Pint-size thugs invade Laguna tonight
- Share via
Tom Titus
The mobsters are coming to Laguna this weekend, but they’re all
too young to drive the getaway car.
Some 54 children, ranging in age from 5 to 15, are featured in the
cast of “Bugsy Malone,” the latest offering from the No Square
Theater, opening tonight for a single weekend at Laguna Beach High
School’s Artists Theater.
“Kids today are inundated with television, video and computer
games,” says Roxanna Ward, artistic director of the Laguna theater
group. “This show gives our cast of kids the opportunity to learn new
skill sets and the joy that comes from committing to a project and
seeing it through together.”
Hopefully, Ward adds, it also will inspire the youngsters’
appreciation and knowledge of the distinctly American art form of
musical theater.
Those with long memories may recall the movie version of the Alan
Parker-Paul Williams musical, which featured a promising teenage
actress named Jodie Foster. It’s a comedy about Prohibition-era
gangsters in which the gag is that they’re all kids.
Laguna’s version promises to be a bit more authentic, if not quite
so extravagant.
The movie version dubbed the kids’ singing with adult voices. The
No Square youngsters will be doing all the warbling themselves.
“The best thing about ‘Bugsy Malone,’” observes
director/choreographer Steve Josephson, “is that the kids get to be
in it and help create how we interpret the show. They develop
relationships with one another and learn how to cooperate.”
The youngsters play mobsters in the 1920s in thing tongue-in-cheek
tribute to the gangster movies of the 1930s. The pint-sized saga
culminates with a nonviolent war where flying pies and silly string
take the place of bullets.
“It’s a thoroughly charming, irreverent and clean -- though very
messy -- showcase for the cast of talented young performers,” says
Ward, who is serving as musical director. Director Josephson may be
dealing with kids here, but his background is first class. He wrote
and directed the off-Broadway musical farce “Some Summer Night,”
which won the New American Musical Writers Festival. In Los Angeles,
he staged the West Coast premiere of Alan Menden’s “Weird Romance,”
and choreographed “Manet” and “It’s a Wonderful Life” for the Laguna
Playhouse.
He’s right at home with his young cast, however, noting that
performing in “Bugsy” will instill self-confidence.
“If they can get up in front of an audience, they’ll be able to
talk in front of any large group,” Josephson notes.
Josephson also conducted a Creative Theater Workshop and
Performance class for kids 10 to 15 for the No Square Theater, one of
five summer classes offered by the group. Upcoming is a class on
Vocal Auditions for the Musical Theater, offered to youths from 13 to
18 and beginning Monday.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.