With the 34th Biograph softball reunion party on the horizon (Sat., May 4), here's a flashback to a 1990 newspaper article that includes some related Fan District Softball League tomfoolery:
REA GIVES BIZARRE EDGE TO BLAB'S 'MONDO SOFTBALL'
Richmond News Leader
Date: 07-05-1990
Byline: Paul Woody
Years
ago when Terry Rea was manager of the now defunct Biograph Theatre, he
organized a softball team for the Fan League. But this wasn't just any
team. This team had two illegal French aliens.
"One
spoke no English at all," Rea said. "Neither had ever seen a baseball
game. But they went out to a yard sale, found some funky `50s uniforms
and they were a laugh riot."
The
Biograph team also had a life-size, cardboard figure of Mr. Natural, a
comic-book character created by R. Crumb of Zap Comics. Rea and his
teammates took Mr. Natural to every game. They would carry him onto the
field and chant to him.
"Some thought it was funny," Rea said. "Some thought we were mocking them. Some thought we were mocking the game."
All
Rea was trying to do was enjoy a little softball and make the team and
the league, "a rolling comedy show," he said. "I'm not sure everybody on
the team was 100 percent behind me on that."
Rea began playing softball in 1976, but now, at the age of 42, he's in semi-retirement.
"I
try in the offseason to lower my expectations, but I'm losing my game
faster than I can lower my expectations," Rea said. "That drives
everyone out of the game except the most fanatic."
Rea,
however, is hardly done with softball. In fact, he may be contributing
more to the game than he ever did as a player. Rea, a freelance graphic
artist by trade, is the originator, host and creative force behind
"Mondo Softball," a weekly, one-hour talk and call-in show seen Tuesday
nights at 9 o'clock on BLAB-TV (Continental Ch. 7, Storer Ch. 8).
Mondo is Italian for "world." Rea took it from the drive-in movies of his youth that were all the rage.
"There
were a bunch of `Mondo' films," Rea said. "Then, you started to see it
thrown in front of almost anything to give it a bizarre connotation.
People just know it has some sort of bizarre edge to it.
"And, of course, I'm using that."
Rea isn't the host of "Mondo Softball."
The
host is Mutt deVille, a man of mysterious origin who always wears a
baseball cap, sunglasses and softball jersey. Mutt deVille is Rea's
alter ego. Mutt deVille was created by Rea as a pen name for the sports
writer in Slant, the twice-monthly newsletter of commentary that Rea
publishes, writes and edits.
DeVille
initially existed to give some diversity to the pages of Slant, "and to
create the illusion there was a staff of writers," Rea said. But the
more Rea wrote as deVille, the more he liked it.
"My
name, and my approach to things, like anyone who stays in his hometown
long enough, carries a certain amount of baggage with it," Rea said. "I
could move more freely as Mutt deVille.
"When
I decided to do a show and it was a sports show, it seemed like a good
idea to use Mutt. That led to the idea that Mutt should become a
character and the time I was on camera should be a performance. Mutt is a
device to make me feel at ease on stage."
"Mondo
Softball" is not like any other show you'll see on BLAB. It's a
one-hour play, softball as kitsch. It's part news -- standings, results
and tournament highlights provided by Paul Joyce, the `field' reporter
and a veteran local player -- part conversation with a guest, questions
from callers and wisecracks, subtle humor and outright gags whenever
possible. It's clever, and it's as entertaining as a show on
recreational softball can be.
Rea
said he has borrowed from shows he's seen. From the "Tonight Show," Rea
took the idea that Johnny Carson is at his best and funniest when
things go wrong.
"Part of
live TV is that there are a lot of glitches," Rea said. "I've tried to
incorporate the production values of an old `50s sci-fi movie and try to
go with whatever goes wrong."
Each
week, there is a great uproar over the magic word. If a caller says the
word, he or she receives a $20 gift certificate from a local
restaurant. The magic word is straight out of "You Bet Your Life" with
the late Groucho Marx. In that show, it was called the secret word.
"If you're going to steal, steal from the best," Rea said.
Part of the attraction of "Mondo Softball" is that you can never be sure what will happen next.
"I think some people watch shows on BLAB just to see if the set will fall over," Rea said.
Rea
brings a unique element of surprise to the screen. He isn't afraid to
take a chance or play a little joke. When he was manager of the
Biograph, a repertory theatre located near Virginia Commonwealth
University, Rea once offered free admission to "The Devil and Miss
Jones."
The line for the
show, which most believed to be a well-known X-rated movie, stretched
around the 800 block of West Grace Street. But the X-rated movie was
"The Devil in Miss Jones." "The Devil and Miss Jones" was a 1941 comedy.
"Most people thought it was funny," Rea said. "But you always have some who get mad about something like that."
"Mondo Softball" has something of the same problem. Hard-core softball players don't always appreciate Rea's attempts at humor.
"I've
heard some don't like Mutt's approach," Rea said. "But that's the
reason Paul is there. Overall, though, the reaction I get is that they
(the hardcore players) like Mutt."
BLAB-TV
likes Mutt so much that another show already is in the works. "Mondo
Pops," covering everything from sports to who knows what will premier
this fall. It should be an interesting experience. Who knows, maybe even
Mr. Natural will make an appearance.
*
Note: To see a 1990 video promo for Mondo Softball click
here.
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