Theatrius Archive
  • Now Playing
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!
  • Search Icon

Theatrius Archive

Archive for Theatrius.com

“Kipling Hotel” Invites Laughter & Love, at The Marsh, S.F.

“Kipling Hotel” Invites Laughter & Love, at The Marsh, S.F.

January 13, 2018 Barry David Horwitz

Don Reed Re-Creates Characters from Oakland to UCLA

by Barry David Horwitz

When Don Reed flashes his wide, welcoming smile, the whole room lights up. Now that he’s a well-known performer on TV and in movies in L.A., he comes up to The Marsh on weekends to weave his magic at home. In “Kipling Hotel: The 80’s,” he recreates the awkward Oakland kid, afflicted with nervous blinking.

Reed, a successful UCLA grad from the 80’s, has become a recognized actor and comedian, working with Jay Leno and Lin Manuel Miranda. But he hasn’t forgotten where he comes from—and he brings us fun, warmth, and hope, as he shares his funny show about working at The Kipling Hotel, as a college student. The son of a pimp in East Oakland, he is smart with a comedian’s touch—that warm smile, a quick wit, and the will to survive.

Don Reed at The Kipling Hotel

Reed can bend his rubbery, flexible features into any shape to create rich, hilarious characters. He imitates a cocaine-sniffing buddy’s “squirrel face,” a 90 year old Holocaust survivor’s stories, and an L.A. policeman who grabs the young man at a drug bust.

Reed says, “When I was like 20 years old, I got recruited to UCLA on a Speech and Debate scholarship—a partial scholarship. But nobody told me that “partial” scholarship, loosely translated, actually stands for “Not Enough Fuckin’ Money”!

Don Reed at the Kipling Hotel, in L.A.

When he first arrives at UCLA, he cannot afford a room. So, he couch-surfs at dorm parties, until students become suspicious. So, he moves onto the women’s bathroom’s “period” couch, living in fear of hearing: “Suzanne, there’s a Negro in the women’s restroom.”

So, Reed tries a gig as a Chocolate Chip Cookie and then tries to be a stripper. Finally, he finds work at the wrong end of Beverly Hills, working and living at the Kipling Hotel, a run-down home for old folks. Here, he learns to listen and understand the lives of people unlike himself. He learns to appreciate his own gifts by listening to the complaints of 80 and 90 year olds who have lessons to teach. Reed, the supreme mimic, brings warmth and compassion to all the wonderful people he recalls.

Don Reed serving at The Kipling in L.A.

We have so much fun re-living those college days through the physical recreation of the youthful Reed. He dances, he becomes many people, and he befriends George, a Holocaust survivor. He bonds with George, skillfully resurrecting the Yiddish accent: “He plotzes in my seat. He’s giving me the shpilkes, this guy. This guy’s giving me the shpilkes.” Reed makes a place for himself at the Kipling Hotel, while powering through a UCLA degree.

We wonder what would happen to a sharp, smart guy from Oakland, today. How would he get through University, with these high tuition charges?

In the 80’s, part-time jobs could get you through school because huge student “loans” had not yet enslaved students. The University of California was FREE to everyone who could get admitted. I attended for years as a graduate student–and never paid a dime.

In fact, “tuition” is still BANNED by the State Constitution! But Ronald Reagan brought in tuition anyway—by naming it “fees”! Why isn’t that illegal?

Reagan’s real reason for cutting state funds and charging “fees” was to keep poor kids OUT of the Universities after the “revolts” of the 70s.  Don Reed and many others (including myself) would not be able to attend with the high rates, today.

When he finds himself in the wrong place or the wrong time, Don Reed adjusts like the smart Oakland youth he is, finding a way to thrive. Young people who see Reed’s show will be inspired by the way he makes starlight out of misfortune. Don Reed is a smash hit!

As Sammy Davis Jr. once said to him: “Dig Yourself!”

“Kipling Hotel: The 80s” written & performed by Don Reed, at The Marsh, San Francisco, Saturdays & Sundays, through Saturday, January 27, 2018. Info: themarsh.org

Cast: Don Reed


Plays

Post navigation

NEXT
Evelyn Arevalo
PREVIOUS
Joan Kirsti-Brennan
Comments are closed.

Menu

  • Now Playing
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!

BLM

Black Lives Matter

Current Shows

  • “What Is To Be Done?” Fights Depression & Fascism, Brilliantly—at The Marsh
  • “Twelfth Night or, What You Will” Highlights Our Humanity—at The Public
  • “The Tempest” Mixes Magic, Old Feuds, & New Love—at Marin Shakes
  • “The Return” Investigates Repression & War—at Golden Thread
  • “Some Things You Should Know About My Mom” Summons the 60s—at Exit
  • “Scat-ter Brain: The Music of ADHD” Celebrates Spontaneity—at The Marsh
  • “The Return” Reveals the Cost of Forbidden Love—at Golden Thread
  • “Home?”: Palestinian Woman Enacts Her Amazing Story, Brilliantly—at Z Space
  • “Jurassiq Parq, A Musiqal Parody”: A Wild Joy Ride!—at Oasis
  • “Night Driver”: Hong Kong Princess Navigates S.F. Queer Scene—at The Marsh
  • “The Magnolia Ballet”: A Bold, Black Father-Son Love Story—at Shotgun: Video to Sept. 6
  • “Les Blancs” Delivers the Truth about Colonialism—at OTP
  • “Execution of Justice” Exposes the ‘Twinkie’ Defense—at Chautauqua
  • “Les Blancs” Exposes Hypocrisy of Imperialism—at OTP
  • “Into the Breeches!”: Wartime Women Take Center Stage–at Masquers

About us:

If you want to see the best plays & performances around the San Francisco Bay or beyond, read our reviews. We promise to give you a true report on the best shows.
Bay Area Critics Circle

Barry David Horwitz, Editor of Theatrius, is a Voting Member of the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics' Circle, SFBATCC.

© 2025   All Rights Reserved.