Culture with a capital ‘C’
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Alex Coolman
It doesn’t have any spotlights. It doesn’t have any palm trees. There
isn’t an awe-inspiring sculpture gracing its facade.
Judging by its appearance, the Jewish Community Center of Orange County
doesn’t seem like the kind of place that would be host to powerful
cultural events. The plain Costa Mesa building, with its anonymous stucco
exterior, looks like it was designed with board meetings and bake sales
in mind.
But Culture? With a capital ‘C’? Could such a beast be found behind those
walls?
Yes.
The JCC does Culture. And it does it with a vitality and an originality
that transcends the venue’s limitations of space and design.
Local residents just experienced the treat of the JCC’s Jewish book month
in November, a series of events that saw authors like Susan Dworkin and
best-selling short story writer Nathan Englander giving readings.
The center, a beneficiary agency of the Jewish Federation of Orange
County, has also been holding an exhibit of the spiritually oriented
paintings of artist Deanna Alevy -- works that riff on the subject of
travel, examining both the literal and metaphorical sides of human
journeying.
In the months ahead, the center’s offerings are no less intriguing. The
JCC’s orchestra will perform Mendelssohn’s 4th Symphony in December, a
symposium on the archeology of the roots of Judaism is scheduled for
January and a “Millennium Retrospective” of visual art that the JCC has
displayed over the years opens today.
The key to the center’s diverse programming, said Selma Sladek, director
of adult services and special events, is a combination of the energy and
receptivity of the center staff and the open-mindedness of the JCC’s
members.
“Basically, we try to schedule a very broad variety of programs so that
we hit at least something that everybody will be interested in,” Sladek
said.
Sladek said the center is interested in pursuing adventurous programming,
but it does so always with a mind toward the community.
“They have to want it,” she said of the center’s audience. “It’s not
enough for a professional to want it and to will it into being.”
Mary Ann Malkoff, who has been acting as vice president of adult programs
and who will take over as the JCC’s president later this month, said the
center works hard to engage with community suggestions for cultural
events and strives to involve locals in the coordination of these
productions.
A proposal to have a swing dancing program, for example, struck Malkoff
as being a little odd. But the center’s philosophy on programming is
simple: listen to what people in the community are saying.
“We’re supposed to have our opinions,” Malkoff said of the boards that
decide on scheduling events. “But it’s almost as though the further up
you get in the committee structure, the quieter you become. Because if
people really want to do something, who are you to tell them no?”
Swing dancing, it turned out, was a big hit. And it’s just one of the
programs that have been developed because of the center’s response to
community interest. A Klezmer band was recently started at the center for
the same reason.
Malkoff attributed the cultural sophistication and enthusiasm of the
members of the Orange County JCC -- about 1,300 families and individuals
belong to the group -- to the relatively recent arrival in California of
much of Orange County’s Jewish community. Many of the families that
belong to the center came here from metropolitan areas with a strong
cultural focus.
“Everybody who comes from Boston or Chicago or Texas to California has an
idea of what the center could and should do,” Malkoff said. “And as those
people become more involved [with the center], they see how responsive we
are.”But in addition to being open to community suggestions, the people
behind the JCC’s cultural committees also tend to be passionate about the
arts.
The center’s Menorah Theatre, which is in its 10th season this year and
put on a production of Neil Simon’s comedy “Jake’s Women” in October, was
the brainchild of former center president Jon Garon. Garon decided to
start the theater in his spare time, Sladek said, simply because he
thought the community needed a theater to showcase works by Jewish
playwrights.
“This became his leisure time, I guess,” Sladek joked.
The JCC Orchestra evolved in 1993 in a similar manner, when JCC member
Sol Sloan put together a group of about 10 players to practice on
weekends.
Membership in the group, which is made up entirely of volunteers, has
tripled in the last six years and the orchestra now puts on two
performances a year.
“There’s so much activity over there, we can’t keep up with it,” Sloan
said. “It’s an extremely vibrant organization.”
Performances of this sort must rely on enthusiasm to compensate for the
fact that the center doesn’t have a particularly lavish space for
musicians or actors to appear. Many of the concerts take place in a
fairly spartan auditorium, which is about as well adapted for acoustics
as it is for potluck dinners.
Polly Sloan, a past chair of the cultural arts committee and the husband
of Sol Sloan, joked that the center could use a benefactor to give all
the culture a little room to spread out.
“We wish we had a sugar daddy who would buy us five acres,” she said.
But with events like the cabaret “SimchaFest” concert that was held in
March at the center -- in which the space was transformed into a dimly
lit jazz venue -- a little imagination frequently overcomes physical
constraints.
“You walked in ... and you just went ‘Where am I?”’ Malkoff recalled.
“What we manage to do in that building is just wonderful.”
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