David and Orson Ossman - Father/Son Double-bill!
The Firesign Theatre's
"WAITING FOR THE ELECTRICIAN
OR, SOMEONE LIKE HIM"
"DON'T CRUSH THAT DWARF
(HAND ME THE PLIERS)"
Contact Judith Walcutt at oworld@whidbey.com,
or call (360) 331-2813 for complete information.
TWO FIRESIGN THEATRE COMEDIES DEBUT MARCH 26
AT WHIDBEY ISLAND CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Two of the legendary Firesign Theatre's most celebrated surreal comedies will be presented live on
stage in their premiere performance for two shows only on Saturday March 26th at 3:00 and 7:30 PM.
A full cast of 16 players will create the first fully-staged productions of the audio originals,
specially adapted and directed for these performances by Firesign's David Ossman,
long-time Whidbey Island resident, and produced by Judith Walcutt for Otherworld Media.

The curtain-raiser is one of Firesign Theatre's best-known pieces, "WAITING FOR THE ELECTRICIAN or,
Someone Like Him," the cosmically-comic adventure of a young Traveler whose chance border-crossing
plunges him, Kafka-meets-Marx Brothers-like into a thrill-ride from Hostage to Revolutionary to
Death Row prisoner, and finally to a game-show where he must "Beat The Reaper!" or die trying.
One of Firesign's most famous albums, "DON'T CRUSH THAT DWARF, Hand Me The Pliers" provides the
basis for the second play. Elderly Hollywood actor George Tirebiter, awake at 4 AM and hungry for a
pizza place that delivers, watches himself in two different movies on all-night TV.
"High School Madness" features the teen-age George as "Porgie" who, with his buddy "Mudhead,"
tries to locate his missing High School so he can graduate. "Parallel Hell" finds " Lt. Tirebiter" trying
to escape the killing in a gritty war drama. The two films, with commercial interruptions,
channel-surf through George's memory, as his multiple movie-personalities are simultaneously
put on trial for being un-American in a time of Declared Emergency.
An exceptional cast, led by Orson Ossman in the roles created by his father, includes Michael McInerny,
Halim Dunsky, Deana Duncan, George Henny, Bif Dangerfield, Jim Scullen, Roy Feiring, Sandy O'Brien,
Damien Cortez, Mark Therien, Kate Hodges, Marissa Wilhelm, Ahna Dunn-Wilder, and Christina Atkinson.
David Ossman plays the elderly former Hollywood celebrity, "George Tirebiter."
The Firesign Theatre wrote and produced the LP album "Don't Crush That Dwarf" in 1970,
and it immediately became a favorite of High School and College kids facing the Viet Nam draft.
"Waiting For the Electrician" was written in 1967 at the height of L.A.'s Love-In Summer and released
early the next year when Firesign was playing on stage at folk-clubs. Firesign performed scenes from
"Electrician" and "Dwarf" in 1974 at Carnegie Hall. The group has frequently featured selections from
both texts on stage and, in 2001, in front of cameras for the DVD "Weirdly Cool," made for Public TV
and released by Rhino. "Dwarf" was presented in a concert reading at UCLA on April 1, 2004
with John Goodman as "George Tirebiter."
David Ossman is a founding member of the four-man Firesign. His work as actor has been showcased
at WICA, most recently as "Sir Peter Teazle" in "School for Scandal." He played poet e. e. cummings
in a cabaret-style autobiography with music, "love is a place," and Mark Twain in "A Winter Visit."
Orson Ossman has been performing in Whidbey Community and Children's theater for ten years,
and for two years at SWHS, where he is now a Junior. He has apprenticed on stage with the
Firesign and was most recently seen here in "The Music Man," "School For Scandal,"
"Pride and Prejudice" and "Bye Bye Birdie." He made his national television debut at
the age of 12, in "The Fugitive," with a featured guest appearance with Tim Daley
and has had numerous featured roles on the radio, including an NPR
special for the Millennium, opposite Walter Cronkite.
Judith Walcutt is executive producer of Otherworld Media. She and her husband David were most
recently heard covering November's Slack Key Guitar Festival on Kauai, last year's Seattle Folklife
Festival, Langley's Choochokam Festivals and hosting "Live From The Islands" at the Edgecliff.
Judith has produced a number of dramatic and musical evenings at WICA, the Grammy-nominated
"The War of the Worlds" 50th Anniversary, and a host of top-award-winning audio productions.
George Tirebiter is a long-retired Hollywood celebrity, best known for his radio programs, including
"Young Tom Edison, Railroad Detective," "The Adventures of Mark Time, Star Detective of the
Circum-Solar Federation," "Maxwell Morgan, Crime Cabby," and his long-running part as himself
in "Hollywood Madhouse." George has guest-starred at WICA several times and most recently
had a regular commentary on KSER's "Live From The Islands."
Events in Mr. Tirebiter's life were co-opted by The Firesign Theatre
when writing "Don't Crush That Dwarf."
For tickets call Whidbey Island Center for the Arts
(360) 221-8268 or go to www.wicaonline.com
Two performances only on March 26th, 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
$12 Adults, $10 students.
"Don't Crush That Dwarf/Waiting For The Electrician" press release
Previous LFTI event
Production Pictures 031213
Poster: Otherworld Media. Webmaster: Sam Longoria
© 2005 LiveFromTheIslands.com Otherworld Media All Rights Reserved.