Tom Titus Not that it needs the...
Tom Titus
Not that it needs the titles to draw audiences -- the most recent show
played to sold-out houses -- but the Laguna Playhouse’s Youth Theater
has a pair of beloved American classics awaiting its audiences in
2002-03.
Highlighting the Youth Theater’s four-show season will be oldies but
goodies “The Wizard of Oz” and “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” slated for
performances in December and May, respectively. They’ll be joined by a
pair of lesser-known titles, “Anastasia Krupnik” in October and “The
Wrestling Season” in February.
The first three plays were selected by Youth Theater director Joe
Lauderdale for the subscription season. They are geared for audiences
ages 5 and older. The “The Wrestling Season,” the non-subscription
project, is recommended for kids 12 and up.
Lauderdale’s staging of “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No
Good, Very Bad Day” earlier this month drew SRO crowds for its
two-weekend run, and the playhouse added an extra Thursday performance to
handle the overflow. It’s a good bet they’ll have to do likewise when
“The Wizard of Oz” hits the boards, since it’s probably quite familiar to
anyone over the age of 2 who can handle Margaret Hamilton’s visage on TV
vowing to eliminate young Judy Garland “and your little dog, too.”
First up, however, opening Oct. 11, is “Anastasia Krupnik,” adapted
by Meryl Friedman from a novel by Lois Lowry. This play centers on a
young girl who chronicles her thoughts and opinions on her life and the
people around her in her zealously guarded notebook.
“Like most kids, she bases conclusions on first impressions, but time
seems to change the way she looks at things,” Lauderdale observes.
Then, the Youth Theater thespians will be off to see the wizard. The
timeless L. Frank Baum story -- set to the music from the movie of
Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg -- finds a young Kansas heroine
transported “over the rainbow” to the land of Oz, where the Scarecrow,
the Tin Woodman and the Cowardly Lion help her find the way home. And, oh
yes, there’s that Wicked Witch of the West. The show opens Dec. 6.
Switching to an older clientele in February, the Youth Theater will
mount Laurie Brooks’ “The Wrestling Season,” which uses the metaphor of a
wrestling match to explore the issues of peer pressure, the search for
identity and the destructive power of rumors. Lauderdale cautions that
the show contains candid language, but “it focuses on the ideas and
issues that teens face every day.”
The playhouse will host post-show discussions that connect the actors
and audience as they explore questions raised in the story. “The
Wrestling Season” will be performed three days only, Feb. 7-9.
Devotees of Mark Twain’s all-American kid, “Tom Sawyer,” will find
the Laguna version a little different than the book or the countless
movie adaptations. Lauderdale has adapted the story and Mark Turnbull has
added music and lyrics to pep up the trials and tribulations of a
youngster who gets his buddies to whitewash his fence, romances the new
girl in town, runs away to be a pirate and is trapped in a cave with a
killer. The show will play May 9-18 to close out the Youth Theater
season.
The season will also include a quartet of special events -- a Winter
Showcase Dec. 17, a reader’s theater March 24, a repertory project May 13
and a Spring Showcase June 2, all scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Season
subscriptions for the three “5-and-older” shows are now being accepted,
and more information may be obtained by calling the playhouse at
497-2787.
By the way, the playhouse will be humming all through June, as the
West Coast premiere of Neil LaBute’s “The Shape of Things to Come”
arrives Saturday and plays through June 30. It replaces the originally
scheduled “Candida” and is being directed by Richard Stein, the
theater’s executive director.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot
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