TOM TITUS -- Theater preview
One of the nicest and most enjoyable birthday presents I’ve received
in recent years was a visit to the Canon Theater in Beverly Hills for a
performance of “Forever Plaid.”
If your musical tastes go back to the 1950s, as mine do, this is your
type of show. My birthday present came courtesy of a lady I was dating at
the time, and the frosting on this particular cake came when she was
chosen from all the admitted piano players in the audience to go up on
stage and play “Heart and Soul” on the keyboards.
“Forever Plaid” -- which is ticketed for Orange Coast College’s
Robert B. Moore Theatre Sunday afternoon -- is a magical mixture of
harmony and hilarity. It’s been touring since 1994 when the show finished
a four-year engagement on Broadway.
It’s the story of four teenagers who dream of becoming a singing group
like their idols the Four Aces, the Four Lads and the Four Freshmen. The
only problem -- all four are killed in a collision with a school bus
filled with eager teens on their way to see the Beatles’ 1964 debut on
the Ed Sullivan Show.
Now don’t wince; I said it was funny. Through angelic intervention,
the boys return to earth to do the show they never got to do in life. And
do they ever, 30 songs worth, including early 50s favorites such as
“Love is a Many Splendored Thing,” “Three Coins in the Fountain” and
“Moments to Remember.” There’s even, ironically, a Beatles number (“She
Loves You”) in the repertoire.
Local audiences -- at least those who have reserved tickets, since the
show is sold out -- can push their nostalgia buttons Sunday at 4 p.m. in
the Robert B. Moore Theatre when “Forever Plaid” makes a one-afternoon
stand in our own backyard. And even the younger folks might dig it, as a
sort of musical history lesson.
* * *
While on the subject of OCC, the college’s repertory company was
scheduled to put on a collection of plays by Harold Pinter this weekend.
However, Pinter has been scratched and replaced with David Mamet’s
“Oleanna,” which, from this corner, is all to the good.
OCC student Martin Winslow, of Costa Mesa, is directing the
two-character drama about a male college professor and the unbalanced
female student who threatens to file a bogus sexual harassment suit
against him. The play was done a few years ago, brilliantly, at South
Coast Repertory.
Performances will be given 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays
through Feb. 25 in the Drama Lab Studio. Tickets may be reserved by
calling (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His columns appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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