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THEATER REVIEW : Effort by Cold Tofu Dies on the Vine

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Pssst . . . have you heard the latest?

Cold Tofu, the Asian-American improvisational group, is staging a full-length, scripted play at Los Angeles Theatre Center. It’s called “The Grapevine” and it’s by Soji Kashiwagi, whose fabulous actor father, Hiroshi Kashiwagi, has a role in it. And that good-looking kid, what’shisname? From “Karate Kid II”? Yuji Okumoto! He’s in it, too. So is Denice Kumagai--you know, the one from “Night Court.”

What’s it about? Cold Tofu’s promotional flyer says it all: “Blah, blah, blah, blah . . . blabber . . . blabber . . . blabber. . . .”

Right. It’s about gossip. How talking behind a person’s back damages reputations. Which “The Grapevine” might do to Cold Tofu. Why? ‘Cause this shockingly derivative, sophomoric exercise should have remained in the East West Players workshop where it began.

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Don’t pass it on.

* “The Grapevine,” Los Angeles Theatre Center, 514 S. Spring St., Los Angeles. Fridays-Saturdays, 8 p.m. Sunday matinees, 2 p.m. Ends July 11. $15-$18. (213) 739-4142. Running time: 2 hours.

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