Center to give its regards to Hollywood
- Share via
Tom Titus
Theatergoers who generally turn up their noses at movies but flock
to the Orange County Performing Arts Center with each new show in the
Broadway Series may find themselves somewhat conflicted the first
week of September. In a rare occurrence, the Center is opening two
major shows the same week -- one in the main theater and the other in
Founders Hall. And both give their regards not to Broadway, but to
Hollywood.
The first show, opening Sept. 3 in the main Segerstrom Hall, is
“The Full Monty,” a musical comedy about working-class Brits who take
up the fine art of stripping. If it sounds familiar, you may remember
the original movie version of five years ago.
The next day, Founders Hall will welcome another dose of wicked
satire from the gang who made “Forbidden Broadway” so popular. Only
this one is titled “Forbidden Hollywood” -- same sort of satire, only
aimed at the silver screen.
Guiding “The Full Monty” from screen to stage was four-time
Tony-winning writer Terrence McNally, who added his own brand of
American comedy to the story.
“The show is about friendship, about being a parent,” McNally has
observed. “It’s also about an image-obsessed society that says you
have to look like Brad Pitt. This show says quite the opposite. It
celebrates everybody for exactly who they are.”
For the benefit of American audiences, McNally transplanted the
scene of the story from Sheffield, England, where the original movie
took place, to Buffalo, N.Y., so you won’t have to worry about
deciphering British accents.
Sheffield or Buffalo, it’s still the raucous and heartfelt story
of six unemployed steelworkers who go to great lengths to make some
cash and help out a friend in trouble. When a local male strip show
-- whose dancers venture down to their G-strings -- is a hit with the
local women, the cash-strapped factory workers figure they can cash
in big time, if they go the “full Monty.”
When it opened on Broadway in October 2000, “The Full Monty” was
hailed by critics on this side of the pond. It’s still playing to
sold-out houses at Broadway’s Eugene O’Neill Theater.
“Forbidden Hollywood” needs little explanation to theatergoers
familiar with Gerard Alessandrini’s outrageous musical satire
“Forbidden Broadway,” which sold out Founders Hall last year. These
constantly updated potshots at the latest musicals on the Great White
Way have been tickling audiences’ ribs for the past two decades. So
why not give the movies the same treatment? Why not, indeed.
“Forbidden Hollywood” promises to cut through Tinseltown’s bombast
and star power with surgical precision. The bigger the production or
more glamorous the star, the harder they fall.
The versatile cast of “Forbidden Hollywood” will revel in the
wicked destruction of box-office blockbusters like “Titanic,”
“Braveheart,” “Saving Private Ryan,” “The Bridges of Madison County”
and even will go as far back as “Gone with the Wind.”
“The Full Monty” will play through Sept. 15 at the Center, while
“Forbidden Hollywood” will stick around a little longer, through
Sept. 22 -- both extended engagements, since most shows not titled
“The Phantom of the Opera” only last for a week. Be advised, however,
that “Forbidden Hollywood” curtain time is 7:30 (with 9:30 shows
added Saturdays and Sundays). Ticket information for both is
available at (714) 740-7878.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.