KarateGuyLogo.jpg

The Karate Guy

KMK Productions
Orlando, FL
Rating: MATURE | Genre: Comedy
Pink Venue   60 minutes (Discounts: $2 off for anyone wearing a karate gi and obi)
MAIN TICKETING PAGE $9 (plus $8 Fringe Button)
25 years after the karate championship, Daniel-san still lives with Mom. Can Miyagi save him from being a douche? Outrageous 80’s parody from the artists behind 2008’s hit JEDI HANDBOOK.


From the artists who brought you the Orlando International Fringe Festival hits Obscenity and The Boy's Own Jedi Handbook comes an outrageous new satire of classic 1980's teen cinema...

The Intrepid Traveler presents
A KMK Production
THE KARATE GUY

Synopsis: 25 years ago Daniel-san was the Kid who learned the secrets of Karate (sort of) and won the big tournament. Today, he’s nearly 40 and still living with his Mom. If he's ever going to get off the couch and get a girl, he'll have to confront his old rival Johnny - now his boss at the Cobra Kai Car Wash ("Scrub First, Rinse Hard, No Soap Scum"). Can his mentor Mr. Miyagi finally teach Daniel his greatest lesson: how not to be a loser?

Starring
Michael Marinaccio as The Karate Guy
Christian Kelty as Johnny
Eric Pinder as Mom
Sarah Jane Fridlich as The Girl
with Chris Prueitt
and Terrence Yip as Mr. Miyagi
special guest star on Fri 5/22 David Almieda

Story by Christian Kelty, Michael Marinaccio, and Seth Kubersky

Written by Christian Kelty (Joe's NYC Bar, Obscenity, Matador)

Directed by Seth Kubersky (Obscenity, Waiting for Godot, The Boy's Own Jedi Handbook)

This show is Rated M: Mature Audiences for Sexual Situations, Adult Language, Drug Use, and 80's Hair.

Presented at the 2009 Orlando International Fringe Festival, May 14-24

in the Pink Venue (Mandell Theater at the Orlando Shakespeare Center, Loch Haven Park)

Cost: $9.00 (+$1 ticket service fee, $8 Fringe button required)

$2 discount for patrons wearing a karate gi (in-person purchases at Fringe box office only)

Purchase tickets on-line NOW at http://orlandofringe.org/node/307

For more information visit www.KarateGuyThePlay.com featuring the interactive "Ask Miyagi" message forum.

Also visit www.youtube.com/KarateGuyThePlay for viral videos, and follow us at www.twitter.com/TheKarateGuy

This production is sponsored by The Intrepid Traveler Publishing www.intrepidtraveler.co

Media Contact: Seth Kubersky skubersky@yahoo.com 407-973-4496

THE KARATE GUY is an unauthorized work of parody. All characters are used without permission under the "Fair Use" doctrine, and remain the property of Columbia Pictures and/or their respective copyright holders.

 

 
 

“I'm a sucker for pop-culture parodies. Especially from the '80s. And I'm still kicking myself for missing "Jedi Handbook" last year, also by the same artists behind this show, so I'm not making the same mistake twice. (Oh, and if you can't guess from the title, this show parodies Mr. Miyagi and Daniel-Son from the '80s classic "The Karate Kid.")” –Tanya Hanson, Metromix Orlando (4/14/09)

“From KMK Productions, a clever comedy that massages the Mr. Miyagi funny bone. One “K” stands for Kubersky, as in Seth, our Live Active Cultures columnist and arts writer; the other “K” represents Christian Kelty, sandwiching the “M” of Michael Marinaccio. Those three names together equal big laughs.” – Lindy T. Shepherd, Orlando Weekly (4/16/09)

One of The Daily City's Top 10 "Don't Miss" Fringe Shows: "The cast and creative team is talented and from what I hear, their past shows have been worth the ticket price."

Orlando Sentinel (5/16/09)
By Kelly Fitzpatrick, Sentinel Staff Writer
It’s been a cruel 25 years for Daniel LaRusso (Michael Marinaccio) after winning the tournament in The Karate Kid. These days he’s living in the past, too busy drinking and doping himself into a near coma to care about waxing on and off.
Meanwhile, Daniel’s mom, hilariously played by Eric Pinder, tortures him with her fling with Daniel’s arch nemesis Johnny Lawrence (Christian Kelty). Kelty and Pinder work great together and an altar scene with the two of them is reason alone to see the show.
Mr. Miyagi (Terrence Yip) once again attempts to help Daniel, giving us the real reason why Daniel became such a loser. Yip’s timing is one of the high points of the show.
There were a couple of lulls during dialogue and a line or two fumbled but overall it’s another solid show from these Fringe favorites.
With minimal stage props, the success of the show relies heavily on the actors’ performances. A projector screen behind them plays scenes from the movie, serving as a backdrop.
Marinaccio nails the Jersey accent with a dash of whine that Ralph Macchio originally delivered.
A homage to ‘80s teen flicks, it’s a show you don’t want to miss.

Orlando Weekly (5/17/09)
by Trevor Fraser
Hey, remember the '80s? KMK Productions (Christian Kelty, Michael Marinaccio, Seth Kubersky) sure does. And as an ode to the Reaganite era, they've written The Karate Guy, an updated sequel to ... well, if you can't figure it out, you won't want to see this.
Daniel-san (Marinaccio) is now pushing 40. He clings to the memory of his heroic championship win (without the use of real karate) while he gets drunk, lives with his mom (Eric Pinder) and works at the Cobra Kai Car Wash for his old nemesis, Johnny Lawrence (Kelty, hilarious from first entrance).
He still hangs with Miyagi (Terrence Yip), whose nigh-racist Miyagi-isms have grown cynical with age. But hopefully Miyagi can help Daniel figure out if the hot, troubled girl at work (Sarah Jane Fridlich) is a nymphomaniac or a compulsive liar.
If you don't get that last reference, you might be in the wrong place. The show doesn't just nod to John Hughes' flicks, it culls entire scenes and exchanges, devoid of context within this story. The jokes are in the remembering.
The performances are elevated beyond what the material calls for. Kubersky's direction gives this show a blend of Airplane-like surrealism and Judd Apatow nuance. Marinaccio is so committed to this Daniel-san, it's hard not to see the real person in him.
The person they're hoping you see is yourself, the inner-man-child, that still wants the big win to change everything.