Waiting for Guffman
Waiting for Guffman is a mockumentary by Christopher Guest. It stars a cast of actors who have come to form an acting troupe that has appeared in a series of Guest-directed mockumentaries.
Related Topics:
Mockumentary - Christopher Guest
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The film's title refers to Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. Note: Reading a synopsis of Godot will provide a spoiler for the film.
Related Topics:
Samuel Beckett - Waiting for Godot
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Noted on the Internet Movie Database, 'Waiting for Guffman' is a parody of the National Film Board movie 'Waiting for Fidel'. 'For Fidel' stars former Newfoundland Premier Joey Smallwood, Newfoundland Media impresario Geoff Stirling, and the director Michael Rubbo. These three men arrive in Cuba, hoping for an audience with Fidel Castro, but are unsuccessful.
Related Topics:
Joey Smallwood - Geoff Stirling - Michael Rubbo
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;See also : A Mighty Wind, Best in Show, This is Spinal Tap
Related Topics:
A Mighty Wind - Best in Show - This is Spinal Tap
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The movie is a loving parody of community theater that seems to reflect the theme of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. Set in the fictional mid-western small town of Blaine, Missouri, it chronicles the trials and tribulations of a handful of its utterly delusional and talent-free residents as they prepare and put on an amateur community musical production. The show, entitled "Red, White and Blaine," is to be performed as part of the burg's 150th anniversary celebration. From the flamboyant director Corky St. Clair (Guest) to perpetual Dairy Queen employee Libby Mae Brown (Parker Posey), the cast and crew scream incompetence.
Related Topics:
Community theater - Samuel Beckett - Waiting for Godot - Fictional - Missouri - Dairy Queen - Parker Posey
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As the story goes, St. Clair has presumably used connections gained from his "off-off-off-off" Broadway past to invite Mort Guffman, a Broadway producer, to critique "Red, White and Blaine." Corky leads the cast to believe that a positive review from Guffman could mean that the group can take their show all the way to the Great White Way.
Related Topics:
Broadway - Great White Way
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The program itself is designed to relive the history of Blaine. Blaine's founding father was apparently a buffoon incapable of differentiating the geography of middle Missouri and the Pacific coastline. We also learn why the town refers to itself rather obtusely as "the stool capital of the United States." The music contained within is a series of grating and poorly performed songs such as "Nothing Ever Happens on Mars," - a reference to the towns supposed visit by a UFO - and "Stool Boom." The DVD contains "This Bulging River," which was edited from the theatrical release.
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A central running theme to the film is the fact that St. Clair is an extremely effeminate man with stereotypically gay mannerisms but who purports to have a wife (whom nobody has ever met nor whom is ever seen). In a plot twist, he has to take over the role of one of the male leads in the play at the last minute. His multiple parts include that of a young lusty frontiersman, a heartbroken soldier, and a little boy wearing a beanie and shorts. St. Clair never sheds his dainty demeanor or lispy voice in spite of his roles, and his face is pasted with an overkill of stage rouge and eyeliner. Corky is also faced with "creating his magic" on a shoestring budget - a turn that nearly costs the cast their beloved director.
Related Topics:
Effeminate - Stereotypically
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Along with Guest and Posey, the film stars Catherine O'Hara and Fred Willard as Ron and Sheila Albertson, a pair of married travel agents and regular amateur performers who give us a little too much information at a certain wine-soaked dinner; Bob Balaban as Lloyd Miller, the increasingly frustrated musical director and only member of the bunch who is even marginally talented; Lewis Arquette as Clifford Wooley, a "long time Blaineian" and retired taxidermist who is "Red, White and Blaine's" bean-loving narrator; Matt Keeslar as the handsome and oblivious mechanic Johnny Savage who Corky goes out of his way to get into the play; and Eugene Levy as Dr. Alan Pearl, a tragically square dentist determined to discover his inner entertainer. Brian Doyle-Murray appears breifly as Savage's dad and boss who is immediately suspicious of Corky's eccentric behavior. Larry Miller plays the jovial town Mayor. Paul Dooley makes a brief cameo describing his UFO abduction and repeated probing in matter-of-fact fashion. Comedian David Cross also appears as a local expert on the alien visitation.
Related Topics:
Posey - Catherine O'Hara - Fred Willard - Bob Balaban - Lewis Arquette - Matt Keeslar - Eugene Levy - Brian Doyle-Murray - Larry Miller - David Cross
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