Theater -- Tom Titus
Bertolt Brecht returns to UC Irvine next season, but the university’s
upcoming production of “The Caucasian Chalk Circle” won’t be directed by
UCI Professor Robert Cohen -- a Brechtian devotee who staged the
playwright’s “The Good Person of Szechuan” last month (and named his dog
Sukie Tawdry, after a character in Brecht’s “Threepenny Opera”).
No, Cohen is opting for Shaw -- or rather George Bernard Shaw by way
of Lerner and Lowe. He’ll stage the season-opening production of “My Fair
Lady,” which arrives Nov. 15 in the university’s Claire Trevor Theater.
Dennis Castellano is musical director and Donald McKayle will choreograph
the popular 1956 musical that ran through 1962 on Broadway.
“Caucasian Chalk Circle,” ticketed for the campus’ Little Theater (the
Humanities Hall venue), will wind up the Stage 2 season, opening April 10
for a single weekend under the direction of Joshua Hsu. The translation
will be by Eric Bentley.
Following “My Fair Lady” on the UCI schedule will be a play called
“Big Love” by Charles Mee. Annie Loui, who staged the estimable “Love of
Three Oranges” last season, is directing and the show opens Jan. 23 for a
two-weekend run.
“Lady Windemere’s Fan” by Oscar Wilde takes up residence in the Trevor
Theater April 18 for two weekends. Jim Sullivan will fill the role of
guest director for this production.
Winding up the main stage season will be a revival of the hot musical
from the late 1960s, an all-undergraduate production of “Hair,” opening
May 30, 2003, for two weekends in the Claire Trevor Theater. Keith Fowler
will direct, with musical direction by Castellano and choreography by
Janice Plastino. No word yet on whether the famous nude scene will be
included.
Jean Genet’s “The Balcony” opens the Stage 2 season at UCI Dec. 5 for
one weekend only in the Little Theater. Coesta Struve-Dencer is scheduled
to direct the existentialist drama, which is ticketed for a single
weekend.
UCI found some rather unique plays last season, and the second Stage 2
production promises to fit that category. It’s titled “The Day Maggie
Blew Off Her Head” by Amy Bridges, and it opens Jan. 30 for two weekends
in the Studio Theater under the direction of Teresa Pond.
Shakespeare’s classic tragedy “King Lear” pays a return visit to UCI
on Feb. 27, but is scheduled for one weekend only. Roberto Prestigiacomo
will direct the production, which will be mounted in the Claire Trevor
Theater.
UCI’s productions have a habit of engaging the intellect, as well as
the emotions, of their audiences. The 2002-03 season promises to follow
this tradition.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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