The Atlanta Lawyer November 2018 | Page 16

ONE SINGULAR SENSATION By Shawn Shepard, (Smith & Carson) On November 16 and 17, the At- lanta Bard Committee presented A Bard Show Tribute: One Singular Sensation, honoring the show’s founder and longtime director, Cathy O’Neil, and featuring a lineup of greatest hits from the show’s 20-year history. Staged at the new Sandy Springs Perform- ing Arts Center at City Springs, the show offered a glimpse of “how the sausage is made,” with scenes from the life of a Bard show, from inspiration to opening night. It was a fitting tribute to O’Neil, who made not only each show what it was, but the entire A Courthouse Line series what it is today. Veteran Bardians Kevin Wilson and Steve Lang narrated the story, pro- viding descriptions of past shows and setting the scenes, includ- ing a karaoke and brainstorming session, a Bard show production meeting, and a meeting of Atlanta Bar board members, complete with cameo appearance by current bar president Nicole Iannarone. The show’s style harkened back to the original Courthouse Line, which presented songs and skits loosely strung together by a group of narrators. Featured songs included “You Can’t Stop the Law” from A Courthouse Line X – Back in Black (Hairspray’s “You Can’t Stop the Beat”), “Su- perSecretExpartitiousExpedited Motion” from A Courthouse Line IV – The Phantom of the Courthouse (Mary Poppin’s “Supercalifragilis- 16 November 2018 ticexpialidocious”), and “Brief Writing” from A Courthouse Line III – Comity Tonight (Grease’s “Greased Lightning”). The show brought together a cast of nearly 70 lawyers, with local legal celebrities gleefully strutting their stuff. Judge Chris McFadden and Don Samuel romped on stage as the devil and Johnny during Clay Thompson’s toe-tapping rendition of “The Devil Went Down to Law School.” Judge Robert McBurney, dressed in pink tights and black legwarmers, led Judge Jackson Bedford and Terrence Croft as they pirouetted and floss-danced their way through several scenes. Near the end of the show, a parade of judges, wearing their regalia and waving oversized gavels, was a testament to both the place of the Bard show and Cathy O’Neil in the hearts of the legal community.