LOOKING BACK
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Young Chang
Before there was the Orange County Performing Arts Center, before even
South Coast Repertory took center stage, arts patrons found refuge at the
Orange Coast College Auditorium -- now known as the Robert B. Moore
Theater.
Built in 1955, the theater gave people like Diane Keaton, who attended
OCC in the early ‘60s, a walkway to a professional acting career. Local
theatergoers enjoyed great acts -- albeit without air conditioning.
And it gave the same audience a chance to get away from the woe of a
nation after former President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
Jim Carnett, college spokesman, was an OCC student on that fateful
Friday in November 1963. The student production of “Two Gentleman of
Verona” had opened on the previous Wednesday and was to have gone on that
night.
But instead the theater went black out of respect for the slain
president. The cast thought the production might even close, Carnett
said, but Saturday’s show went on with a packed house.
“People were ready to laugh,” he said. “The community needed a
diversion.”
Renamed the Robert B. Moore Theatre in 1982, after a college president
who was an avid supporter of the arts, the facility continued to
entertain the community throughout the years with student productions as
well as such household names as the Smothers Brothers, Dizzy Gillespie,
the Kingston Trio, Tito Puente, Bob Hope, Don McLean and, most recently,
Judy Collins.
Bob Dylan was supposed to perform there in the early ‘60s but
canceled. A famous motorcycle accident threw him off track.
Guest lecturers that walked the stage included novelist H. Jackson
Brown Jr.; “Catch 22” author Joseph Heller; Richard Bach, author of
“Jonathan Livingston Seagull”; and Bill Russell, an NBA Hall of Famer and
former star with the Boston Celtics.
One local graduate who later influenced the art scene was David Emmes,
co-founding artistic director of the South Coast Repertory. He performed
on the Robert B. Moore Theatre stage.
In 1991, needing modern-day amenities after 36 years, the theater
underwent a $2-million renovation. It reopened in the summer of 1993.
Work included air conditioning, improved acoustics, the purchase of an
orchestra shell, work on the stage and renovated seats.
“I think when we remodeled, it allowed us to bring in better acts,”
said Doug Bennett, executive director of the Orange Coast College
Foundation.
The original theater, designed by Richard Neutra, seated about 1,200
people. Forty-five years later, it accommodates 910.
Carnett recounts one fun memory of watching the Smothers Brothers, not
from the seats, but rather from the ceiling.
His friend at the time was responsible for handling stage lighting for
the group’s production. The theater was supposed to remain locked all day
for the Smothers Brothers to set up and rehearse. Carnett, then 19, and
his friend hid in the catwalks above the seats and watched the famous
comedians all day long. They even brought lunch.
“This was one of the best houses, the biggest, in Orange County,”
Carnett said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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