“Pirates” sets sail at Golden West
- Share via
Tom Titus
Musical theater returns to Golden West College this weekend as the
Gilbert and Sullivan operetta “The Pirates of Penzance” takes up
residence in the college’s Mainstage Theater Friday. The time warp, while
not quite as severe as the last Golden West show, “Oedipus Rex,” still
will be quite significant.
One of director Grant Rosen’s most formidable tasks will be to imbue a
cast of 21st century young people with the style and manners of the late
19th century -- and then spoof it through the eyes of the two leading
satirists of the time.
“It’s a motivational thing you have to input in younger performers,”
said Rosen, 38, a man of many hats who’s staging his first production at
the college. “You have to get them to buy into the concept of the satire
not only over a century old but a continent away.”
Rosen, who has performed, directed and choreographed professionally
for two decades, nevertheless is taking his first crack at a Gilbert and
Sullivan musical. The closest he’s been to the Gilbert and Sullivan style
was the Roaring 20s musical “The Boy Friend.”
To prepare, Rosen obtained three different versions of the script,
gleaned the better parts of each and is presenting what he terms the
“streamlined version.”
He and musical director Bruce Bales are attempting to strike abalance
between traditional and modern approaches to musical theater.
Bales, like Rosen, believes in paying a certain degree of homage to
that bygone era.
“Reckless disregard for 19th century sensibilities puts one in danger
of creating a rather convoluted parody of what was already meant to be a
parody,” the musical director explains. “On the other hand, if one is too
careful, one runs the risk of mounting a dusty museum piece rather than
what its creators intended, a lively and provocative evening’s
entertainment.”
Rosen, who was born in Los Angeles and now lives in Long Beach, has
worked all over the country with some of the greats of the musical
theater, including the legendary choreographer Jerome Robbins. He’s
proficient not only at acting and directing, but the art of fight
choreography, which he’s employed in productions of “West Side Story,”
“Man of La Mancha” and “The Scarlet Pimpernel.” He was the fight captain
on the national Broadway tour of “Beauty and the Beast.”
He’s using all three of his offstage skills in “Pirates,” which he
says will feature “a lot of talented kids.” He predicts that “the
audience will have a lot of fun with this one. They should be able to
relate to a sense of spirit of the piece, which doesn’t take itself too
seriously.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
FYI
WHAT: “The Pirates of Penzance”
WHERE: Golden West College Mainstage Theater
WHEN: Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 3 p.m. through May
19
COST: $16.50-$18.50
PHONE: (714) 895-8150
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.