Dedicated dancing
- Share via
Jennifer K Mahal
When Temre Jaco Vouga agreed to sing and tap dance in her first
Children’s Hospital Orange County Follies three years ago, she had no
idea how personal her fund-raising work would become.
While rehearsing that year, the Huntington Beach resident was
diagnosed with breast cancer and her first grandchild was born at
Children’s Hospital needing heart surgery. The child died a few months
later.
“I was in a show volunteering for CHOC, and I needed CHOC at the same
time,” said Vouga, a fifth-grade teacher at Harbor View Elementary.
Her firsthand experience with CHOC and the camaraderie formed with her
cast mates during rehearsals has kept Vouga coming back to perform year
after year.
“Going through chemotherapy and radiation, losing all my hair, I made
friends here who support me and raise my spirits,” said the vivacious
1966 homecoming queen of Mariners High School.
The sixth CHOC Follies, “The Slipper and the Surfer,” will be held May
17-19 in a tent across from the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Vouga will tap dance her way across the stage as the Fairy Godmother in
this Orange County Cinderella tale.
There are few, if any, professional actors, singers or dancers in the
Follies. Every year, creator and executive producer Gloria Zigner
recruits people from all walks of society to rehearse two or three times
a week for several months and perform the original musical over a
weekend. Director John Vaughan, choreographer Lee Martino and music
director Doug Austin whip the cast into shape.
So far, the Follies has raised more than $1 million for CHOC, which
has facilities in Orange and at Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo.
Follies participants are required give a $500 personal check as a promise
that they will raise or sell at least that much in sponsorships and
ticket sales.
“Most people never ask for their check back,” Zigner said.
This year’s cast of 90 includes Theresa Flynn and Dody Korn, both of
Huntington Beach. Prominent businessman John Crean will perform alongside
Costa Mesa Mayor Linda Dixon. Skipper Tim Bercovitz of the American
Legion Yacht Club in Newport Beach will play an aging hippie.
What makes such divergent people come together? Two things -- Zigner
and the hospital itself. When asked why they participate in the Follies,
most people claim executive producer and former CHOC Foundation president
Zigner as the reason they are there. “She talked me into trying out,”
said Leslie Cancellieri, who is co-chairing the Follies with Sandy
Segerstrom Daniels and Dale Skiles. “I’d never been on stage before. I
told her I had no talent. She said it was OK.”
“Gloria forced me to do it,” said Rick Reiff, executive editor of the
Orange County Business Journal. “But now I beg her every year.”
For Vouga, it was a former boyfriend, who knew Zigner, that got her
involved initially. He ran into Zigner and ended up getting Vouga an
audition time.
It wasn’t her first time on stage. Besides being Miss Seal Beach from
1966 to 1968 (Mariners High served Seal Beach at that time), Vouga was
the lead in her high school play, “South Pacific.” Her high school drama
teacher has told her he intends to see her perform this year.
* JENNIFER K MAHAL is an editor with Times Community News and a former
city editor of the Independent. She can be reached at (949) 574-4282 or
by e-mail at o7 [email protected]
FYI
* WHAT: CHOC Follies “The Slipper and the Surfer”
* WHERE: A tent across from the Orange County Performing Arts Center,
Town Center Drive and Avenue of the Arts, Costa Mesa
* WHEN: 8 p.m. May 17, 2 and 8 p.m. May 18, and 2 p.m. May 19
* COST: Evening performances -- $25 general admission, $50 reserved
seats, $100 includes cast party. Matinees -- $25 general admission, $25
reserved seats.
* CALL: (714) 532-8690
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.