I stumbled over this entirely by accident while Googling for something different (but tangentially related). A little background, first: I was a member of the Princeton Triangle Club when I was in college -- not a performer, although I probably could have eked out a small role here or there had I worked at it, but as a writer. The sketch below comes from the very first Triangle Club show I wrote for -- 1982's Stocks and Bondage.
(No, I didn't write this, I was -- if you can imagine it -- the lyricist half of a songwriting team. This sketch was actually written by Louis Bayard '85, who's now a respected novelist.)
Anyway, this sketch became a classic, and as far as I know has been performed every year since as part of the free Freshman Week show that's put on to attract new members to the club. This clip appears to be from one such show, given the audience reactions, which over three decades have became almost as standardized as the Rocky Horror Picture Show's audience participation "script".
Have fun.
-- Bob
---------
Then the horns kicked in...
...and my shoes began to squeak.
(No, I didn't write this, I was -- if you can imagine it -- the lyricist half of a songwriting team. This sketch was actually written by Louis Bayard '85, who's now a respected novelist.)
Anyway, this sketch became a classic, and as far as I know has been performed every year since as part of the free Freshman Week show that's put on to attract new members to the club. This clip appears to be from one such show, given the audience reactions, which over three decades have became almost as standardized as the Rocky Horror Picture Show's audience participation "script".
Have fun.
-- Bob
---------
Then the horns kicked in...
...and my shoes began to squeak.