Fourteen Carrot Gold

Page 1

entertainment

at leisure

Fourteen Carrot Gold With his new variety show for seniors, former vegetable man Kit Stewart has gone from produce to producer.

by Rob Crimmins

When the Easter Bunny rode into the Dover Mall last April in a pony drawn cart the children were enthralled. He waved and nodded his large head and demonstrated surprise by raising his forelegs or putting his paw over his mouth. Little ones stared into the fixed, plastic eyes as they processed the image before them. Some reached behind them for their mothers as the bunny approached but most sensed that he was a benign although inscrutable creature. They studied the scene before them and divined the truth that their parents and the other grownups were putting on a show but there had to be at least some confusion in the minds of those in and around toddling age. When Carrot Man burst on the scene their questions were answered. A nine-foot tall, bright orange, caped carrot with human arms and legs, a man’s face and far

more energy than the Easter Bunny was whirling around them, laughing and singing. The new figure wasn’t at all confusing. With his face and hands clearly visible and his voice booming there was no doubt that this was a man in a carrot suit. Even the children most perplexed by the mute bunny now knew that the grownups were having fun. Carrot Man became the show and it isn’t the first that this root vegetable and member of the parsley family has stolen the show. The Carrot Man is Dover resident Kit Stewart. The character first appeared at Kit’s produce stand, “The Gay Street Vendor” on Gay Street in West Chester along with other street performers. Eventually it became the “Carrot Man Show” and included Kit’s children as a strawberry and a banana. (Coaxing them to eat their vegetables must have been fun.) Through the years the show, that includes original songs and choreographed vegetable dances, could be seen at malls, conventions and state fairs. Kit still performs as Carrot Man but his current career and the one that he left to start his produce business are even more interesting. In 1961 after leaving Special Services, the entertainment branch of the U.S. Navy, he founded a rock and roll band, “The Kit Kats”. They were quite successful and remained together until

Look for Carrot Man and a friend in ads about nutrition, coming soon to a cable channel near you. 40

January 2000

DELAWARE TODAY

Photograph by Ben Fournier


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.