JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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The greatest joy of writing a column like this is derived from
connecting with people. You don’t have to agree with them to find a
satisfying and often delightful exchange. But the greatest joy of all
comes from discovering a soul mate in an unexpected place. Like the
eighth grade of Ensign Intermediate School in Newport Beach.
Four years ago, I visited the Laguna Playhouse to see a fine
production of Stephen Sondheim’s “Company” and wrote about it in this
space. My thesis was how deeply Sondheim’s lyrics touched me, not only in
“Company” but in many of his other shows. That column produced a
wonderfully articulate letter from an eighth-grader named Felicity
Claire, who told me that his lyrics reached her in the same way. Even
though she disagreed with some of my reactions to the show, Sondheim’s
words literally built a bridge across three generations.
A year later, my wife and I saw Felicity as a freshman at Harbor High
School doing her first Sondheim role in “A Little Night Music.” At 14,
she had all the stage presence of a seasoned pro. Since then, I’ve
followed her work intermittently through her letters. Leading roles in
Harbor High productions. A growing list of theater festival honors that
last year included a second place in the world in an international
competition in Lincoln, Neb. At all of these festivals, she performed
“cuttings” -- mini-scripts she extracted and crafted together from the
original texts -- from a variety of Sondheim shows.
In a few weeks, Felicity will graduate from Harbor High. And, Tuesday
evening, the Harbor Drama Department presented a program of this year’s
dramatic and musical highlights on the stage of the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse. Felicity’s work was an important part of the show, and my wife
and I were happily in the audience.
If we could somehow harness the energy put out by these young people,
there would no longer be a shortage. The variety and quality of talent
was quite remarkable. And so was the manner in which Felicity commanded
the stage, whether she was doing a dramatic monologue from “Copenhagen,”
singing the ironic lyric of “Barcelona” or taking charge of an ensemble
performing a cutting of Sondheim’s “Merrily We Roll Along.” She was
professionally mature and quite splendid.
Watching these kids perform, knowing how tough show business is to
crack, seeing it so very closely these days through the eyes of my
stepson who is four years up on the cast of the show we watched, I
couldn’t help thinking about the meager way in which we support the arts
with public funds in this country. We are investing billions of dollars
in a Star Wars device that demonstrably doesn’t work and would drive off
our closest friends if it did, while people seeking help for the arts
have to grovel for a pittance -- and in recent years have struggled to
avoid being cut off completely.
That the same problem exists locally on a smaller scale was driven
home by a poignant plea before last night’s show from Damien Lorton, the
artistic director of the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, where Sondheim’s
“Into the Woods” is playing. After 35 years of feeding the soul of this
city, the Playhouse, said Lorton, is approaching the end of the line.
Unless the group is able to raise $8,000 quickly, it will have to shut
down. And the first victims will be local kids denied the summer
activities of the playhouse.
“Into the Woods” will be playing there (661 Hamilton Ave., [949]
650-5269) through June 10, and a heavy turnout would take a healthy bite
from this deficit. I haven’t seen this production, but I’ve seen the show
several times and can strongly recommend it. I can also strongly
recommend that the Costa Mesa community not let the playhouse slip away.
It was supported by city funds until seven years ago. Restoration of that
funding would prevent a serious loss in a community that sorely needs
such affirmation today.
Meanwhile, Felicity will be going to New York to explore the next step
in her theatrical education. Gail Brower, the head of Harbor High’s Drama
Department, says that Felicity “has never wavered in her devotion to the
theater or her determination to work in it.” But her youth was a
deterrent at Juilliard, where she was told to come back in a year; she
hopes it won’t be at the Manhattan School of Music, where she also
recently auditioned.
Seventeen of the students we saw perform Tuesday are seniors who --
like Felicity -- will be reaching out and moving on next year. Tuesday’s
program included a silent auction to raise money for at least a token
support of these seniors.
“We hope,” said Brower, “to give each of them $100. That’s not very
much, but at least it says ‘Thank you’ for all their dedicated work these
past four years.”
One of the Sondheim songs Felicity gave us Tuesday night was “Move On”
from “Sunday in the Park with George.” It might well have offered a
challenge to all these young students, just as it always will for some of
the older people in the audience.
I fully expect Felicity to be delivering Sondheim from a New York
stage one day. And I fully expect to be around to see it.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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