Posts filed under Travelogues

Travelogue: Ada, OK and Stillwater, OK

[Once a month we have a company member report to us about life on the road. This month, it's Rachel Bouton sharing with us her experiences on our recent Oklahoma tours to East Central University in Ada, OK and Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, OK.]


Rachel Bouton is A-OK with our Oklahoma audience member!

Rachel Bouton is A-OK with our Oklahoma audience member!

From 2009-2011 I found myself living in Oklahoma. The reason I ended up in Oklahoma is a tale for another day, but suffice it to say that reason had a name. A male name. A name that is now in my phone as “EX BOYFRIEND! DO NOT TEXT." 

I hadn’t been back to OK since I left for NYC in 2011, but last weekend I found myself on a flight back to the red dirt state waxing more than a little nostalgic. My time in OK was formative to say the least - I made some of the best friends I’ll ever know, lived alone for the first time, ran my first (and last) marathon, got a cat, ate a lot of really unhealthy and amazing food (you can literally deep fry anything), and discovered improv. [Editor's Note: Rachel's Oklahoma City eating picks are in this blog post.]

What’s that you say? Oklahoma is where I first started doing improv? But how can you improvise in the middle of a cow field? That’s all they have there right? Cows and fields?

Wrong. Very very wrong.

Sure, they have cows in fields, but they also have hip restaurants, a growing independent art and film scene, and a thriving comedy community fostered by the amazing people at OKC Improv, where 7 years ago, I signed up for my first improv class.

So much of what I loved about Oklahoma was simply how surprising it can be. Poor Daniel [Tepper] and Christine [Pynn] had to endure several hours-long car rides in which I went on and on about all the amazing things about Oklahoma that are “not what you would expect.” I’ll give you a taste here:

Oklahoma has a thriving film industry thanks to some serious tax breaks for filmmakers who shoot in Oklahoma. Many of my improv friends made part of their living being in films shot in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma isn’t just a bunch of cowboys and cows (though it is the home of the World Cow Chip Throwing Championship and the Cowboy Hall of Fame). There are also loads of armadillos there (we saw a few by the side of the road after they had become arma-DEAD-los).

Oklahoma has tons of great restaurants. I’ve included a list of my favs at the end of this post.

The band The Flaming Lips is from Oklahoma City and every Halloween they lead the March of 1000 Flaming Skeletons. People dress up in skeleton costumes and march down the OKC streets carrying torches while the lead singer Wayne Coyne rolls around the city in a human size hamster ball.

You can still smoke in bars in Oklahoma (I’m not a fan of this one, but it’s good to know. Leave your coat in the car or it will smell like smoke for a month).

Oklahoma experiences more earthquakes than anywhere in the world. THE WORLD! Scientists attribute the quakes to fracking and the number of quakes went up from 2 in 2008 to 680 in 2015!

The people really are as friendly and welcoming as you think they will be. When I lived there I learned that everyone talks to strangers. So I did too and a lot of those strangers become lifelong friends.

Our weekend in OK was far too brief. We had great shows in Ada and Stillwater, and I got to teach a workshop at OSU for a group of talented and hilarious students which was a real highlight. I made Daniel and Christine eat at my favorite taco place in the world, and I explained to everyone in my car what “Okie Noodling” is (Google it). I even got to sit in with OKC Improv and do a two-person improv set with one of my first improv idols! But perhaps the best part of the trip was simply seeing so many of the wonderful people that made my time in Oklahoma so incredibly rich.

Until we meet again, stay classy Oklahoma.


Highlights from our Oklahoma Shows

Winning Songs

Ada, OK

Stillwater, OK

Posted on February 1, 2016 and filed under Travelogues.

Travelogue: Germantown, MD

Marc T. Engberg working the Red Carpet in Germantown, MD

Marc T. Engberg working the Red Carpet in Germantown, MD

Note: Once a month a company member shares with us unique experiences on the road. This month, it's emcee Marc T. Engberg telling us about Germantown, MD,


What can I say about Germantown, MD that hasn’t already been said? Everything. Precisely everything.

Let’s start with our visit, en route, to Chaps Pit Beef, a celebrated barbecue dive on the unvarnished outskirts of Baltimore, where several of us cast members stopped for a beefy pre-pre-show déjeuner. When he's not tickling the ivories with gusto and brilliance, pianist Eric March is scouring the nation for unique and unforgettable hole-in-the-wall eateries. As Deb Rabbai, our eventual Germantown winner, pointed out, Eric has demonstrated a particular knack for uncovering these sorts of places, and he always delivers. Chaps Pit Beef did not disappoint, and we were all delighted to gorge ourselves on hearty sandwiches and obscene gobs of delicious sauce. Everyone knows that of all the food groups, sauce is the most essential.  What's more, we scored the perfect window table with a nice view of the Pulaski Highway and the neighboring strip club. Imagine enjoying the best Reuben of your life on the set of The Wire. That's Chaps. 

A sandwich from Chaps Pit Beef. 

A sandwich from Chaps Pit Beef. 

Germantown, which is situated about 15 miles outside the Beltway, is perhaps best known for being Maryland’s second largest city and the hometown of two of the members of Hootie & the Blowfish. The people of Germantown were an amiable lot, which you wouldn’t necessarily expect based on the name, and the BlackRock Center for the Arts is a beautiful, intimate venue – ideal for comedy. Not a bad seat in the joint! The audience was warm, welcoming, and on board from the first note, and we all had a fun time traveling back to 18th century England for a one-time-only production of the musical "Almost Like Love" featuring the hit song "I Love You, Brian." As we all know, Brian is one of the great names to come out of 18th century England - right up there with Trevor, Jason, and Stacy.

Most of the comedy venues in New York City are total dumps. But when you go out on the road, you get to perform in these beautiful, gleaming performance spaces, and the BlackRock Center was no exception. What a gem. We met some great folks after the show, and it seemed like they wanted us back. Hey, it’s a different show every time! We’d love to come back.

The next day, fellow cast member, Matt Giroveanu, and I drove back up to NYC doing impressions and characters the whole way. It was a whole back and forth. I spent four hours in the car with Matt and still don’t know what his real voice sounds like.

Thank you, Germantown!

Producer's Spotlight: Creating a Rich Life on the Road

Producer and emcee Greg Triggs takes advantage of time spent traveling to get together with far away friends.

Producer and emcee Greg Triggs takes advantage of time spent traveling to get together with far away friends.

Editor's Note: Once a month we ask the producers of Broadway's Next Hit Musical to write for the blog. Greg Triggs (emcee and producer) travels extensively for both Broadway's Next and other projects. Here is how he creates a fulfilling life despite the grind of travel.

I love everything about touring to new places with Broadway’s Next – the camaraderie of the cast, the cool local restaurants, being inspired by new ideas, the way too frequent flyer miles and observing what for better or worse makes each community we visit unique. I’ve strolled the Walk of Governors in WA.  I’ve seen a 3-legged dog in Fallon, NV.   I’ve even met the Mayor of Opelousas, LA.

The best part of touring is the reunions that happen along the way.

I’ve been able to spend the day with my college roommate Liz in Parker, CO.  I’ve performed for my siblings in Madison, WI.  In Olympia, WA I was able to hang out the kids of dear friends who happen to live on the other side of the country.

Yesterday in Hammond, LA I got to be interviewed by a young reporter just starting out. I learned that their paper the Daily Star isn’t published daily.  I discovered that their cypress forest was overrun by little rat like rodents with orange teeth called Nutrias.  When I go back home I will take comfort in good old run of the mill yellow toothed NYC rats.

Best of all, the trip provided a chance to see my good friend Mary Ellen Chamberlin, a retired music teacher from Mississippi.  Her many accomplishments include being one of Britney Spears’ choral teachers.  Mary Ellen drove over two hours listening to Sirius Escape in her Buick to see the show.

After the show, we went to a local restaurant called the Mariner Inn.  Nice place. Mary Ellen enjoyed a Popeye Pork Chop Platter topped with cheese sauce and spinach.  I had the best onion rings this side of a rat with orange teeth.

Mary Ellen and I had a great time catching up. I got to meet her new beau Dr. Dan.  They’re a perfect match.  She told me about her son’s recent wedding.  I saw pictures of her grandchildren. We reminisced about walking down Broadway doing the first post 9/11 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade – a job I wasn’t sure I could do.  Mary Ellen’s confidence in me helped me believe I could and so I did.

Thank you Hammond, LA.


See Greg Triggs at the 2016 NYC Phonys


Posted on November 18, 2015 and filed under Producer Spotlight, Travelogues.

Travelogue : Traverse City

Megan Reilly backstage before the show in Traverse City, MI at the City Opera House. (Note: Rachel Bouton is behind her)

Megan Reilly backstage before the show in Traverse City, MI at the City Opera House. (Note: Rachel Bouton is behind her)

Note: Once a month we have a company member write a post about life on the road. Here is cast member Megan Reilly talking about her experience in Traverse City, Michigan October 23 - 25th.

After getting blessed on the plane by a Michigan native, I exited the airport into the Grand Rapids crispness with a huge smile on my face. From beginning to end, this tour was the true winner! It started with a delicious sandwich from the epic Fatty Lumpkins Sandwich Shack. It was a shack on the lake full of sassy ladies who were toasting bread and spreading garlic mayo like total bosses. I could have showed self-control and saved the second half of my sandwich for later, but it was too divine to put down. So, I ate it all and was constipated for the remainder of the trip.

The fall foliage in Michigan is incomparable. Mother Nature straight up gave this land the gift of rolling hills and vibrant leaves. We would be mid-conversation and someone in Car 2 would exclain "LOOK AT THOSE COLORS!" We could not control our appreciation for this beautiful state.

Traverse City is a magestic little town right on one of the great lakes. Now, this lake being called "great" is no exaggeration. It is sprawling, glassy and so serene. Deb, Rachel and I spent part of our afternoon before our show chatting on the beaches. We talked about life, we laughed about life and we questioned life. Then it started to pour on us so we ran to the theater for a wonderful show that evening.

Why did I love Michigain so much, you ask? Well, the people were lovely, the food was on-point and I got to pet a pig named Violet and a French Bulldog named Zoe in the same 5 minutes. What more can a girl ask for?

Peace, Love and Improv...Reilly.

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Posted on October 27, 2015 and filed under Travelogues.