TOM TITUS -- Theater
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Fewer and fewer musicals are being written for Broadway consumption,
financial considerations and risk factors being what they are. Thus, the
oldies are being revived at a rapidly accelerating pace.
This situation extends to the provinces as well, with those
communities fortunate enough to house a venue such as the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. Next season, the Center’s Broadway series will
offer a revival-heavy slate of oldies-but-goodies along with a pair of
newcomers in its nine-show lineup.
The leadoff slot, Sept. 19-23, goes to a show that lifts musical
satire to a new level, “Forbidden Broadway.” Unseen locally since
Saddleback College offered its own version back in the mid-’80s, it’s a
hilarious put-down of the shows and stars that have become legendary,
from Ethel Merman and Mary Martin to “Phantom of the Opera” and “Les
Miserables.”
The two newcomers arrive back to back -- “Swing!” from Nov. 27 to Dec.
2 and “Blast!” Dec. 27 to Jan. 6. “Swing!” is a potpourri of singing and
dancing that spans the past 60 years in music, while “Blast!” features 60
brass, percussion and visual performers in an explosion of music and
theater. No story line, apparently, in either offering.
The delightful Ann-Margret visits Costa Mesa from Feb. 5-10 as the
madam of “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.” This show has some miles
on it, but has been seen only once in this area, long ago at the
now-defunct Harlequin Dinner Theater.
One of the best musicals of all time on my personal list, “Kiss Me
Kate,” arrives March 19 and will play through the 24th. Cole Porter’s
tuneful musicalization of “The Taming of the Shrew” was born in the
1940s, but recently enjoyed a whopping Broadway revival, winning five
Tonys in 2000.
Shortly after St. Patrick’s Day, “Riverdance” will have Irish eyes
smiling at The Center on a return visit March 26-31. The celebration of
Irish music, song and dance will feature an international company.
A hardy perennial slice of Americana, “The Music Man,” plays from
April 30 to May 5. We’ve all seen this one a hundred times, but few
musicals make the prospect of a return visit so attractive. Break out the
76 trombones.
Another American classic, recently redone on TV, is Rodgers and
Hammerstein’s “South Pacific,” which visits The Center from June 4-9.
This tale of cross-cultural romance on an island at the height of World
War II has a score most theatergoers know by heart -- and it was only the
second musical to win a Pulitzer Prize for drama.
Finally, in an extended engagement, “The Phantom of the Opera” makes
its third visit to Costa Mesa from July 31 to Aug. 24. Andrew Lloyd
Webber’s most celebrated musical continues to spin its web over audiences
entranced by the music of the night.
If we must have revivals, at least we have some substantial ones to
look forward to at the Center in 2001-02.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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