All for
Colbert
Hundreds watch museum 'open' and 'close'
By Bernie
Delinski
Staff Writer
October 05. 2006 3:30AM
TUSCUMBIA
Original Article
|

Cheerleaders
from Colbert County High School lead a crowd gathered in downtown
Tuscumbia in a cheer for the "Stephen Colbert Museum and Gift
Shop" for Comedy Central. DANIEL GILES/TimesDaily
|
Hundreds of local residents cheered and
laughed Wednesday to the grand opening -- and grand closing -- of
"The Stephen Colbert Museum and Gift Shop."
The
event, which will air in a future episode of Comedy Central's
news-program parody, "The Colbert Report," even featured a
"never-before scene" from "The Miracle Worker."
Mayor
Bill Shoemaker cut the red ribbon to open the museum, with actor Paul
Dinello, who plays the role of "Tad" on the show, standing
alongside him.
The entire event -- like the show itself -- was
done tongue-in-cheek, with the premise that Colbert
County was named for the show's host, Stephen
Colbert.
Residents, and even the Deshler High School band and
Colbert
County High School cheerleaders, played along.
Crewmembers
admit they were unsure how they'd be received going into the week but
were very pleased with the reception.
"It was a bit of a
crapshoot," Dinello said, while getting his picture made with
fans during a break in taping.
The area's warm and
enthusiastic reception soothed those concerns.
"This is
beyond our imagination," Dinello said. "We didn't know
whether it would be like this, or if we'd be met with an angry old
man shaking his fist at us."
Dinello obviously was
enjoying his stay. "If this keeps up, I'll never
leave."
Production members say the dates the show will
air on Comedy Central haven't been determined, but it likely will be
within a month.
It is expected to run over two or three shows,
with the ultimate joke being the museum's closing, due to lack of
interest.
In fact, the "closing" was taped earlier
Wednesday, before the "opening."
"The Colbert
Report" airs Monday through Thursday at 10:30 p.m. on Comcast
channel 66. Reruns of the show air at various times the next
day.
Opening ceremonies included filming of Deshler's band
marching across a cordoned-off section of Main Street, between Fifth
and Sixth streets.
They marched in front of the museum, at 116
Main St. The crowd joined the Colbert
County cheerleaders, who played along with a sketch in which Tad
corrects them for "mispronouncing" Colbert.
The
county's name is pronounced differently from Stephen Colbert's, and
it was a running joke throughout the day that whenever the county's
name was mentioned, it was pronounced like that of the show's
host.
The ceremony also included a scene from "The
Miracle Workers (with an "s" at the end)," which is
about Tuscumbia's
Helen
Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan. In the touching scene,
Keller is at the pump, spelling out her first words: "S-t-e-p-h-e-n
C-o-l-b-e-r-t."
The mock museum included a gift shop that
had all items "sold out" from the moment it opened.
It
also had a cardboard cutout of Colbert and his desk (which actually
was a plain table and chair), photos and drawings of Colbert in
action and a television monitor that played highlights of his
show.
Colbert made a "surprise appearance" via the
monitor, to thank the crowd for its support and for making this "one
of the happiest moments I've ever prerecorded."
Tad told
the crowd the museum would be an economic boost for the city.
He
said Colbert would save the city with the attraction.
"On
behalf of Stephen Colbert, the Stephen Colbert Museum and Gift Shop,
and myself, Tad, I'd like to say, 'You're welcome,' " he
proclaimed, to the laughter and applause of the crowd.
"It's
not every day I get to save a town, and I know you must appreciate
the opportunity for me to do so," he said, playing on the
conceitedness that the character Stephen Colbert portrays.
Some
in the crowd brought signs, including one asking Colbert to run for
president.
Another proclaimed, "Colbert
County loves Stephen; Hates Grizzlies," which alludes to an
ongoing joke on the show about Colbert's character's supposed hatred
toward and fear of bears.
Jason Aderholt, Jessie Cabler and
Falon Yates were among those shooting photos with camera phones and
cameras while enjoying the event.
"I was hoping for an
appearance on the show," said Aderholt, who had a good excuse
for being slightly late for the taping.
"I just got
through watching 'The Colbert Report' before I came here," he
said.
Bernie Delinski can be reached at 740-5739 or bernie.delinski@timesdaily.com.
|