Q&A; -- Ghost of ‘Christmas Carol’ haunts again
It amazes director John-David Keller to come across people who do not
know about “A Christmas Carol.” The play, which opened for previews
Saturday at South Coast Repertory, is in its 22nd year of being put on by
the Costa Mesa theater company. And for every year it’s been performed,
Keller has directed it.
“This is probably the best Christmas story there is,” he said. “It has
everything.”
The Charles Dickens tale of miserly Ebenezer Scrooge and the three
spirits who show him the error of his ways (especially in his treatment
of employee Bob Cratchit) has been translated over and over again into
film, theater, books, etc.
Keller took time out Nov. 13 to speak with Features Editor Jennifer K
Mahal about what makes the tradition endure at SCR year after year.
When did you start rehearsals?
The Christmas season for us, I think, starts about three days after
the department stores. We started with the children on November the
third. And it’s good to have them by themselves because there’s always
new people in the cast, and I always say to them “It’s like jumping on to
a fast moving train and we’ve already left the station.”
And it’s true, because there’s so many people in the show who have
done the show before and who come back and ... you know, it’s sort of
like falling off a log or riding a bicycle. I mean, once they get on
their feet and they’re in the midst of what’s going on, I think a reflex
reaction takes over, and they’re sort of in it and everyone else is kind
of playing catch-up. It’s a short rehearsal process.
For the children, it’s a little bit longer, but then they’re all new.
And we’ve discovered over the years that the kids learn best by just
repeating it. For example, now we’re at the point in some of the Cratchit
rehearsals where they know their lines and they know what they’re
supposed to be when, but I’m trying to get them to have more fun while
they’re doing it. So, the having fun part is something that -- kids have
fun naturally, but when you tell them to have fun, they sort of close
down.
How has ‘A Christmas Carol’ changed in the 22 years you have been
doing this?
It’s changed and it hasn’t changed. I mean, the story is always the
same. Fortunately the Scrooge has always been the same, and fortunately
it’s always been the same design team working on it -- the same person
does the costumes, the same person does the sets, comes in and looks at
them. This is the only show that SCR saves from year to year. The props,
the costumes, the sets are all put away and packed up and put in storage
for a year.
I always think of it as having the same sort of spirit as when we’re
at home and right after Thanksgiving we start getting out the Christmas
boxes, and that’s what it is. I mean, if you look around this room,
nothing is in any sort of order. But I can tell you that everything that
you see on the stage is in this room -- except for the set -- and it’s
amazing. These are all the props, all the real props, and the big set
pieces and all that, they’re all sitting here. It’s like being among a
lot of old friends.
What draws you back to doing this every year?
Well I think A) it’s my responsibility to do it. I mean as long as I’m
part of the company, it’s been my assignment and my pleasure for 22
years. Every now and then, you know, I feel like “Oh, my God. We have to
do it again.” But by the time I get there, I’m filled with the spirit. I
am sort of the spirit of Christmas anyways, so.... (He laughs) People
have accused me of that.
There was one year where, literally, I don’t know if there was any
other event going on in Orange County that had to do with Christmas. At
one point I was directing “Christmas Carol” here, I was running the
display where the children have their photographs taken with Santa Claus
at South Coast Plaza, and then I was asked to emcee the tree lighting
ceremony. It sort of all comes at the same time.
What’s your favorite part of doing this? Favorite part of the play?
Well, I don’t know that I have a favorite part. I’m sure that my
favorite part of the play is watching the audience watch the play,
especially if they’ve never seen it before.
I think my favorite part of doing it really involves the children in
the show because.... I tell them at the very beginning that it’s going to
be a Christmas that they’ll never forget. And it’s true. We get kids
coming back who have done it in years past, and they just walk into the
room and they just smile. It brings back a lot of wonderful, sort of fond
and funny memories.
What’s the biggest challenge in doing this every year?
Making it new. Making it new every year. As actors, we know what our
job is -- to tell the story, to make it fresh for an audience that’s
never seen it. And in a sense that’s the biggest challenge. How do you do
that after you’ve been doing it for 22 years? And that is the challenge.
We just have to erase everything we remember and try to start all over
again.
What lessons do you think people can take with them when they walk
away from watching “Christmas Carol”?
Well, this year there’ll be a bigger lesson than there has been in
last year’s, I think. The sense of doing something with your family that
is not only enjoyable but will be part of what will hopefully be part of
a tradition.
I think over 60% of the people who’ve seen this show have seen it
before at this theater. And then there are those people who have never
seen it and they’re just awed by it. It’s a beautiful production.
I think people are looking for things, this year more than ever, about
being with family and how important it is. And not taking it for granted,
and this is a wonderful beginning.
Do you have any anecdotes from the years of doing this play?
Which ones do you want?
Well, each character probably has some that are just very, very, very
funny. Hal’s, of course, (Hal Landon, Jr., who plays Scrooge) you know
he’s on stage all the time, so he sees a lot more than the rest of us
see.
My favorite thing that happened during a rehearsal just the other day
was, we have a wonderful actor by the name of Tim Landfield playing the
Ghost of Christmas Present. The adults were called for the first time
last Friday (Nov. 9). Tim was in the other room having a costume fitting
and we were rehearsing some scene. Suddenly the door burst open, and Tim
walked in the room in full costume and makeup and just went around the
room to everybody and wished them all a very merry Christmas and then
left. So there’s that to add to it.
We got into rehearsing the office scene, and Martha, who plays one of
the solicitors in the show -- Martha McFarland her name is -- has done
this show for years and years and years and years. And during a
performance last year, Martha just went blank. And in the scene, we’re
soliciting a contribution from Mr. Scrooge, which we of course don’t get.
But Martha has a lot of words, where she’s talking about the poor and how
important it is and the needy have to be taken care of, and she just goes
on about this. And she went dry.
I don’t think she would have remembered her name, and all that came
out were three words. And she was pulling on Mr. Scrooge’s coat by saying
“Want. Need. Help.” And, we, all of us were onstage, we couldn’t look at
her because ... and Hal just turned upstage and Bob Cratchit, who’s
sitting at his desk, was just, was openly laughing. And, I mean, poor
Martha. There was nothing we could do to help her. Well, we could have,
but we didn’t want to.
So we were reminded of that. We were reminded when we got into the
first Cratchit scene last year, that Mrs. Cratchit, who is in person, as
well as onstage, the most quiet-natured, almost spiritual person. And
there was a chair missing from the set, and the chairs are very important
in the Cratchit scene. And she went running off the stage, and she just
couldn’t find the chair. And this spew of invectives came out of her
mouth that were, like, “Oooh, from Mrs. Cratchit!”
I think every scene brings up something about children losing their
petticoats onstage and missing entrances and it all happens. I don’t
think our anecdotes are any more unusual than any other production that’s
been running for 22 years. But they’re all pretty wonderful.
I think one of my favorite things that happens now during “Christmas
Carol” is, if you think about how long we’ve been doing the show, now we
have children who were in the show maybe 20 to 22 years ago, maybe 15
years ago, and now they are bringing their children to see us. And I
haven’t aged a day, but somehow they’ve gotten a lot older.
Do you guys have any ceremonies for opening or closing day?
No. We don’t. In fact some times we are confused as to when we
actually open because we actually have our first audience, which is a
kind of opening, but it’s not because it’s a preview. And then we can go
on for about -- well this year the Saturday after Thanksgiving we will
have an afternoon run through for the company of South Coast Repertory.
And the word gets out on that one, so it’s a pretty big audience. And
that night we have our first preview, it’s a paid audience. And my guess
is that we open the following Thursday, but I don’t know.
Our traditions happen in the middle of the run. Because we share the
space with “La Posada Magica,” which is on the Second Stage, we try to do
things together. On one of the Saturdays towards the end of the run of
both of us, between shows, both casts have this huge potluck dinner on
stage, and it’s also known as “Tech Follies,” in which the members of the
tech crew do scenes from “Christmas Carol” -- their own version. And I
look forward to that more than anything else.
o7 For dates, times and ticket information for “A Christmas Carol,”
call (714) 708-5555.f7 BIO
Name: John-David Keller
Age: 63
Residence: Irvine
Job: Resident director and actor at South Coast Repertory, which he’s
been with for 28 years. Is directing “A Christmas Carol” for SCR for the
22nd year.
Upcoming: Will direct the new educational touring show, “Power Play,”
for SCR.
Miscellaneous: Likes to cook. Is master of ceremonies of fifth-grade
concert series for the Philharmonic Society of Orange County
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