An Interview
with Nicky Abbondanza
the
leading character in Joe Cosentino’s Drama
Christmas,
the eleventh
Nicky and Noah mystery/comedy/romance novel
Nicky, you’re famous!
Or infamous.
Congratulations on the release of
the eleventh novel in your award-winning and popular Nicky and Noah gay cozy comedy
mystery series.
Thank you. Noah and I are donning our gay apparel as we speak.
Since the readers can’t see you,
tell them what you look like.
Noah says I’m totally hot. Now you know why I love him so much.
I’m tall with dark hair and long sideburns Noah loves to kiss, a cleft chin,
Roman nose, emerald eyes, and a hunky body thanks to the gym on campus I call
the torture chamber.
And?
Noah says I have a huge heart. Among other huge organs, which is
just fine with Noah.
Tell us about Drama Christmas, the eleventh novel in your popular, award-winning
series.
In
Drama Christmas I direct and play Bob
Crotchitch in an original musical version of A Christmas Carol, Call Me
Carol, at Treemeadow College. Since Noah was readying the kitchen knives
and Taavi threatened to call child protective services, I cast my handsome husband,
Associate Professor of Acting Noah Oliver, as Scrooge’s Nephew Freddy, and our
son, Taavi, as Tiny Tim. My best friend Department Chair Martin Anderson,
threatened to give me all 8 a.m. classes if I didn’t cast him as Scrooge/Carol and
his husband Ruben Markinson as Marley/Ghost of the Lover of the Past. Martin’s
sassy office assistant, Shayla Johnson, said she’d fill my classes with all
senior audits if I didn’t cast her as Scrooge’s Housekeeper. I also cast my
favorite target, Detective Manuello, as Ghost of the Lover of the Present. Noah
and my both sets of wacky parents are also along for the bumpy ride. The show
proves that every Christmas needs a good Carol. However, more than stockings
are hung when hunky chorus members drop like snowflakes. Once again, Noah and I
use our drama skills to catch the killer before our Christmas balls get
cracked. I know you’ll laugh, cry, feel romantic, and love delving into this
crackling mystery with a surprise ending. “I’m more excited than a
televangelist at a wig shop.”
As usual, calamity ensures.
I have my hands full as
technical dress rehearsals for the show get off to a rocky start, Taavi falls
unrequitedly in love, a homeless teenager is found living in the theatre,
ensemble members claim their belongings have been stolen, and of course murder
after murder multiplies. “Try saying that three times fast with a tongue ring.”
Who are the new characters in book eleven?
Assistant Professor of
Music Barrett Knight plays the Ghost of the Lover of the Future. Barrett tries to
make sweet music with Noah and me (pun intended). Muscleman Roman Giamani,
student set designer, has his design on someone else in the show. He also has a
huge…secret. Student costumer Logan Benton and student stage manager Colton
Corrigan share their tortured pasts and yearn for a happy future. Hunky
ensemble members wealthy Lucas Alencar, ex-hustler Buck La Rue, and diner
worker Marc Micklos claim to be straight, but visit gay establishments.
Lighting designer student Alec Griffin shines the light on everyone’s antics,
including mine.
Who was your favorite new
character?
Student stage manager Colton Corrigan is working on a
documentary about the show. He’s behind his camera more than a news reporter
with acne. When he finally comes out (no pun intended), he opens up (pun
intended) to another character in a big way.
Which new character do you like
the least?
Ensemble member Buck La Rue, an ex-male escort, thrives to
become a reality TV star and president. Remind you of anyone? He double crosses
his best friend, Mark Micklos, in a shocking way.
Which new character was the
hardest to pinpoint?
Ty Wilde, a thirteen-year-old, tough, homeless boy infiltrates
the theatre—and Martin’s heart. When the entire chorus is murdered, Ty steps in
as the Waif character and saves the show.
Which new character was the
sexiest?
Dark-eyed muscleman Roman Giamani tosses his long dark hair past
his broad shoulders. He carries a huge secret and also a huge heart.
What makes the Nicky and Noah mystery series so
special?
Me! I’m a legend in my
own mind. Actually, it’s a gay cozy mystery comedy series, meaning the setting
is warm and cozy, the clues and murders (and laughs) come fast and furious, and
there are enough plot twists and turns and a surprise ending to keep the pages
turning “faster than a Super PAC buying a conservative politician.” At the
center is the touching relationship between Noah and me. You watch us go from
courting to marrying to adopting a child, all the while head over heels in love
with each other. Reviewers called the series “hysterically funny farce,” “Murder She Wrote meets Hart to Hart meets The Hardy Boys,” and “captivating whodunits.” One reviewer wrote
they are the funniest books she’s ever read! Another said Joe is “a master
storyteller.” Who am I to argue? Even though I tell Joe everything to write.
How are the novels cozy?
Many
of them take place in Vermont, a cozy state with green pastures, white church
steeples, glowing lakes, and friendly and accepting people. Fictitious Treemeadow
College (named after its gay founders, couple Tree and Meadow) is the perfect
setting for a cozy mystery with its white Edwardian buildings, low white stone
fences, lake and mountain views, and cherry wood offices with tall leather
chairs and fireplaces. It’s even more cozy in winter with snow blanketing the
campus and surrounding the village.
Why do you think there aren’t many other gay
cozy mystery series out there?
Most
MM novels are erotica, young adult, dark thrillers, or supernatural. While
that’s fine, I think we’re missing a whole spectrum of fiction. In the case of
the Nicky and Noah mysteries, they include romance, humor, mystery, adventure,
and quaint and loveable characters in uncanny situations. The settings are warm
and cozy with lots of hot cocoa by the fireplace. The clues and red herrings
are there for the perfect whodunit. So are the plot twists and turns and a
surprise ending to keep the pages turning over “like an anti-gay politician in
the back of a pick-up truck.” No matter what is thrown in my path, I always end
up on top, which is just fine with Noah.
For anyone unfortunate enough not to have read
them, tell us a bit about the first ten novels in the series.
I’ll
let Joe do that. He needs to be good for something. Take it away, Joe.
Joe:
In Drama Queen (Divine Magazine’s
Readers’ Choice Award for Favorite LGBT Mystery, Humorous, and Contemporary
Novel of the Year) Nicky directs the school play at Treemeadow College—which is
named after its gay founders, Tree and Meadow. Theatre professors drops like stage
curtains, and Nicky and Noah have to use their theatre skills, including
impersonating other people, to figure out whodunit. In Drama Muscle (Rainbow Award Honorable Mention) Nicky and Noah don
their gay Holmes and Watson personas again to find out why bodybuilding
students and professors in Nicky’s bodybuilding competition at Treemeadow are
dropping faster than barbells. In Drama
Cruise it is summer on a ten-day cruise from San Francisco to Alaska and
back. Nicky and Noah must figure out why college theatre professors are
dropping like life rafts as Nicky directs a murder mystery dinner theatre show
onboard ship starring Noah and other college theatre professors from across the
US. Complicating matters are their both sets of wacky parents who want to embark
on all the activities on and off the boat with the handsome couple. In Drama Luau, Nicky is directing the luau
show at the Maui Mist Resort and he and Noah need to figure out why muscular
Hawaiian hula dancers are dropping like grass skirts. Their department
head/best friend and his husband, Martin and Ruben, are along for the bumpy
tropical ride. In Drama Detective (Rainbow Award Honorable Mention),
Nicky is directing and ultimately co-starring with his husband Noah as Holmes
and Watson in a new musical Sherlock Holmes play at Treemeadow College prior to
Broadway. Martin and Ruben, their sassy office assistant Shayla, Nicky’s
brother Tony, and Nicky and Noah’s son Taavi are also in the cast. Of course
dead bodies begin falling over like hammy actors at a curtain call. Once again
Nicky and Noah use their drama skills to figure out who is lowering the street
lamps on the actors before the handsome couple get half-baked on Baker Street.
In Drama Fraternity, Nicky is
directing Tight End Scream Queen, a
slasher movie filmed at Treemeadow College’s football fraternity house,
co-starring Noah, Taavi, and Martin. Rounding out the cast are members of
Treemeadow’s Christian football players’ fraternity along with two hunky screen
stars. When the jammer, wide receiver, and more begin fading out with their
scenes, Nicky and Noah once again need to use their drama skills to figure out
who is sending young hunky actors to the cutting room floor before Nicky and
Noah hit the final reel. In Drama Castle (Rainbow Award Honorable Mention),
Nicky is directing a historical film co-starring Noah and Taavi at Conall
Castle in Scotland: When the Wind Blows
Up Your Kilt It’s Time for A Scotch. Adding to the cast are members of the
mysterious Conall family who own the castle. When hunky men in kilts topple off
the drawbridge and into the mote, it’s up to Nicky and Noah to use their acting
skills to figure out whodunit before Nicky and Noah land in the dungeon. In Drama Dance (Rainbow Award Honorable Mention), during rehearsals of The Nutcracker ballet at Treemeadow,
muscular dance students and faculty cause more things to rise than the
Christmas tree. When cast members drop faster than Christmas balls, Nicky and
Noah once again use their drama skills, including impersonating other people,
to figure out who is trying to crack the Nutcracker’s nuts, trap the Mouse
King, and be cavalier with the Cavalier before Nicky and Noah end up in the
Christmas pudding. In Drama Faerie,
Nicky and friends are doing a musical production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Treemeadow’s new Globe Theatre. With
an all-male, skimpily dressed cast and a love potion gone wild, romance is in
the starry night air. When hunky students and faculty in the production drop
faster than their tunics and tights, Nicky and Noah use their drama skills to
figure out who is taking swordplay to the extreme before Nicky and Noah end up
foiled in the forest. In Drama Runway
Nicky directs a runway show for the Fashion Department. When sexy male models
drop faster than their leather chaps, Nicky and Noah use their drama skills to
figure out who is taking the term “a cut male model” literally before Nicky and
Noah end up steamed in the wardrobe steamer.
Joe is a college theatre professor/department
chair like Martin Anderson in your series. Has that influenced your series,
Nicky?
As
a past professional actor and current college theatre professor/department
chair, Joe knows first-hand the wild and wacky antics, sweet romance, and
captivating mystery in the worlds of theatre and academia. The Nicky and Noah
mysteries are full of them! He never seems to run out of wild characters to
write about. His faculty colleagues and students kid him that if any of them
tick me off, he’ll kill them in his next book. And he probably will. The little
guy is fearless!
What do you like about the
regular characters in the series?
I like my never give up attitude and sense of humor in the face
of adversity. I’m genuinely concerned for others, and I’ll do anything to solve
a murder mystery. I’m also a one-man man, and I’m proud to admit that man is
Noah Oliver. Noah is blond, blue-eyed, lean, handsome, smart, and devoted. He
makes the perfect Watson to my Holmes. (I always thought Holmes and Watson were
a gay couple.) Noah also has a large heart and soft spot (no pun intended) for
others. Finally, like me, Noah is gifted at improvisation, and creates wild and
wonderful characters for our role plays to catch the murderer. I think it’s
terrific how Martin and Ruben throw riotous zingers at each other, but they’re
so much in love. You don’t see a lot of older gay characters in books nowadays.
Of course Martin’s administrative assistant, Shayla, thrives on her
one-upmanship with Martin, and he thrives right back.
How about your and Noah’s
parents?
They’re hilarious. I love Noah’s mother’s fixation with taking
pictures of everything, and his father’s fascination with seeing movies. I also
love how Noah’s father is an amateur sleuth like me. As they say, men marry
their fathers. My parents’ goal to feed everyone and protect their children is
heartwarming. My mom’s gambling addiction is also a riot. Both sets of parents
fully embrace their sons and their sons’ family, which is refreshing.
I’m sure Joe has been told that
the books would make a terrific TV series.
Many many times. Rather than Logo showing reruns of Golden Girls around the clock, and Bravo
airing so called reality shows, I would love to see them do The Nicky and Noah Mysteries. Come on,
TV producers, make your offers! Joe has written a teleplay of the first novel
and treatments for the remaining novels!
How would you cast the TV series?
Here’s my wish list: Matt Bomer as me, Neil Patrick Harris as Noah,
Rosie O’Donnell and Bruce Willis as Noah’s parents, Valerie Bertinelli and Jay
Leno as my parents, Joe as Martin Anderson (nepotism!), Nathan Lane as Martin’s
husband Ruben, Wanda Sykes as Martin’s office assistant Shayla, and Joe
Manganiello as my brother Tony.
Tell us about Joe’s
other mystery series, the Jana Lane mysteries published by The Wild Rose Press.
Noah and I aren’t in them. So take it away,
Joe.
Joe: I created a heroine who was the biggest
child star ever until she was attacked on the studio lot at eighteen years old.
In Paper Doll Jana at thirty-eight
lives with her family in a mansion in picturesque Hudson Valley, New York. Her
flashbacks from the past become murder attempts in her future. Forced to summon
up the lost courage she had as a child, Jana ventures back to Hollywood, which
helps her uncover a web of secrets about everyone she loves. In Porcelain Doll Jana makes a comeback
film and uncovers who is being murdered on the set and why. In Satin Doll Jana and family head to
Washington, DC, where Jana plays a US senator in a new film, and becomes
embroiled in a murder and corruption at the senate chamber. In China Doll Jana heads to New York City to
star in a Broadway play, faced with murder on stage and off. In Rag Doll Jana stars in a television
mystery series and life imitates art. Since
the novels take place in the 1980’s, Jana’s agent and best friend are gay, and
Jana is somewhat of a gay activist, the AIDS epidemic is a large part of the
novels.
And how about Joe’s New Jersey
beach series?
Noah and I aren’t in those either. So you’re on again, Joe.
Joe: A reviewer compared them to Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the
City books. I was incredibly humbled and flattered. I love those books, and
they are incredibly cinematic (hint-producers)! They are: Cozzi Cove: Bouncing Back, Cozzi
Cove: Moving Forward, Cozzi Cove:
Stepping Out, Cozzi Cove: New
Beginnings, and Cozzi Cove: Happy
Endings. The series (NineStar Press) is about handsome Cal Cozzi’s gay
beach resort on a gorgeous cove. I spent my summers as a kid on the Jersey
Shore, so it’s a special place for me. The first novel was a Favorite Book of
the Month on The TBR Pile site and won a Rainbow Award Honorable Mention. I
love the intertwining stories of Cal and his family and the guests as Cozzi
Cove, each so full of surprises. Cozzi Cove is a place where nothing is what it
seems, anything can happen, and romance is everywhere. Some reviewers have
called it a gay Fantasy Island.
What’s next for Joe?
Joe has a new mystery series, The Player Piano Mysteries. Book
2, The Player’s Encore, releases
March 15, 2021. The Player Piano Mysteries take his cozy mystery writing into
the supernatural world since the sleuth, dapper Freddy Birtwistle from the
Roaring Twenties, is a ghost! But Noah and I aren’t in them.
How can your readers get their
hands on Drama Christmas, and how can
they contact you?
The purchase links are below, as are Joe’s contact links,
including his web site. I love to hear from readers via Joe! He tells Noah and
me everything you say about us!
Thank you, Nicky, for interviewing today.
My
pleasure. “I’m happier than a priest with an altar boy’s robe malfunction.” It
is my great thrill, joy, and pleasure to share this eleventh novel in my series
with you. So take your seats. The stage lights are coming up on an infamous
miser, Victorian lovers of the past, present, and future, a not so Tiny Tim,
and murder!
DRAMA
CHRISTMAS (the 11th Nicky and Noah mystery) by JOE COSENTINO
http://mybook.to/DramaChristmas
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1046358
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/2940164266332
http://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/Search?Query=9781005055967
E-book and Paperback: 193 pages
Language: English
Genre: MM, contemporary, mystery, comedy, romance, winter
holiday, drama, academia
Cover Art: Jesús Da Silva
Release date: December
1, 2020
It’s winter
holiday time at Treemeadow College, and Theatre Professor Nicky Abbondanza, his
husband Theatre Associate Professor Noah Oliver, their son Taavi, and best
friends Martin and Ruben are donning their gay apparel in a musical version of
Scrooge’s A Christmas Carol, entitled
Call Me Carol! More than stockings
are hung when hunky chorus members drop like snowflakes. Once again, our
favorite thespians will need to use their drama skills to catch the killer and
make the yuletide gay before their Christmas balls get cracked. You will be
applauding and shouting Bravo for Joe Cosentino’s fast-paced, side-splittingly
funny, edge-of-your-seat entertaining eleventh novel in this delightful series.
Take your seats. The stage lights are coming up on an infamous miser, S&M
savvy ghost, Victorian lovers of the past, present, and future, a not so Tiny
Tim, and murder!
Excerpt of Drama Christmas, the eleventh Nicky and Noah mystery, by Joe Cosentino:
Like an open snow globe, the quaint Victorian village at
Christmastime featured a lit candle shop, bay windowed toy store, succulent
butcher shop, frilly hat maker, multicolored flower shop, and cozy inn. Festive
holiday wreaths and elaborately decorated trees adorned all the establishments,
except for one—Ebenezer Scrooge’s Counting House.
Suddenly, jazzy music played as the street inhabitants
faced front singing and dancing of their city at Christmastime, “Oh de London,
It’s Not Only Merry, It’s Gay.” During the last refrain, the fog swirls turned
into black gusts, and the delicate snowflakes transformed into snowdrifts.
Ducking for cover, the passersby screamed and hurried off the street. The shops
blurred away like a painting under a faucet.
“Stop!”
Like a good holiday fruitcake, I’m back. It’s me, Nicky
Abbondanza, PhD, Professor of Play Directing at Treemeadow College, loving
husband to Associate Professor of Acting Noah Oliver, and doting father of
Taavi Kapule Oliver Abbondanza—who calls me the director of his latest show. You’ve probably guessed
the show is Scrooge’s A Christmas Carol.
As many of you know, Treemeadow College in picturesque Vermont was founded by
gay couple, Harold Tree and Jacob Meadow, whose bronze likenesses are celebrated
at the college’s entrance—where many a grateful student has relieved himself
after a dorm party. Given Treemeadow’s history, we couldn’t do a straight (pardon the pun) version of the Dickens
classic. So, my best friend and Theatre Department Head, Martin Anderson,
threatened to put coal in his long-suffering husband’s compression stockings if
Ruben Markinson didn’t agree to produce an alternative version of the famous
play. Ruben, feeling the holiday spirit—and Martin’s shoe in the seat of his
leisure suit—secured a grant from the Gay, Gay, and Even More Gay Foundation to
cover our budget. Then Martin wrote the book, music, and lyrics to Call Me Carol!, claiming the lead role
of Scrooge/Carol for himself, and offering the part of the Ghost of Jacob
Marley/Scrooge’s Lover of the Past to Ruben—commenting that Ruben was as old as
any ghost. As director, I cast the most talented actor in the country, if not
the world, to play Scrooge’s clerk, Bob Crotchitch—me. My husband, Noah,
threatened to put anti-freeze in my eggnog if I didn’t cast him as Nephew Fred
in addition to his position as acting coach for the show. Our son, Taavi, had a
family court judge on his cell phone until I gave him the role of Tiny Tim. New
Assistant Professor of Music Barrett Knight agreed to be musical director and
play the Ghost of Scrooge’s Lover of the Future—after I reminded him about his
upcoming fall tenure hearing. Theatre students not anxious to get home to
relatives gloating about their children making big money in the business world
were cast as ensemble members. Students also took on the tasks of
choreographer, set designer, lighting designer, costume designer, and stage
manager. Local Detective Jose Manuello, wanting to keep an eye on the
production—and on me—offered to play the Ghost of Scrooge’s Lover of the
Present. Let me explain for anyone who hasn’t read the previous ten Nicky and
Noah mysteries—and you should! Mystery and mayhem follow me like a Republican
president and a stolen Supreme Court seat. My productions are always met with
bravos and wild applause. However, they’re also rife with murder—which I always
use my theatre skills to solve. Hence Manuello’s interest in me and this show.
Since you can’t see me, I’m thirty-five. Okay, you got
me, I’m really a youthful forty-three, tall, with dark hair, emerald eyes, a
Roman nose, sexy cleft in my chin that Noah loves to kiss, and a pretty
muscular body thanks to the torture devices in our college gym. There’s
something else Noah loves to kiss. Brace yourself, Nicky and Noah newbies. I
have a nearly foot long penis when erect. And despite my age, it’s erect a lot.
That genetic gift from the Abbondanza line has helped me catch many a murderer,
and it has made my father’s bakery a favorite with the women and gay men in
Kansas—especially Papa’s cream pie.
Generally, Noah, Taavi, and I wear dress shirts, dress
slacks, blazers, winter overcoats, and a long scarf. Since we are donning our
gay apparel for this show, we’re outfitted in Victorian-era three-piece suits
that are as uncomfortable as a Democrat at an Alt Right meeting.
So here we are at the start of winter break in tech week
for our show. For you non-thespians, that’s the week prior to performances when
the director generally bemoans his ulcer while suffering a heart attack en
route to the psychiatric ward. Sitting in my front-row center seat in the
theatre house—clutching my director’s notepad and pen like a surfboard during a
tsunami—I called out to the student stage manager at his console offstage left,
“Colton, what’s going on?”
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION:
Post a
comment about why you love models. The one that sends us down the runway will
win a gift Audible code for the audiobook of Drama Queen, the first
Nicky and Noah mystery, by Joe Cosentino, performed by Michael Gilboe!
https://www.audible.com/pd/Drama-Queen-Audiobook/B012I834LS
Praise for the Nicky and Noah mysteries:
“Joe Cosentino has a
unique and fabulous gift. His writing is flawless, and his use of farce, along
with his convoluted plot-lines, will have you guessing until the very last
page, which makes his books a joy to read. His books are worth their weight in
gold, and if you haven't discovered them yet you are in for a rare treat.”
Divine Magazine
“a combination of
Laurel and Hardy mixed with Hitchcock and Murder She Wrote…
Loaded with puns and
one-liners…Right to the end, you are kept guessing, and the conclusion still
has a surprise in store for you.” “the best modern Sherlock and Watson in books
today…I highly recommend this book and the entire series, it’s a pure pleasure,
full of fun and love, written with talent and brio…fabulous…brilliant” Optimumm
Book Reviews
About the Author
Joe Cosentino was voted
Favorite MM Mystery, Humorous, and Contemporary Author of the Year by the
readers of Divine Magazine for Drama Queen, the first Nicky and
Noah mystery novel. He is also the author of the remaining Nicky and Noah
mysteries: Drama Muscle, Drama Cruise, Drama Luau, Drama
Detective, Drama Fraternity, Drama Castle, Drama Dance, Drama Faerie, Drama
Runway, Drama Christmas; the Player Piano Mysteries: The Player and The
Player’s Encore; the Jana Lane Mysteries: Paper Doll, Porcelain
Doll, Satin Doll, China Doll, Rag Doll; the Cozzi Cove
series: Cozzi Cove: Bouncing Back, Moving Forward, Stepping
Out, New Beginnings, Happy Endings; the In My Heart Anthology:
An Infatuation & A Shooting Star; the Tales from Fairyland Anthology:
The Naked Prince and Other Tales from Fairyland and Holiday Tales
from Fairyland; the Bobby and Paolo Holiday Stories Anthology: A
Home for the Holidays, The Perfect Gift, The First Noel; and the Found
At Last Anthology: Finding Giorgio and Finding Armando. His books
have won numerous Book of the Month awards and Rainbow Award Honorable
Mentions. As an actor, Joe appeared in principal roles in film, television, and
theatre, opposite stars such as Bruce Willis, Rosie O’Donnell, Nathan Lane,
Jason Robards, and Holland Taylor. He received his Master of Fine Arts degree
from Goddard College, Master’s degree from SUNY New Paltz, and is currently a
happily married college theatre professor/department chair residing in New York
State. http://www.JoeCosentino.weebly.com
Web site: http://www.JoeCosentino.weebly.com
Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/JoeCosentinoauthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JoeCosen
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4071647.Joe_Cosentino
Amazon: Author.to/JoeCosentino
1 comment:
It's interesting to see how a model embodies a look or era in a way that an actor or other celebrity can't, especially when the model ends up influencing pop culture herself!
--Trix, vitajex at aol dot com
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