Articles Tagged With: Robert Horn

Danielle Wade (left) as Maizy and Erick Pinnick (right) as Grandpa in the first National Tour of Shucked đź“· Matthew Murphy

Kernels of Comedy: An Earful from Shucked’s Erick Pinnick

Homegrown yuks getting cornier by the second! Must mean Shucked is coming to town! Checking in with Howard County native, Erick Pinnick, we do get a little earful about the poppin’ good time that is playing in the first National Tour of Shucked.

Thank you for giving us some of your time, Erick, it’s really exciting to get to talk to you!

Erick Pinnick: No problem.

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Jake Odmark (left) as Beau and Danielle Wade (right) as Maizy in Shucked đź“·Matthew Murphy

Kernels of Comedy: An Earful from Shucked’s Jake Odmark

Corn is so fantastic because it has a-maize-ing friends! There. I told my corn joke. And it popped! And if you need more of that corny humor, you’re in luck! Shucked is coming to Baltimore, landing at Baltimore’s Hippodrome Theatre, and it’s bringing some local yokels with it! No joke and this isn’t an April Fools’ prank! We’ve had a phone-chat-interview with Jake Odmark, starring as Beau in Shucked, and we can’t wait to share it with you!

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Jake Odmark (left) as Beau and Danielle Wade (right) as Maizy in Shucked đź“·Matthew Murphy

Shucked at The National

author: Erin Tarpley

“From Farm to Fable”

What did the corn say when it received a compliment?

“Aw, shucks!”

And there are so, so many compliments to shuck around this a-maize-ing show that one could say is outstanding in its field with its whirlwind of corny puns and jokes which is simply named: Shucked.

In case you have never heard of this show,

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Evan Zimmerman

Tootsie at The National Theatre

The touring production of Tootsie, a musical spin on the classic 1982 film comedy, plays at the National Theatre from Dec 7 through 12th, delivering old-fashioned, crowd-pleasing antics.

The plot concerns Michael Dorsey (Drew Becker), an NYC actor desperate to be cast in anything, who eventually auditions for a play disguised as a woman he names Dorothy Michaels. Not only is he cast but becoming “Dorothy” allows him to “access his inner female” in a way that creates both emotional growth and increasingly comic complications.  

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