A remote control organizing system includes a base that has a front edge. A lip is attached to and is coextensive with the front edge. The lip is angled back over a top side of the front edge. A panel has a bottom edge and a coupler releasably attaches the bottom edge to an upper edge of the lip. A plurality of the remote controls each has a back side. A plurality of securing members releasably attaches the back sides to a front side of the panel. At least one spacer is provided. The at least one spacer is attached to the panel and positioned between a raised portion of one of the back sides and the panel to approximately position a longitudinal axis of the associated ones of the remote controls into a parallel alignment with a plane of the panel.
Litke, known to audiences for her iconic performances (Shrek, Nunsense), will portray Fraulein Schneider with Brandon Shalansky (39 Steps, Music Man) as Herr Schultz. Rounding out the cast is Cory de Roos as writer Clifford Bradshaw, Mikayla Jones as Fraulein Kost. Randy Leslie will play the villain
because of this, the entire show is thrown off. Suddenly, the people we care most about are Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz. And while Linda Emond and Danny Burstein are marvelous in the roles, they upstage the main plot Sally's relationship with her American bisexual lover, Clifford Bradshaw.
Bill Heck has a compelling open-boundary American curiosity as Clifford Bradshaw, the would-be novelist, the character inspired by Christopher Isherwood's Berlin stories. Without changing the basics of Joe Masteroff's book, Mendes and co-director Rob Marshall made it clear that Clifford is gay, or a