OCC Rep gets ‘Earnest’ about its productions
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Tom Titus
It seemed like a good idea at the time, and it’s gotten even
better. Eighteen years ago, Orange Coast College’s Theatre Department
came up with the concept of a student repertory company, in which
students would run the show under faculty advisement, handling all
the directing, designing, costuming, technical and producing
assignments.
In the beginning, this project was limited to one-acts and,
occasionally, a full-length play staged by one of OCC’s advanced
students. The current season is barely two months old and the OCC
Repertory Theatre Company is putting its second full-length
production on the boards with the opening this weekend of Oscar
Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest.”
Earlier this season, students Angel Correa and Angela Lopez teamed
up to co-direct and co-star in Jane Martin’s “Jack and Jill,” a
bittersweet comedy about romance. And not long ago there was David
Mamet’s “Oleanna,” another two-character play skillfully presented.
“The Rep has become the proving ground for many up-and-coming
professional theater people,” faculty advisor Rick Golson says. “In
its 18 years of existence, the company has become a respected
educational theater force that allows students to be completely
creative. Students regularly have an opportunity to try their wings
in all aspects of theater.”
Many of the Repertory shows, Golson adds, are not only directed by
students but written by them. The upcoming “Ten or Less” series of
student-directed short plays, each running no longer than 10 minutes,
fall into that category. The one-acts open Nov. 1 for two weekends.
“The Importance of Being Earnest,” directed by OCC student Andrew
Vonderschmitt, is more than a century old, first presented in 1895 at
the St. James Theater in London. It’s become one of the most
performed works ever written in the English language.
Wilde himself once wrote of the play, “It is exquisitely trivial,
a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy -- that we
should treat all the trivial things of life seriously and all the
serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality.”
The OCC cast includes Sen Engard, Nancy Troia, Emily Rued, Raine
Hambly, Travis Woods, Michael Cavinder, Sean F. Gray, Ann Gray,
Justin Ross and David Reider.
“Earnest” opened Friday evening in the college’s Drama Lab Studio
and will be presented tonight at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 and 7 p.m. and
next weekend on the same schedule. The show was originally ticketed
only for one weekend, but has been extended to the normal OCC
two-weekend engagement.
As for the “Ten or Less” series, those playlets will be staged
Nov. 1 to 3 and 8 to 10 in the Studio. Some are original, others were
penned by recognized playwrights. All will be student directed.
Ticket sales alone can’t completely support the OCC theater
projects, which is why the college’s Theatre Department will be
holding a costume sale Monday and Tuesday to raise money to support
the OCC Repertory Theatre Company. The sale is scheduled from 11:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. in the courtyard between OCC’s Music Building and the
Robert B. Moore Theatre.
“Prices will be extremely cheap,” promises Cynthia Corley, OCC’s
costumer and assistant theater arts professor. “We have lots of
wonderful costumes that have been used over the years in many
different Orange Coast College productions.”
For details on “The Importance of Being Earnest,” the “Ten or
Less” one-acts or the costume sale, call OCC at (714) 432-5640. Dial
ext. 1 for ticket reservations.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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