The History of Colder by the Lake
Colder by the Lake
was formed quite a few years ago, when an amphibious life form with a sense
of humor not appreciated by his fellow sea creatures crawled out of the
Indian Ocean, where he perched on the back of a big golden man named Atleast,
who stood on the shell of a giant turtle, held up by four rubies as big as
rubies would have to be to hold up a giant turtle standing under a giant
man. Under the rubies were the god Ganesh, a sub sandwich with turkey and
smoked gouda, and the blueprints for the Atari 1600.
Years after the
crawling-out-of-the-ooze episode, Margi Preus, a refugee from points east
via points near west, stumbled into town one day and declared it not big
enough or funny enough. Soon one of these deficiencies was remedied when she
and cohort Jim Calder taught a commedia del'arte course at
the .. This was in 1983, when no one had a job
and few saw this is an immediate problem, leaving plenty of time and human
resources to do things like take classes in improvisational theatre and take
the resulting ideas to their inevitable and illogical conclusion and form a
comedy theatre troupe. But Margi had worked her evil magic in previous
small-to-medium sized Midwestern cities, namely LaCrosse, WI, home of Heart
of LaCrosse Comedy Theatre. (Heart of LaCrosse is no longer active; however,
former Colder by the Lake company member Howard Bell moved to LaCrosse in
1996; coincidence?)
So we staged "Of
Ice and Men (or, Real Vikings Don't Eat Lutefisk)" at, believe it or not,
Sir Benedict's Tavern on the Lake (that big table with the church bench
seats on the upper level near the doors to the bathrooms? That's where the
stage was). The group moved on to do shows at the Orpheum Cafe (201 E.
Superior Street in downtown Duluth, where Browsers N'etc. is now located),
Fitger's Spirit of the North Theatre, the Norshor Theatre, and just about
every other venue in the Twin Ports area that has overhead lighting and room
for chairs.
Colder by the Lake
spent the first 10 years doing mainly sketch/revue style comedy, and since
then broadened its focus (focii?) to include full-length plays, adaptations
of Dickens, Aristophanes and Shakespeare, collaborations with other performing arts
groups including the Lake Superior Chamber Orchestra, Minnesota Access
Theatre, and the College of St. Scholastica, commissioned shows for
corporations and nonprofits, live radio variety shows, and an original comic
opera.
In 2001, Margi
Preus took early retirement according to the little known "rule of 21"
(years of service + number of children). Buoyed by the generous retirement
package offered by Colder by the Lake, Margi lives today in Splendor, a
small neighborhood near Hartley Field. Longtime company member Jean Sramek
was promoted to the position of artistic director during a
solemn ceremony known as The Passing of the Cardboard Boxes.
What a long,
strange, etc., etc., etc. What does the future hold? If any of us played
poker, we'd say it held a straight flush or some aces or whatever is good to
hold in poker. But let's just say that we've done pretty well over these 20
years and we're not quitting any time soon.
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