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Parker Here, Parker There - What fun it must have been growing up in The Parker House, a half-done kids putting on show's every Saturday morning based on stories they'd read during the week.  Clearly, this make-believe got wildly out of hand because two of their number are now starring on Broadway and a third, until last month, stage-managed Cakewalk Off-Broadway.  The new uptown assault was made by Sarah Jessica Parker in Once Upon a Mattress, and her big bro (Timothy Britten Parker) skipped his nightly rent to catch it. In fact, the whole family came out full-force, as did her long-time beau and sometime co-star Matthew Broderick.  At the party afterward at the Marriott Marquis, Broderick was reunited with a buddy from his boyhood, Kenneth Lonegran, whose play about a pair of privileged-class slackers (This is Our Youth) just had a limited but much-praised run on Theater Row.  That was their youth, apparently.  "See that Show?  I lived that show," Broderick was quick to attest, but the author rushed in with asterisks:  "Neither of them were either of us.  They were composites of other people we know very well."  Lonergan expects his play will get an open-ended gig Off-Broadway around March; it'll reprise an excellent performance by Josh Hamilton and a star-making one by Mark Ruffalo.  Hours before Mattress sprang to stage life, the Brits of Broadway met at the Players' Club for a spot of tea.  Club prexy Michael Allinson may not have qualified as An Ideal Husband in the show by that name, but he was an ideal to host fellow countrymen like Elaine Paige, Michael Gambon, Fiona Shaw, Jim Dale, Simon Jones, et al.  Legendary Lucille Lortel, just got The Helen Hayes Award - for her humanitarian work - from Hayes's pet charity, St. Claire's Hospital.  (This comes with an historical footnote:  Lortel worked her way up from walk-on speaking part in the 1925 Caesar and Cleopatra that starred Hayes.  Anna Strasberg threw open her CPW pad to celebrate Lonel's latest prize.  "Big Al" (Pacino), huge in Hughie, bopped by, as did most of the theatrical world.