Culture clubs
Young Chang
A handful of twenty- and thirtysomethings shared a long, hearty laugh
Tuesday at the Opera Pacific office.
The merriment was over a performance given last year at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center. At one of Nick Dauderman’s first opera
experiences, a soprano collapsed onstage while singing the line, “My
blood turns cold.”
“I didn’t know that that was not part of the performance,” said
Dauderman, 31.
“But the stand-in was excellent,” chimed in Jody Berger.
This is what members of Opera Pacific’s Culture Club and other young
professional groups attached to South Coast Repertory, the Center and the
Orange County Museum of Art do. They chat about shows they’ve seen, swap
opinions and sometimes laugh. They do this over drinks and snacks at
post-show events, during intermissions between acts and at group
meetings.
The Culture Club’s members are young professionals who attend and plan
events around the four operas staged by Opera Pacific each year. Berger
is an Opera Pacific staff member who is one of the liaisons for the club.
Mary-Christine Sungaila, a 33-year-old lawyer in Los Angeles, founded the
group last year.
Members enjoy such benefits as discounted tickets, VIP entrance to the
Opera Club, an intermission venue at the Orange County Performing Arts
Center, entry to post-show receptions and, ultimately, an education in
the arts.
They frequently become the future generation of arts supporters and
board members who are counted on for funds, Sungaila said.
“Young professionals are looking for a way to connect with the
community,” said Dauderman’s wife, Jennifer, 29, a product manager and
Culture Club member who is also involved with a group at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center called West Side Story. “Our age group is
such a transient group, and the beauty of the arts is that it unifies
us.”
Nick Dauderman added that young professionals groups are a good way to
teach people about different kinds of arts.
“A lot of people don’t know the difference between the Orange County
Performing Arts Center and South Coast Repertory,” he said. “And the
Orange County Museum of Art is so far removed.”
Through the Masquerade Ball, an annual event held last month that he
helped to start three years ago, young professionals groups from various
local art venues have come together. Attendance numbers have increased
each year, which confirms that more young people are developing an
interest in the arts, he said.
“The arts is sort of a magnet for young leaders,” he added.
Nick Dauderman, the manager of a start-up dot-com company, is also
involved with young professionals’ efforts at the museum. After Hour
events there include discussions on how to buy a first piece of art, a
docent talk about exhibits in the museum and mixers.
Because the museum houses mostly modern art, young visitors appreciate
any advice they can get.
The art “is often difficult for young professionals to grasp, because
it’s such forward thinking, the really contemporary works,” he said.
South Coast Repertory’s young professionals group, called the Ovation
Club, is similar to Opera Pacific’s and the museum’s.
“It’s a way to bounce ideas off of each other,” said Marc Di Domenico,
a 35-year-old member and co-founder of the Masquerade Ball.
Being a member also serves as a networking opportunity to meet the
“movers and shakers” in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, he said.
Ovation holds pre-performance cocktail hours the second Thursday of
each production’s run, script readings and tours of the theater.
“If you went to a play and it was all blue-haired people, it shows the
audience had grown up with the theater but now are getting into their
senior years,” said Domenico, a financial planner. “We wanted to expose
what it could offer to younger people. That’s the only way to keep the
theater vibrant.”
FYI
WHAT: The Culture Club
CALL: (714) 546-6000, Ext. 340
WHAT: The Ovation Club
CALL: (714) 708-5555
WHAT: West Side Story
CALL: (949) 720-0490
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