‘Stone Soup’ short and sweet at Orange Coast
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There aren’t many ingredients in Orange Coast College’s children’s
production of “Stone Soup,” but the end result may prove filling for
youngsters later in life.
The short play, written by David Scaglione and directed by Rick
Golson, both OCC drama department faculty members, carries a message
particularly significant in today’s suspicious times.
“Stone Soup” is a morality playlet set in a poor Prussian village
of yesteryear, where inhabitants are wary of anything unfamiliar and
especially frightened of strangers. Imagine their consternation,
then, when three soldiers -- tired and, most particularly, hungry --
arrive in their midst.
All this in a little over a half hour. But OCC’s enthusiastic and
imaginative entertainers manage to reach their pint-sized audience
and, perhaps, impart a message.
Brian Munce cleverly enacts the more prescient of the three
soldiers, with Andrew Vonderschmitt and Justin Chambers completing
the trio on a more basic level. Laura Viramontes as the mayor and
Frank Miyashiro as the butcher fill their assignments well, but it’s
the animated Heather Leanna as the town crier who walks off with a
good chunk of the show.
This weekend, as “Stone Soup” completes its run in the large
Robert B. Moore Theater, OCC’s spotlight shifts to the Studio
Theater, where student directors will put their work on display in
the college’s summer one-act play festival.
The students, members of the OCC Repertory Company, will offer a
wide variety of short plays, both original and published. The
one-acts will be staged Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 and 8
p.m. through July 28, and tickets may be ordered by calling (714)
432-5640, ext. 1.
No sooner will the one-acts be on stage than the college will
mount a pair of highly abridged Shakespearean works under the
collective title of “Supersonic Shakespeare.”
The Bard’s “Comedy of Errors” will be performed in an abbreviated
45-minute version, while the post-intermission attraction will be a
return production of Tom Stoppard’s “The 15-minute Hamlet.”
Both shows have been offered at OCC in the recent past, but “The
Comedy of Errors” has been sliced and diced into a much-shorter
format, sort of the same treatment Stoppard rendered on Shakespeare’s
most celebrated tragedy.
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