TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first in a series reviewing this year’s
local theater scene.
To say South Coast Repertory had a good year this year hardly would be
news to local theatergoers. It’s been, in fact, quite a while since Costa
Mesa’s professional company actually had a bad year.
However, 2000 had particular significance for SCR. Apart from marking
its 35th year of bringing high-quality live theater to Costa Mesa and
(for its first two years) Newport Beach, the company also launched plans
to build a third theater venue -- a $19-million, 336-seat showplace
adjoining the large Mainstage and intimate Second Stage.
And, if the productions mounted in this new auditorium match or exceed
the caliber of shows SCR has presented this year, the occasion will be a
joyous one indeed.
Consider the recent comedy “Art,” one of the freshest, funniest plays
unveiled before a local audience in years. In any other year, it probably
would have headed this year-end list of top productions. This year it
ranks No. 3.
Earning highest honors for SCR’s presentations this year was the
revival of Arthur Miller’s powerful first play, “All My Sons,” under the
direction of Martin Benson. This epic of postwar trauma in Middle America
was described in this column as “a superlative and unsettling depiction
of the disintegration of an American family.”
A surprising second-ranked effort was the Irish import “The Beauty
Queen of Leenane,” a riveting mounting of a dark and compelling drama
centering on a widow in her 70s and her 40-year-old spinster daughter.
Andrew J. Robinson directed with spirited intensity.
“Art,” Yasmina Reza’s biting commentary on culture and friendship,
finishes at No. 3 but must be labeled SCR’s most watchable show of the
year. Director Mark Rucker excelled in his staging of this biting,
sophisticated comedy, centering around a huge, all-white painting, which
was laugh-out-loud funny through its brief 90-minute stint.
Richard Greenberg’s fifth SCR-spawned world premiere, “Everett
Beekin,” checks in at No. 4, a satirical comedy that balances Old World
attitudes against modern affectations. Evan Yionoulis directed with
acidic irony in both the play’s New York and California venues.
There were many candidates worthy of rounding out the top five at SCR,
but the provocative fantasy “References to Salvador Dali Make Me Hot”
fills that slot quite nicely. Jose Rivera’s world premiere, directed by
Juliette Carillo, was a haunting exercise in marital restlessness -- set
in nearby Barstow, but rooted in another dimension.
Among the company’s performers, there was a plethora of inspired
individual accomplishments, but two stood out above the rest -- Peter
Michael Goetz’s haunted industrialist in “All My Sons” and Heather
Ehlers’ repressed Irish spinster in “The Beauty Queen of Leenane.”
Others earning particular mention were Linda Gehringer and Simon
Billig in “All My Sons,” Mark Harelik in “The Hollow Lands,” Ana Ortiz in
“Salvador Dali,” Linda Thorson in “Amy’s View,” Geoffrey Nauffts in “The
Beginning of August,” Kandis Chappell in “Everett Beekin,” Jane Carr in
“Entertaining Mr. Sloane,” John de Lancie in “Art” and Blake Lindsley in
“The Countess.”
Productions and performances of this caliber, along with the prospect
of more to come when the company’s new theater is completed in October
2002, make this an exceptionally significant year for South Coast
Repertory.
In Saturday’s second edition of year-end accolades, the spotlight will
swing over to local community theater. Future columns will access
collegiate productions and performances, and unveil the Daily Pilot’s man
and woman of the year in theater for 2000.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.