TOM TITUS -- Theater
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After a year as Costa Mesa’s “new kid on the block,” the Trilogy
Playhouse is beginning to settle in -- bolstered by favorable responses
to both its adult and children’s theater offerings. But the theater is
still wondering if a more substantial diet will prove as financially
palatable as its standard menu of comedies and musicals.
“We’re still trying to find our true audience,” admits Alicia Butler,
the artistically dynamic but publicity-shy managing director of the
Trilogy, located at 2930 Bristol St., in The Lab. “We’d like to do the
heavier shows, but we don’t know yet if we’d have the support we draw for
the musicals and comedies.”
This factor led the Trilogy to cancel two of its more mature scheduled
productions last year -- “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “The Bad Seed.”
Whether shows of this nature have a place at the theater is yet to be
determined.
The Trilogy made its Costa Mesa debut last January, after eight years
in Laguna Niguel, where family theater was the order of the day. Seeking
to shatter that image, the company opened with Ira Levin’s
mystery-thriller “Deathtrap,” but soon gravitated to such family-oriented
fare as “The Wizard of Oz,” “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and Neil
Simon’s comedy “Fools.”
Ironically, the Trilogy’s finest effort last year, the musical
“Little Shop of Horrors,” didn’t translate its artistic excellence into
box office gold. Still, the theater’s overall product was met with enough
encouragement to keep the doors open for a second season.
Keeping those doors open is a full-time job for Butler, who directed
all seven of the playhouse’s productions last year -- despite suffering
a broken leg -- as well as conducting acting workshops for youngsters and
teenagers. She’s now putting the finishing touches on the venerable
comedy “Arsenic and Old Lace,” which will open Feb. 9, and has started
rehearsals for “The Secret Garden,” the family-oriented musical that
will open April 16.
Butler, a native of Tennessee who migrated to California 21 years ago,
has been involved in theater all of her adult life, working as a stage
manager and casting director in Los Angeles before moving to Orange
County in 1991. When her husband’s work brought her south, she wasted no
time in organizing Children’s Theater Productions in Laguna Niguel.
That company attracted other people who now form the core of the
Trilogy Playhouse -- scenic artist James Mulligan, who’s also an
accomplished actor; actress and technician Sharon Simonian; and front
office worker Pat Cain. Mulligan has designed and built all the sets, as
well as turning in such notable performances as Seymour in “Little Shop,”
while Simonian sunk her teeth into that classic villainess, the Wicked
Witch of the West, in “Wizard.”And, while Butler is the heart and soul
of the Trilogy Playhouse, don’t look for her on stage -- ever -- in the
future. This dyed-in-the-wool theaterholic doesn’t even own a head shot.
“My creativity comes from making magic happen,” she declares. “I love
pulling out emotions. I’ve always loved backstage work, but I don’t have
to be out there. I don’t even like to have my picture taken.”
Now a single mother, Butler has brought her 11-year-old daughter,
Hailey Villaire, into the family business, where she impressed as Little
Red Riding Hood in “Into the Woods” and the gum-chomping Violet in
“Chocolate Factory.” She’s also one of her mom’s prize pupils in the
theater’s children’s acting workshops, which, Butler declares, “provide
a nurturing, learning environment for youth.”
The classes have been going very well, Butler notes, crediting the
Newport Harbor Unified School District for its support. “We try to
instill confidence and self-esteem in our young people.”
Once she puts “Arsenic” and “Secret Garden” on the boards, Butler will
be looking at a 2001 production schedule that includes the musicals
“Ruthless” and “Forever Plaid,” the family drama “Anne of Green Gables”
and the classic thriller “Frankenstein,” scheduled, naturally, in late
October.
These shows, plus the youth workshops, add up to a full plate, even
for someone as energetic as Butler. But this year, she doesn’t have the
early 2000 headaches of transporting the Laguna Niguel operation to Costa
Mesa.
“It’s like starting all over again,” she says, “but this time not at
the beginning.”
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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