has hosted âSongs of the Seasonâ for 15 years now, benefiting the AIDS Emergency Fund, which has given over $25 million to people with AIDS. It has become a holiday tradition among the truly cool Yule school. The Rob Evans Quartet opened the show with jazzy sounds. Then Basic Black, a fabulous trio of Shirley Smallwood, Mike Hardwick, and Bill Bunn, said, âLetâs remember those who canât be home for Christmas,â and sang Oleta Adamsâ âGet Here If You Can;â Dianne Reevesâ âChristmas Time Is Here,â (âIf only we could see such spirit through the yearâ); and (taking us all to church) âGo Tell It on the Mountain.â Donna, creator of âSongs of the Season,â regally strolled up to the stage in a floor length red velvet gown trimmed with white faux fur, gracefully dragging an eight-foot train behind her. She sang âAll I Need for Christmas Is You,â (âWeâll spend the day exchanging kisses, smile and say, âWhat a Christmas this is!). Donna noted that the Plush Room will soon be closed to cabaret performances, so theyâll have to look for a new venue next âSongs of the Season.â She sang the lovely âJust in Time for Christmasâ (âyou showed me what Christmas is all aboutâ).
Kathleen Antonia (fresh from her brilliant new CD release, Next Time, a bakerâs dozen of delicious standards to be sure), sang her not so traditional holiday song, âHeâs Just My Billâ from Showboat, kidding, âMy mother used to tell me to not be lonely during the holidays - lower my standards). And changing the mood, she sang âSanta Babyâ with two of her friends, Soul Sista Shakti, and Troy Ziel, where the man gaily sang, âThink of all the fellas that I havenât kissed.â Wowzers!
The two who have appeared the most times at Donnaâs âSongsâ are T.J. and Sheba of the Imperial Court, with their majestic voices. They sang mostly a cappella âFrom a Distanceâ also known as âGod Is Watching Usâ (heavy lyrics: âyou look like my friend, even though we are at war. I donât know what all this fighting is forâ). They sang and dedicated âLittle Drummer Boyâ to the late, great Jo-Carol, a beautiful songstress taken too soon from us, suffering a sudden brain aneurism. There wasnât a dry eye in the house when the duo sang a real tearjerker about a poor little waif who wanted to âBuy These Shoesâ for his dying mother, so she would look pretty when she went to see Jesus that night. Connie Champagne (wearing the specially designed red dress made for her by Chris March â of TVâs âProject Runwayâ â for the spoof, Christmas with the Crawfords), sang her revised Christmas medley, âLet It Snowâ to the tune of The Beatlesâ âLet It Be.â We even got to sing along with the chorus. Connie showed her expertise at putting down a very drunk heckler, sniping, âOh yes, Marga Gomez warned me about the drunk guy in the front row!â She finished with âHave Yourself a Merry Little Christmasâ and making âthe yuletide GAY.â Donna closed the first act with a new outfit, new wig, and new old favorite, âRudolph the Bashful Schoolboy.â Thatâs right, this was a takeoff on the reindeer song, but about a boy shunned from playing games because he was gay. But eventually everyone shouted out with glee. Donna wanted to do a Hanukkah song, âbut they were all in the minor key.â So she found a happier tune, âI Like a Lotta Latkes.â She then sang âChristmas ClichĂ©sâ and a very depressing, âMerry Christmas to Meâ about another season spent alone and sad. We were about ready to open a vein, when she thankfully followed with âHard Candy Christmasâ from Best Little Whorehouse (âI wonât let sorrow get me downâ). She then dueted with Queen Cougar in âThe Christmas Song,â better known as âChestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire.â Cougar then soloed with Karen Carpentersâ âMerry Christmas, Darling.â With her big bold voice and superb comic timing, Irene Soderberg burst into âHere Comes Santa Clausâ with her special naughty lyrics, âbells are ringing, men are singing, everyoneâs happy and gay; so jump in bed and give some head.â She then put on a curly girly Baby Jane Hudson wig and did a dead-on impression of Bette Davis singing (shouting, actually) âWalking in a Winter Wonderlandâ to her sister Blanche, whose wheelchair was apparently SKIDDING through the snow. Regarding Miss Crawfordâs demise, she sang, âDonât be afraid; Joan has been laid, far beneath the Winter Wonderland.â Irene joked, âI lost 90 pounds. Boy, was I glad to get that Paris Hilton off my back!â She spoke of her love affair with another woman, finishing with âIâll Be Homo for Christmas.â
International recording artist Vicki Shepard wore a red feather wig-hat with twinkling lights and sexy hot-pants to sing a hot jazzy bluesy set about wanting Santa to âBring Me A Man for Christmas.â I can relate. Donna, dazzling like a snow princess in white sparkly gown, sang the same song that has closed every âSongs of the Seasonâ show for 15 years: âWhite Christmas,â bringing the entire cast back for their well deserved applause, singing along with Donna and the whole house.