TOM TITUS -- Theater
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They started on a shoestring, traveling from venue to venue, hauling
their props and costumes in a station wagon. Realists would give them
little chance of sustaining their lofty concept of world-class
professional theater.
Their growth was measured in carefully orchestrated steps: Step 1, a
mobile theater group, introducing itself to local audiences; Step 2, a
small theater converted from a marine swap shop in Newport Beach; Step 3,
a larger playhouse in downtown Costa Mesa; Step 4, a two-theater complex
in South Coast Town Center that would win worldwide renown and a Tony
award.
And today, three and a half decades after its humble beginning, South
Coast Repertory prepares to take its fifth step, a new, $19-million,
336-seat theater adjoining the existing two, as part of the envisioned
Segerstrom Center for the Arts.
The Segerstrom family, agricultural pioneers and developers of the
Town Center and South Coast Plaza, has been in the forefront of SCR’s
development from 1978, when the present theater complex was built, to the
current campaign.
When the new project is completed, the mainstage will be re-christened
the Segerstrom Theater, with the Second Stage becoming the Nicholas
Studio Theater, honoring Broadcom founder and SCR patron Henry T.
Nicholas III.
It will mark the end of the rainbow for SCR and its artistic
directors, David Emmes and Martin Benson, who came up with the idea of
building a professional theater back in 1964 when they presided over a
three-play summer season in Long Beach.
Emmes and Benson, now in their early 60s, remain at the SCR helm,
guiding the theater and directing many of its productions. Local
audiences received their first taste of what would become South Coast
Repertory in February 1965 when the mobile troupe staged “Tartuffe” at
the old Laguna Playhouse, following the Moliere comedy with “Waiting for
Godot” and “Volpone.”
The official birth of SCR occurred March 12, 1965, when “Godot” opened
the 75-seat Second Step Theater at 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Those
first three plays ran in repertory at the converted swap shop, followed
in the initial season by “The Glass Menagerie” and an original play, “The
Trial of Gabriel Kapuniak.”
But the theater’s artistic energies were being stretched to their
limit, and Emmes and Benson reverted to the traditional
one-play-at-a-time concept. The second season ignited the company’s
rocket boosters with back-to-back stagings of Shakespeare’s “Othello” and
Harold Pinter’s “The Birthday Party,” which brought SCR widespread
attention.
With the support of actor and Newport resident Buddy Ebsen, the troupe
launched plans for its third step, which culminated in the opening of the
downtown Costa Mesa venue. Highly praised productions such as “One Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” “That Championship Season,” “A Streetcar Named
Desire” and “Death of a Salesman” launched the company into fully
professional status.
But it was the original rock-ecology musical “Mother Earth” by Ron
Thronson and Toni Shearer (now known as Toni Tennille) that energized the
company financially, triggering the plans to take the ambitious and
economically risky fourth step.
That move culminated in the opening in September 1978 of “The Time of
Your Life” on the mainstage of the present theater at 665 Town Center
Drive. The following year saw the birth of the smaller Second Stage with
a play called “Forever Yours, Marie Lou.”
In 1980, SCR sought to produce a Christmas-themed production for the
holiday season. Company member Jerry Patch came up with an adaptation of
Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol.” The play became a tradition that
will mark its 21st season next month with Hal Landon Jr. in the role of
Ebenezer Scrooge, a character he’s played from day one.
Another holiday tradition, the Hispanic-themed “La Posada Magica,” is
entering its seventh season on the Second Stage.
The new theater, scheduled to open in October 2002, will give SCR a
total of 943 seats, expanding the company’s education and outreach
programs, including youth theater initiatives that draw on SCR’s
nationally acclaimed play development program.
Plans are to commission scripts for a new youth theater series of
professionally staged productions in the new theater, as well as plays
performed by SCR’s youth and teen players in the Nicholas Studio Theater
(the current Second Stage).
The 37-year road from a station wagon to a multimillion dollar complex
has been a long and winding one, navigated by the steady hands of David
Emmes and Martin Benson.
In Saturday’s column, the founders will offer their perspective on the
incredible success story that is South Coast Repertory.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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