A little off-topic, but this is a promotional photo from the off-Broadway show COOKIN’!
They’re all playing cooks. In the show, they’re cooking a big Korean dinner, rhythmically. (Contain your excitement. CONTAIN IT!) And they put the woman in a chef’s coat with the belly cut out. You know, where the burners are.
I can’t even begin to express how stupid that is.
{ 21 comments }
P O'Neill 02.03.05 at 6:07 pm
Well, the Iron Chef mania has been headed towards Reductio ad absurdum for some time now.
Kieran Healy 02.03.05 at 6:25 pm
They should call it “Cats” instead.
Sorry! Sorry. I completely apologise.
ogged 02.03.05 at 6:25 pm
And there’s no such thing as “warp speed,” either.
dave 02.03.05 at 6:27 pm
I also can’t imagine a kitchen where those heels would be of any benefit.
Ted Barlow 02.03.05 at 6:36 pm
Why do you hate America, Ogged?
edhall 02.03.05 at 7:30 pm
You probably criticize the costumes in Cirque du Soleil, too. “No one would wear that in real life!”
Edith 02.03.05 at 7:41 pm
We actually saw Cookin’ at the New Victory Theater on 42nd Street, before the show moved off-Broadway – my kids loved it. Competitive percussive cabbage-chopping needs to be seen to be believed.
The New Vic is a family- and kid-oriented theater – I don’t remember the belly cut-out and the heels in the posters for that version of the show :-)
Andrew McManama-Smith 02.03.05 at 7:46 pm
You are just hating because you don’t look that hot when you are cooking (sorry cookin’).
Seriously though, I saw this in Korea about 5 years ago and what I saw before I feel asleep was entertaining.
Bill Gardner 02.03.05 at 8:24 pm
No, that’s an authentic hwrang do costume of the Tu’p`ac Sh:ak’ur period.
Kieran Healy 02.03.05 at 8:44 pm
Seriously though, I saw this in Korea about 5 years ago and what I saw before I feel asleep was entertaining.
Now _that’s_ what I call an endorsement! They should run that in the newspaper ads for the show.
yabonn 02.03.05 at 9:44 pm
_they’re cooking a big Korean dinner_
Bulgogi.
Bibimpap!
KIMCHI for teh win !!
Whatever this show is, can’t be all bad.
beowulf888 02.03.05 at 9:48 pm
Ahhh, but notice that the woman in that picture is the only character NOT holding a knife, but, instead, she’s holding two phallic shaped pepper mills. And they’re (gasp!) pointed down. Deconstruct this, anyone?
dsquared 02.03.05 at 9:53 pm
It’s rather like the chainmail bikini, beloved of those science fiction novels that my otherwise highly intelligent co-authors read. Can anyone think of a situation in which you’d want to be wearing chainmail, but not want to have it covering your entire body?
yabonn 02.03.05 at 9:57 pm
Can anyone think of a situation in which you’d want to be wearing chainmail, but not want to have it covering your entire body?
Yes. But it involves a hamster, and i can’t give all the details here.
Andrew McManama-Smith 02.03.05 at 10:07 pm
Hey, but I fell asleep during LOTR ROTK also, and what I saw before that happened was pretty entertaining…
D^2, I can think of many different scenarios… It just depends on what sort of purpose you intend the chain mail for…
Mary Kay 02.03.05 at 10:12 pm
dsquared: I’m sorry, but chain mail bikinis are for fantasy novels. Science fiction novels have brass brassieres. HTH
MKK
jr 02.04.05 at 12:28 am
I saw this in London several years ago (we had our children with us and thought it would be a good family outing). It was stupid and loud. The kids fell asleep.
Ted Barlow 02.04.05 at 5:43 pm
The women in the chain-mail bikinis inevitably seem to have a powerful anti-gravity field affecting their breasts. Perhaps the chain-mail is simply ballast.
Dan 02.04.05 at 9:24 pm
…she’s holding two phallic shaped pepper mills. And they’re (gasp!) pointed down.
I don’t think I could deconstruct it, but it appears she is… peppering?
HP 02.04.05 at 9:45 pm
I can’t speak for Cookin’!, but one thing that shows like Stomp, Blast, and anything involving Michael Flately have in common is this: These are all based on extremely dorky, nerdy activities (drum line, bugle corps/brass band, Irish dance) engaged in by middle class children, which typically involve competitions and lots of parental involvement, dressed up by Broadway costumers and presented as entertainment. (I’m just waiting for Flags! to come to the theater.) To the extent that these extravaganzas make marching band or pep squad look “cool,” there’s a built-in audience.
Full Disclosure: I was the featured trumpet soloist when Kokomo-Hayworth placed 5th at Marching Bands of America in 1980. It was on PBS and everything. Believe you me, I was being recruited heavily by all the major drum corps. It was pretty intense, but in the end I didn’t want anything to take time away from Stage Band.
Doug 02.05.05 at 6:42 pm
Yeah, all that exposed midriff and not nearly enough cleavage going. What were the costume designers thinking??
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