Playing at motherhood
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Wearing a fitted white tank top that reveals how toned her stomach is,
a very lean Katy Woodruff shares her secret to acting: Imagine the steps
between yourself and your character and then cross those steps.
Woodruff, who plays Molly in Orange Coast College’s production of
“Approximating Mother,” is 19 years old. Molly is 28. Woodruff is
slender. Molly is pregnant. Woodruff doesn’t have children. Molly already
has one.
“I draw a lot from my own respect for the women I’ve observed as
mothers and the [idea of] the type of mother I hope to be,” the OCC
student said.
For Woodruff, her two fellow female leads in the show and even the men
in the cast, preparing for “Approximating Mother” required not only
rehearsals and line memorization but on-the-spot crash courses in
motherhood.
The story of three women, which opened Thursday, follows one who is
having a baby, one who wants to adopt a baby and a third who is giving
her newborn up for adoption. The play examines the effects of wanting
children, having children and then raising them.
“It’s a serious comedy, a play that originally debuted at the Women’s
Project in New York,” said director John Ferzacca, who is an associate
professor of drama at OCC. “I wanted to do a story women could relate to,
especially in a season that’s more male-dominated in terms of issues and
roles.”
Costume designer Cynthia Corley, who has two children, provided
pregnancy pads for the belly effects, little snuggly front carriers,
strollers, blankets and even a doll donated by her 6-year-old daughter.
She gave tips on how to hold a baby -- you prop the head and never
just let it hang, you hold them tight when they’re in the front carriers
(often called snugglies) and you do the “new mom sway.”
“It’s just automatic, it’s something you don’t think about if you hold
a newborn a lot,” Corley said.
Anne Gray, 54 and a mother, portrays a social worker in the play. She
gave Woodruff and cast mates tips on how it feels to be pregnant, the
physical changes your body experiences and the attachments formed before
the baby is even born.
Woodruff said she learned how to walk with a belly and, as her
character gives birth during the show, she also watched videos on how to
breathe during labor.
Jessica Martinez, 20, who plays a pregnant teen in the show, learned
about the emotional effects of being pregnant.
“I guess every emotion is pumped up like 10 times,” she said.
“Everything you feel, you feel even more.”
Woodruff, who has always wanted to be a mother, said her wish still
stands despite all the pros and cons of mothering she recently learned.
“I would like to be a mom in five or six years,” she said. “It will be
the most important thing I do with my life.”
FYI
* WHAT: “Approximating Mother”
* WHEN: Through Monday; Thursday through Oct. 21. 8 p.m. Thursdays
through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays
* WHERE: Orange Coast College’s Drama Lab Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
* COST: $7-$10
* CALL: (714) 432-5880
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