TOM TITUS -- Theater Preview
Now it can be told. With the closing of “Bye Bye Birdie” at the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse, it may safely be revealed that the actress billed
as Agnes Burns, playing the mother’s role etched so indelibly by Maureen
Stapleton in the movie version, was none other than Lynn Reinert, who’s
somewhat younger and far more attractive than her character should be.
What’s more, she was able to pull it off with almost no one guessing
her true identity. I say “almost no one” because my perceptive daughter
nailed her by intermission. But she certainly had me fooled.
Reinert not only is an accomplished actress, she can take on any
variety of characterizations -- from the sophisticated Tracy Lord in “The
Philadelphia Story” to the plain, introverted Lennie in “Crimes of the
Heart” to the narcissistic, aging beauty queen Toby in “The Gingerbread
Lady.” She’s done all these roles on the Costa Mesa stage, employing her
natural Southern accent only in “Crimes.”
But Mae Peterson? It would seem a stretch, but Reinert -- who had
actually done the role several years ago -- was up to the challenge. Even
though the striking blond actress could pass for a good 10 years younger than the 41 she admits to, she yearned to take another crack at the
matronly character.
“It took a little convincing, but Damien [Lorton, the director]
trusted me when I promised him that I could carry it off,” Reinert said.
“Believe me, there were a number of detractors out there who couldn’t
believe he had cast me.
“Another reason is that I am especially drawn to humorous,eccentric
characters. I love them, and I think the greatest compliment in the world
is creating a life on stage that is so vastly different from your own
that the audience doesn’t recognize it is you,” she added.
Which is partly why Reinert billed herself as “Agnes Burns” and
provided a phony biography in the program.
“It wasn’t done to trick anybody or to play a joke on the audience,”
she insisted. “It’s just that we have a number of patrons who regularly
attend the theater who know me, and I didn’t want anyone’s focus or
attention taken away from the performance to analyze the makeup or the
costumes or how much it did or didn’t look and sound like me.
“It was more important that they liked what the actor did with Mae,
that they enjoyed her, maybe thought she was funny and most of all found
her believable,” she added.
But didn’t performing without proper credit bother her?
“I can honestly say that it was enough to see people’s reaction after
the show,” she declared. “I thought it was the highest compliment that
they didn’t recognize me, or to hear from friends of the cast or even the
occasional comment that they liked the old lady playing Mama.
“My husband actually had people from his office come to see the show
who were disappointed that I wasn’t in the show that night -- and this
was after Scott had told them which part I was playing. I still hear that
they aren’t convinced it was me. To me, that is just the coolest.”
So, beyond the obvious acting skills, how did she pull it off
physically?
“I actually did the makeup myself from pencils and contouring creams
and powder. By the end of the run, I was able to get into the costume,
wig and makeup in less than 30 minutes. It’s funny how easy it got
finding those wrinkles to draw in with the brown pencil,” she said.
Reinert, the Daily Pilot’s woman of the year in theater for 1998, is
credited with guiding the Civic Playhouse through some rocky financial
shoals in her offstage role as playhouse president.
She’s also been taking classes from the pros at South Coast Repertory,
including an on-camera class, which, she said, “has given me the
confidence to venture outside the world of live theater.”
“At the end of October,” she notes, “I will shoot anindependent film
and, believe it or not, I have been writing some comedy sketches, one of
them actually based on the character of Mama. I just can’t bear to bid
her farewell, I guess.”
* TOM TITUS writes about local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
stories and reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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