LOOKING BACK
Young Chang
A few weeks ago, we brought you the history of a community theater in
Costa Mesa that may not offer what the Orange County Performing Arts
Center does, but raises area kids to try to be stars.
This week it’s Newport Beach’s turn. The city has a community theater
company of its own, but it’s been around for just over a year.
Linda Safran started the Newport Beach Theater Company when she
realized her daughter, who is interested in theater, didn’t have a local
stage to call her own. The company still doesn’t have a facility -- they
perform at Lincoln Elementary School, at the Newport Theatre Arts Center
and other venues -- but Safran wanted to offer Newport children a
close-to-home chance to be in shows.
“For about two years we drove [our daughter] all over Orange County to
do plays for different theaters,” Safran said. “My husband and I looked
at each other and said, ‘This is silly.”’
They brought together a board of like-minded people from Newport Beach
and started the company last year.
“Because kids like to belong to something,” the company’s president
said. “It’s a normal thing for kids to want to do.”
Safran acknowledges that sports offers children the same sense of
belonging. But she focused on the theater arts because the city offers
almost none of that for young kids during the year.
So far, the company has staged three productions: “Annie” was
presented last summer at the Newport Theatre Arts Center, “Tidepool
Condos” was staged last December and “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat” ran at Lincoln Elementary in February.
The company is almost all volunteer-run by parents, except for
choreographers, directors and vocal directors who get hired.
“A lot of parents are involved,” said Safran, who also owns a
consulting company. “Theater people are great. If you want a house built
in a week, just find theater people.”
One of the company’s goals is to avoid using the same group of 15 or
so children in ever play.
“And it’s written in our bylaws that we can’t have the same director
do two shows in a row because directors come with a bias,” the president
said. “They have kids that they favor because they know them and they
work with them.”
Safran added that if she were “God creating the world,” she would put
on a show with a team of directors, choreographers and orchestra members
all younger than 21.
“Because there are so many talented kids out there in so many
different [ways] . . . I want them to be able to practice their art,” she
said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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