Quiet as a mouse
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Mike Sciacca
Mitzi Williams sat tight lipped throughout the afternoon interview in
her Huntington Beach home, despite being surrounded by family members.
She thought about saying something, but, true to her resolve, she managed
to keep still.
“Not a creature was stirring, not even a . . .,” oops, wrong Christmas
story.
Beginning the night of Dec. 14 and continuing through Christmas Eve
day, the traditional Christmas production of the “Nutcracker Ballet” will
take place at the Golden West College Mainstage Theater.
And, in spite of her quietness on Tuesday, Mitzi Williams, all of 4
years old, will be participating in the play. Fittingly, she will play
the role of a baby mouse in the 25th anniversary of the production.
No speaking necessary.
It will be her first major stage performance.
“She might not talk much right now,” Mitzi’s mother, Kathy,
forewarned, “but as soon as she stands in the wings on stage, she just
lights up. It’s like she’s a different person.”
Mitzi isn’t the only child of Kathy and Rob Williams that will be on
stage, however.
Her siblings -- Takara, 10, Naomi, 8 and Aaron, 5 -- are seasoned
veterans. This will be the sixth “Nutcracker” performance for Takara, who
will play a party scene girl, the fifth for Naomi, who will be a soldier,
and Aaron’s second go-round. This time, he will play a party scene boy
and also a baby mouse in one performance.
Takara and Aaron also will play siblings from the same family in the
dance party scene.
All previously have played the role that Mitzi will portray. Unlike
their sister, her siblings had plenty to say.
“We have a lot of fun out there,” said Takara. “We all get to dress up
and dance. I enjoy it, too, because I get to perform with my friends.”
The Williams children have been dancing since the age of 3, when their
parents enrolled them in the Orange County Dance Center in Huntington
Beach, run by Michael Houston. The Ballet Repertory Theater, run out of
the center, is headed by Terri and Anthony Sellars, who also have three
children, Chris, Kevin and Katie, performing in the silver anniversary
production.
When not in school, the Williams children spend up to 25 hours a week
at the center. More time is required for rehearsals for the upcoming
Christmas production.
“From an efficiency standpoint, it’s great to have all four of our
children performing. Nobody is left out,” Kathy Williams said.
Performing arts has been a regular activity for this family since the
Williams parents were children.
Rob, an elementary school principal by day in La Mirada, is a drummer
by night and regularly plays in local productions including with the
Orange County School for the Performing Arts. Kathy has a degree in music
from Cal State Fullerton and also studied dance as a child with The
Classical Ballet Foundation and Kathryn Lowe School of Dance.
Aaron Williams has a keen eye for the craft. When his two older
sisters, Takara and Naomi, rehearsed for the “Nutcracker” production in
years past, Aaron, his mother said, would learn every detail of their
roles.
“I have seen the ‘Nutcracker’ a lot and I know what to do,” said
Aaron, who, along with Mitzi, takes a gymnastics class at SCATS
Gymnastics in Huntington Beach.
You might think that having four children involved in a major stage
production such as the “Nutcracker” might prove costly. Kathy Williams
said that, although a spring time recital can be somewhat costly, the
“Nutcracker” production tends to be easier as all performers attempt to
borrow or share the costumes, owned by the Ballet Repertory Theater.
The “Nutcracker” is set in the Victorian era and costumes will fit the
times. That means that ringlets are required by the party scene girls to
roll as many as 65 to 100 hair curlers, Kathy Williams said -- a process
that can take upward of two hours.
The Williams children seem to be not only eager but confident about
their opening night performance.
Mitzi doesn’t say a word when asked what excites her most about the
“Nutcracker.”
Yep, quiet as a mouse.
Perfect casting.
The Ballet Repertory Theatre’s 25th anniversary production of the
“Nutcracker” ballet will run Dec. 14-24 at Golden West College’s
Mainstage Theater. Performances will be given Dec. 14, 15, 21, 22 and 23
at 7 p.m. with matinees Dec. 15, 16, 22 and 23 at 2 p.m. A special
Christmas Eve matinee will be presented at 1 p.m. Tickets can be ordered
by calling the Golden West College Bookstore at 895-9150. For more
information, call 846-0215.
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