Style Weekly
Valley Haggard
Slash Coleman Cover Story
January 25, 2006
As soon as you try to put
Renaissance man and prodigal
son Slashtipher J. Coleman into a
box, he jumps out. This Chester
native, an
actor/writer/singer/artist/musician/
masseuse/surfer, paid to have his
name changed with his bar
mitzvah money in 1985, feeling
that “Slashtipher” embraced the
spirit of his grandfather, who came
from a family of gypsies, danced in
Style Weekly Winter Arts
Photo/ Steven Sulpakas
the Moulin Rouge and joined the French Resistance.
“Slashtipher is the name that propelled me out into the world,” he
says, “and it is the name that brought me back [to Richmond].”
Returning in 2004 after a nearly 20-year adventure that took him
to Alaska, Hawaii, England, Scotland and all over South America,
Coleman is finally ready to settle down in Virginia — sort of. That
is, when he’s not on the U.S. college circuit or the Fringe Festival
in New York and Edinburgh, or taking his one-man show, “The
Neon Man and Me,” on tour.
The show is a hilarious and moving eulogy to Mark Jamison, his
best friend who died in 2004 while hanging neon. A benefit for
the family Jamison left behind, the show explores bereavement
and recovery. It’s also “a vehicle that embraces all parts of
myself,” Coleman says. Sans props or costumes, there’s
nothing to obscure the beautiful punch of his story, one Coleman
says he’s too passionate about to grow bored with.
Coleman’s next performance, “Herbert Mermelstein’s Big Jew Show,” promises nothing less than a Yiddish three-ring
circus, complete with a live band, a surprise guest and loads of laughs. Scheduled to premiere in the fall at the Virginia
Holocaust Museum and the Weinstein Jewish Community Center, the “Big Jew Show” is inspired by the comedy of
Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, Woody Allen and Mr. Bean. Coleman will explore the issues and questions that have
emerged from the fated union of his French Jewish mother and Italian Catholic father.

Coleman’s CD, “Conversations With a Southern Wonder-Boy,” and his broad collection of
whimsical paintings are also full of poetry and strongly lyrical. And he’s at work on his second
book, “The Four Delicious Moons,” a semiautobiographical novel about a boy who lives with his
alcoholic biker dad and with the help of a drunken rabbi becomes a concert pianist as his ticket
out of Chester. Also in the works is a DVD package with a 30-minute documentary about “The
Neon Man and Me” and four music videos, one of which will use only Claymation.
Slashtipher J. Coleman Playwright, Performer photo: Stephen Sulpakus
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After a year at work upholstering furniture for his family’s North Side business, Tinker’s, Coleman plans to join the ranks
of the rare breed of artist who is able to quit his day job and live off the fruits of creative effort alone. He received money
from the Virginia Commission for the Arts to conduct writing residencies in high schools, and he’s teaching writing
workshops at Comedy Alley, C3 and through the Henrico County Adult Education program. Coleman is a one-man band
and a whirling dervish of creative resource. But don’t blink as he spirals past — you wouldn’t want to miss a thing.
Coleman will perform “The Neon Man and Me” at the Bainbridge Art Center Friday, March 10, and Saturday, March 11, at 7
p.m. Learn more at www.slashtipher.com.