Season opens with a roar
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Tom Titus
Traditionally, it’s March that’s supposed to come in like a lion, but
that adage also could be applied to September on the local theater
scene.
The 2004-05 season not only will arrive next week, it’ll wash over
the local playhouses like a tidal wave of greasepaint with five
productions opening, followed by two more the following week.
No sooner will Labor Day herald the unofficial end of summer than
the Orange County Performing Arts Center will turn up the spotlight
on its first show of the new season. This will be the musical revue
“Side by Side by Sondheim,” featuring local luminary Teri Ralston,
who works across the street, teaching musical theater at South Coast
Repertory.
“Sondheim,” a tribute to Broadway’s uber-composer Stephen Sondheim
and featuring musical numbers from his greatest (and not so great)
shows, will be in the center’s Founders Hall for two weeks, from
Tuesday through Sept. 19. The center’s main stage comes alive the
following Tuesday, Sept. 14, with the third visit of the abrasive
urban musical “Rent.”
South Coast Rep, where world premieres abound, has another in the
works to kick off its new season. Donald Margulies’ “Brooklyn Boy”
arrives next Friday on the Segerstrom Stage as the first SCR
production to move directly from Costa Mesa to Broadway -- it’s
ticketed for the Biltmore Theater in New York, opening Feb. 3.
The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, which closed its last season with
the musical “Cabaret,” opens the new campaign a week from tonight
with another play dealing with the ominous threat of Nazi Germany
during World War II. “The Diary of Anne Frank” recounts a teenage
Dutch girl’s written memoirs of her desperate family’s days in hiding
from their inevitable fate.
“Poetry 101” is the subject at Orange Coast College as OCC’s
Repertory Theater Company launches its 20th season. The
student-operated troupe will open this celebration of the spoken word
next Friday for the customary two-weekend run.
Also on the collegiate scene, Costa Mesa’s Vanguard University
will kick off its new season with the musical revue “Starting Here,
Starting Now,” opening next Friday for two weekends. This show places
its emphasis on the search for love and companionship.
The following Friday, Sept. 24, will see the Newport Theater Arts
Center back in business with Herb Gardner’s most well-known comedy “A
Thousand Clowns.” That particular play holds special memories, since
it was the first show I reviewed for the Daily Pilot nearly 40 years
ago, and 25 years later I took on the role of Murray Burns in a
community theater production.
OCC’s Rep company again will be out to prove that less is more,
starting Sept. 30, with its annual “10 or Less Festival.” This
program will be a series of one-act plays, each running for a maximum
of 10 minutes, and all will be student-directed.
“The Retreat From Moscow” on South Coast Rep’s Julianne Argyros
Stage doesn’t deal with the Napoleonic wars directly, but rather
their impact on an unraveling 33-year modern marriage in this West
Coast premiere by William Nicholson. Opening night will be Oct. 1.
Vanguard University is back in action Oct. 15 with a revival of
the classic vintage comedy “Life With Father.” The show details a
patriarch’s struggles with his four sons and his wife, who’s
determined to have him baptized. It runs through Oct. 24.
The SCR spotlight swings back to the Segerstrom Stage Oct. 22 with
“Habeas Corpus” by Alan Bennett, a farcical piece focusing on some
young Brits in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. It’s described as a
comic whirlwind of lechery within the medical profession.
Orange Coast College will round out the first two months of the
season with “View of the Dome,” a new satirical play by Theresa
Rebeck touted as a comic journey through the sexual politics and
intrigue of the nation’s capital. It’ll be on view for only four
days, Oct. 21-24.
November will bring another gust of theatrical wind, with SCR’s
Young Conservatory staging “The Hoboken Chicken Experiment,” Vanguard
University staging “A Murder is Announced,” Newport Theater Arts
Center opening the “Redwood Curtain” and, late in the month, SCR
mounting its 25th annual production of “A Christmas Carol.”
Yes, it’s nearly that time again.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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