Worth a repeat performance
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Tom Titus
You might think that the last thing Tim Nelson and Diane
Makas-Weber would want to do after working through September and
October on the musical “Side Show” would be to plunge right into
another production of the same show. But that’s exactly what they’re
doing.
Director/musical director Nelson and choreographer Weber -- who
helmed the Huntington Beach Academy for the Performing Arts
production -- have joined guest director Teri Ralston, the Orange
County musical actress who made it big on Broadway and has returned
to pass on her experience to local students.
Ralston is directing “Side Show” for the Santa Ana Academy for the
Performing Arts program, with Nelson and Weber aboard as musical
director and choreog- rapher, respectively. The show opens the first
week of December.
Ralston made her mark in local theater before heading for New
York, was a member of the original cast of three Broadway shows --
“Company,” “A Little Night Music” and “The Baker’s Wife.” The first
two, written by legendary composer Stephen Sondheim, were huge
successes.
The veteran singer/actress/director has amassed a long and
impressive list of credits on Broadway, in L.A. theater and on
television since she played the teenage Luisa in a Laguna Playhouse
production of “The Fantasticks” back in 1965.
These days, Ralston is in residence at the Laguna home she’s owned
for 15 years -- that is, on those rare occasions when she’s not
teaching a class in musical theater at South Coast Repertory or UC
Irvine.
Born in Colorado, she moved to the art colony at the age of 12 and
soon fell under the influence of a favorite teacher, who plucked
young Teri from one of her classes and entered the then-inexperienced
student in an Orange County theater competition in a scene from the
play “Hello, Out There.”
Ralston won a best actress award for that effort -- the first of a
plethora of honors which would fall her way -- and her career choice
was cemented. As a college student, she returned to Laguna for her
“Fantasticks” role in a production that also featured Mike Farrell
(“M*A*S*H,” “Providence”) as El Gallo.
Ralston has come a long way since that summer production of “The
Fantasticks” in Laguna. Bernadette Peters may be the definitive
Stephen Sondheim musical actress, but Ralston must be right behind
her. She performed in the original productions of Sondheim’s
“Company” and “A Little Night Music,” which she left, incidentally,
to star in “Annie Get Your Gun” at Laguna’s Irvine Bowl, as well as
the lesser-known musical “The Baker’s Wife,” and has both directed
and performed in a tribute to the composer, “Side by Side by
Sondheim” with Peggy Lee. She’s also played Sally in two productions
of “Follies,” as well as Mama Rose in “Gypsy” -- all Sondheim
creations.
As a director, Ralston has helmed Sondheim’s “Into the Woods” at
USC, “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” in Alaska and
“A Little Night Music” in Thousand Oaks. She joined the reunion of
the original “Company” cast at the Long Beach Civic Light Opera and
New York’s Lincoln Center.
And that’s just the Sondheim section of her credits. Ralston has
headlined productions of “I’m Getting My Act Together” and “Taking It
on the Road” and “Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris”
-- her first show in New York. She starred as “Mame” at the South Bay
Civic Light Opera and has directed “Man of La Mancha,” “My One and
Only,” “Me and My Girl” and “No, No, Nanette.”
She’s not exclusively a musical actress, either. Ralston has been
featured in a number of straight plays, including South Coast
Repertory’s original production of Craig Lucas’ “Prelude to a Kiss,”
Neil Simon’s “Jake’s Women” and “Brighton Beach Memoirs,” along with
“The Octette Bridge Club.”
TV audiences have seen Ralston on “Frasier,” “Dharma and Greg,”
“Wings,” “Murder She Wrote,” “One Day at a Time,” “Married with
Children” and the soap opera “The Bold and the Beautiful.”
Her awards (including a “woman of the year in theater” accolade in
this column, a distinction she shares with one-time “man of the year”
Nelson) would fill several volumes, but one she’s most appreciative
of came just this past April when the Arts Orange County proclaimed
her the outstanding individual artist of 2001 in the performing arts.
“I really love being back in Orange County,” she said, noting that
she’s been renting her L.A. digs to such personages as Chita Rivera.
“I had set out to find a way of staying in Laguna. I guess you really
can go home again.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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