- Terry Bohner: This is not an occult science. This is not one of those crazy systems of divination and astrology. That stuff's hooey, and you've got to have a screw loose to go in for that sort of thing. Our beliefs are fairly commonplace and simple to understand. Humankind is simply materialized color operating on the 49th vibration. You would make that conclusion walking down the street or going to the store.
- Mike LaFontaine: I worked some bills with a few Folkies, you know - "Put 'em in a cell with a long hose on him, put 'em in a cell with a long hose on him!" I used to say "If he's got a long enough hose, he's gonna have a lot of friends in the shower room." Folk audiences hated that joke.
- Leonard Crabbe: I'm a model train enthusiast.
- Amber Cole: Oh! That's great!
- [chuckles]
- Leonard Crabbe: Yes... sort of a whole layout in my basement. Very much a big passion for me, 'tis.
- Amber Cole: Yeah. Thank God for model trains.
- Leonard Crabbe: Oh, absolutely.
- Amber Cole: You know, if they didn't have the model train, they wouldn't have gotten the idea for the big trains.
- Lars Olfen: [In the meeting with Jonathan Steinbloom] The naches that I'm feeling right now... 'cause your dad was like mishpocheh to me. When I heard I got these ticket to the Folksmen, I let out a geshreeyeh, and I'm running with my friend... running around like a vilde chaye, right into the theater, in the front row! So we've got the shpilkes, 'cause we're sittin' right there... and it's a mitzvah, what your dad did, and I want to try to give that back to you. Oh keinehora, I say, and God bless him.
- Mark Shubb: [lost driving around in New York City] Do you have a map?
- Alan Barrows: I - I have a map, but I don't have it in the car.
- Jerry Palter: Oh. Were you planning to study it later, just kind of academically?
- Mitch Cohen: [while eating dinner] What is it you do, Leonard? For work?
- Leonard Crabbe: Oh, for work. I'm in the bladder management industry. I sell catheters. I have my own distribution company, Sure Flo Medical Appliances. You may have heard of it. It's actually named in tribute after my mother, her name was Florence. It's a growth industry, really, because one in three people over 60 either have a flaccid or a spastic bladder, so in a sense, every 13.5 seconds a new incontinent is born, as it were. People like you and I have what they call "leakage problems." They can be running, playing tennis, laughing, sneezing, anything. I mean, the good old constipation, you know. You have impacted fecal mass in your rectum, you find that pushing on your bladder...
- Mickey Crabbe: You know, this might make good dessert talk.
- Alan Barrows: They had no hole in the center of the record.
- Jerry Palter: No, you had to provide it yourself. A drawback.
- Alan Barrows: So, the people complained that you'd get this vinyl, of course, in those days, it was kind of up to you to center it and make the actual...
- Mark Shubb: It would teeter crazily on the little spindle.
- Alan Barrows: The hole. And that was, of course, we had no control over that aspect of it, but...
- Jerry Palter: But, they were still good records. It was a good product.
- Mark Shubb: If you punched a hole in them, you'd have a good time.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: [referring to his mother] You could say she was overly protective - I just like to think she cared about me, which she did, a lot. And I was a member of the chess team and whenever we would have chess tournaments I had to wear a protective helmet, I had to wear a football helmet. Now who knows what she was thinking? Maybe she thought that we might have fallen maybe and impaled our heads on a pointy bishop or something, I don't know.
- Lawrence E. Turpin: All right, here's your giant banjo...
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Um-hmm. It's very flat.
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Well, it doesn't look flat from in the audience.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: It has basically, no dimension to it.
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Well, it's painted to look three dimensional. If you go back there, trust me...
- Jonathan Steinbloom: But it's not painted on the back. I'm looking at the back right now. Will you look with me for a minute?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Why would it be... From the audience it's gonna look perfectly fine. And it looks three dimensional. Just go out there and take a peek.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Well, is this the real furniture or is this the rehearsal furniture?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Well, A it's not called furniture. It's a set.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Uh-huhh...
- Lawrence E. Turpin: And it's painted this way. It looks completely three dimensional from the audience, if you just go out that way, Mr. Steinbloom.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: So this is the real furniture, and this is... Is this an actual street lamp?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: I'm sure it was at one time.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Can you have an actual three dimensional object that represents the thing that it actually is, can that be next to something that it's pretending to be? Would that be okay?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Yes, it's perfectly fine. You know, I really don't have time to explain Stagecraft 101. This show starts in an hour. Now, every... everything is exactly the way you...
- Jonathan Steinbloom: And what are tho... what's tha... that... Those are lights hanging up there?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: Yes, those are lights...
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Could they fall?
- Lawrence E. Turpin: ...and that's a ceiling above us!
- Jonathan Steinbloom: But they look shaky.
- Lawrence E. Turpin: No, they're not shaky, they're perfectly...
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Is that wire? I see a wire. I see a...
- [Lawrence smacks him on the head]
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Oww!
- Terry Bohner: This flame, like all flames, represents the light and darkness. It also represents the uncertainty of life and its delicacy. It also represents a penis.
- Leonard Crabbe: [Leonard shows Mitch his model trains] This whole area here is called Crabbe Town. We've got a brothel down there above the saloon. And right down there further along I'm thinking of building a French Quarter. I've actually got a bit of French blood.
- Mitch Cohen: I would love to see this town in the autumn. I think Crabbeville in autumn would look quite magnificent. I would have made tiny little leaves, oak, poplar, maple, chestnut, and spread them across the town of Crabbeville. Magnificent.
- Leonard Crabbe: It's Crabbe Town, not Crabbeville.
- Lars Olfen: I had a garage band in Stockholm, which was a challenge in its own right, you know, to keep an instrument tuned with that temperature swing. You know, there's a block warmer for the Volvo in the garage but it's pretty cold in there in the winter. So, we played and I had a hit that you might have heard of. "Hur hänger det, mormor?" which means, "How's It Hanging, Grandma?" and it was big on the Swedish charts.
- Jerry Palter: [listening backstage to Mitch & Mickey singing "Kiss at the end of the rainbow"] I know this song. This is that really pretty one. With the kiss. Turn that up a bit. Remember, where they used to...
- Mark Shubb: The kiss.
- Jerry Palter: Wonder how they're gonna handle that.
- Mark Shubb: 5 dollars says they do it.
- Jerry Palter: You're on.
- Amber Cole: Thank God for the model trains, you know? If they didn't have the model trains they wouldn't have gotten the idea for the big trains.
- Mike LaFontaine: [about the folk singers with the deputy mayor] Hey, where's the real mayor, wha' happened? Somebody shot the mayor, but they did not shoot the deputy.
- Mitch Cohen: You know, 35 years ago, preparing for a concert meant playing "find the cobra" with the hotel chambermaid.
- Jerry Palter: We go out there, we do the song we're known for, we get it out of the way and then, 'hey, here's the icing on the cake.'
- Alan Barrows: What's the icing?
- Jerry Palter: Well the icing is the rest of the act.
- Mark Shubb: That's the cake.
- Jerry Palter: No, that's the dressing.
- Jerry Palter: Things have been going really well. We got some gigs here, working at the casinos. It has been a time of changes, but change is good. Change is life.
- [camera pulls out to reveal Mark Shubb dressed as a woman]
- Mark Shubb: It was like a great big door opening for me... Town Hall... after that concert, I realized I wanted to spend as much of the rest of my life as possible playing folk music with these gentlemen...
- Jerry Palter: Right back atcha.
- Mark Shubb: ...and I wanted to spend all of it as a woman. I came to a realization that I was - and am - a blonde, female folk singer trapped in the body of a bald, male folk singer and I had to LET ME OUT or I WOULD DIE.
- Jerry Palter: When you put it that way, it's almost poetry.
- Alan Barrows: Almost.
- Wally Fenton: We're professionals here, you see. We get ideas that help sell.
- Amber Cole: Yeah. We work together very well. You know, it's almost as like - we have one brain that we share between us.
- Alan Barrows: I always thought it was "hey nonny no, nanny ninny no" and I'm getting kind of confused with all the nannies and the ninnies.
- Jerry Palter: There's no nanny, just take that out of the equation. It's "hey nonny no, nonny ninny o".
- Mark Shubb: Iron clad rule, Alan. Nonny before ninny.
- Alan Barrows: Well, I don't sing this one anyway.
- Jerry Palter: No, so it's kind of academic.
- Mickey Crabbe: It does not seem like yesterday that Mitch and I met and started making music together. I don't know if any of you would know or even remember that Mitch and I met in the hospital. Mitch was there with his jaw wired shut after defending the honor of a girl he didn't even know. Me. And I of course was there to visit, I felt really bad. And the only way that Mitch could communicate with me was on paper. Every word of it poetry. And if you don't mind, MItch, I have the very first poem that you wrote me: Parched in exile / thirsty for your smile / though silence behind this barbed wire mask / your spirit burns through that I might bask / in your cool misty loveliness.
- Mitch Cohen: I just wanted a drink of water.
- David Kantor: In 1971, after the breakup of the Main Street Singers, Chuck Wiseman moved up to San Francisco where she started a retail business with his brothers Howard and Dell, the Three Wisemen's Sex Emporium. It was very successful for a year until they were sued over something having to do with a box of ben wah balls.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: [Mitch has disappeared] Would you consider doing both parts?
- Mickey: No, I'd consider going home, making a nice tray of nanaimo bars, lying in bed and watching TV - that's what I like doing.
- [after asking a part of the audience to neigh like horses]
- Mark Shubb: We're going to have to put saddles on those folks!
- Jerry Palter: We don't want people to reach for their remotes here.
- Mark Shubb: It's public television.
- Alan Barrows: They don't have remotes.
- Mike LaFontaine: To paraphrase an old joke... Knock, knock. Who's there? It's the New Main Street Singers!
- Jonathan Steinbloom: Before we begin tonight's performance I would like to make a brief announcement. I'd like to warn you that some of the floral arrangements at tonight's performance have dangerously low hanging vines and may be poisonous. So please, whatever you do, don't eat 'em and don't become entangled in them or trip, please.
- Laurie Bohner: Terry and I worship an unconventional deity. The power of another dimension. Now you are not going to read about this dimension in a book or a magazine because it exists nowhere... but in my own mind. Through our ceremonies and rituals we have witnessed the awesome and vibratory power... of color.
- Terry Bohner: No, ladies and gentlemen, we don't ride around on broomsticks and wear pointy hats. Well, we don't ride on broomsticks.
- Mike LaFontaine: But thank you, sincerely, Your Honor - which reminds me, I was at a swingers' party the other night and a fella said to me, "I'd like to meet your wife." I said, "Your honor!"
- Mitch Cohen: [deleted scene - Mitch practising When I'm next to you] You know, I'm gonna take this down one fret. I've a feeling it *was* two frets up, I hope. I'm a 36 waist now not a 34.
- Terry Bohner: I've come to understand as an adult, with the help of Laurie, my beautiful wife, that there had been abuse in my family, but it was mostly musical in nature. My father used to lock me away in a room with nothing but the Percy Faith recording of "Bim! Bam! Boom!" and then send me to bed with nothing but dessert.
- Laurie Bohner: I blew town at 15 and ended up in San Francisco, California. And it's at this point in my story that the dark clouds part; because, I met a certain Mr. Wiseman, who gave me a job in his shop. And before long, he tapped me to do some small roles in some of his short films for more mature audiences. And before long, I had landed, if you will, some leads and then I started to do some cameos. Well, I was known for doing a certain thing - that many of the other girls wouldn't do. And, of course, I loved to sing ever since I was a little girl. And I learned to play the ukulele in one of my last films, "Not So Tiny Tim." And based on that, my world opened up; because, I was invited to join the re-formed New Main Street Singers. And that's where I met my man and before long I was the new Mrs. Bohner.
- Mitch Cohen: Seeing these long lines of fans who want nothing more than to have you sign an autograph, it's like it's 1968... Or '67... Or '66.
- Jonathan Steinbloom: [Hosting "An Ode To Irving"] And now please join me in welcoming our next three talented performers. Taken alone, they are Jerry Palter, Alan Barrows and Mark Shubb... but when you put them all together, they spell "absolutely fantastic".
- Mitch Cohen: I feel ready for whatever the experience is that we will... take with us after the show. I'm sure it will be... an adventure... a voyage on this... magnificent vessel... into unchartered waters! What if we see sailfish... jumping... and flying across the magnificent orb of a setting sun?
- Mickey Crabbe: Then there's the kids - we're hearing: "You rock... you rock me... you rock my world!" What?
- [Looking at some item of clothing in a shop]
- Terry Bohner: Honey, can you run your hand over this? What are you getting?
- Laurie Bohner: I'm getting a bounce, but there's a lightness within it.
- Jerry Palter: [the New Main Street Singers perform 'Wandering' in the background] You swear to God you didn't talk to Menschell about the set?
- Alan Barrows: Why would I talk to him about it?
- Jerry Palter: You didn't tell him what we were opening with, right?
- Alan Barrows: I never talked to him about it at all.
- Jerry Palter: Okay,
- [turns to Mark]
- Jerry Palter: so you were talkin' to that Terry Bohner kid, in his blue sweater...
- Mark Shubb: All I said was, 'Oh my goodness, isn't it warm?' Nothing about the set.
- Jerry Palter: Well, it's gettin' warmer now...
- Mark Shubb: All right, I don't think finger-pointing is gonna help us here, I... I think it's very clear what we do.
- Jerry Palter: What's that?
- Mark Shubb: I'm going to suggest we be bold.
- Jerry Palter: Yeah, let's hear it...
- Mark Shubb: We open with Wandering.
- Jerry Palter: Did you miss the last couple of minutes? They're currently butchering...
- [to Alan briefly]
- Jerry Palter: Turn it back up again. Do you... you wanna hear it?
- Mark Shubb: We give the audience a choice. We say, you can enjoy 'a toothpaste commercial', or do you wanna hear folk music?
- Jerry Palter: I think they'll have already brushed their teeth by that time; It's not even germane.
- Alan Barrows: Well, here's the thing, you can't have on a bill, especially on a folk bill, you cannot have two people doing the same song. It doesn't work; they're just gonna be flat-out confused...