THEATER
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Tom Titus
Orange Coast College has 24 competitive sports programs, such as
football, basketball, soccer, water polo and volleyball. The theater
department is about to add a 25th.
Are you ready for some improv?
Improvisational theater, that is, as practiced by the OCC theater
students’ comedy improv team. After several rounds of what the college
terms “full-contact theater,” they’re good and they know it. And now
they’re looking for some competition.
“Our students are champing at the bit,” says Alex Golson, who heads
the college’s theater department. “I can’t hold them back much longer.
They’re issuing a challenge to actors from all other local colleges. We
want to take them on -- in theater sports -- on our turf or theirs.”
Golson explains that his students, the OCC comedy improv team, would
like to initiate some lively intercollegiate competition. Their goal is
to compete in comedy improvisation contests between schools, similar to
the quick-witted comics on TV’s “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”
“I envision that each team will be comprised of somewhere between six
to 10 students,” Golson says. “The OCC team will be available to rumble
any Monday evening in March, April or May of 2002.”
The competition would be adjudicated by referees, yet to be
designated, and will be open to the public. Golson says his students are
working on a dozen to 20 improv games that could be used in the spring
matches.
“We’ll provide the other colleges with detailed rules and descriptions
of the games,” he says. “In fact, we’ll even help them prepare for the
competition. I’ll be more than happy to go over to any other college
campus with a small group of my own students, and we’ll host an improv
workshop or rehearsal prior to the performance.”
Golson says that any local colleges or universities willing to take on
the OCC improv players in a friendly spring joust can call him at (714)
432-5640, Ext. 5.
Speaking of OCC theater, the department has made a change in its
spring schedule. Lisa Loomer’s “The Waiting Room,” originally bumped to
make room for last month’s “Approximating Mother,” now is off the slate
completely.
In its place, OCC will present “North Shore Fish,” Israel Horovitz’s
play about workers at a faltering Massachusetts fish-packing plant. The
show was labeled by one critic as “angry, passionate, raw, funny and
sad.”
“It presents a remarkable combination of hilarity and heartbreak,”
says OCC instructor John Ferzacca, who will direct. “The show contains
adult situations and language.”
“North Shore Fish” will be staged March 7-17 in OCC’s Drama Lab
Theater.
Next up for the industrious OCC theater department is “Ten or Less,” a
series of student-directed plays, each running 10 minutes or less,
presented by the OCC Repertory Theater Company.
The program, which includes both material by recognized playwrights
and student-originated originals, will be presented Nov. 9-11 and 16-18
in the Drama Lab Studio Theater. Tickets are $5 and may be reserved at
(714) 432-5640, Ext. 1.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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