Jennifer K Mahal There are the families...
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Jennifer K Mahal
There are the families we are born with and the families we make.
James Sherman’s “Beau Jest” at the Newport Theater Arts Center has
both.
There are the fictional Goldmans, the Jewish clan at the center of
the play. And then there is the cast, which has found in each other
support and camaraderie.
“This cast is so cohesive,” said Renee Oran, who plays matriarch
Miriam Goldman. “We truly work together.”
Her words echo the sentiments of other cast members.
“You’re looking at the hardest working people ever,” said Kristina
Leach, who plays Sarah Goldman, the single Jewish woman the play
revolves around.
“Beau Jest” is the story of what happens when Sarah hires an
escort to play her invented Jewish boyfriend for a family Sabbath
dinner. The agency sends over Bob Schroeder (Michael Serna), a
Polish-Italian actor who only knows a little about Jewish culture
because he did a six-month tour in “Fiddler on the Roof.” Add to that
mix two near-stereotypical parents (Oran and Sy Schwartz), a real
gentile boyfriend (Mitchell Cohen) and a suspicious brother (David
Colley) and, well, wackiness ensues.
Leach, whose own play “Grasmere” will appear off-off-Broadway
soon, said playing Sarah has been a fun experience.
“I don’t necessarily have the push to get married from my parents,
but being 30 years old and single, I understand,” Leach said.
Director Jack Millis said the play is a lot like phyllo dough -- a
light piece with moments of heaviness. The hardest part of putting
together this romantic comedy was finding the cast.
A number of concurrent auditions -- Costa Mesa Playhouse’s
“Picasso at the Lapin Agile” and Huntington Beach’s “The Foreigner”
held theirs at the same time -- meant a smaller pool of actors to
draw from. Then, two weeks into rehearsals, the actor cast as Bob got
a film job. Enter Serna, who had worked with Leach and Millis before.
“It’s a very fun play,” said Serna, whose day job is as
coordinator of scheduling for characters at Disneyland. “What is nice
about comedy is that it comes of natural reactions to things.”
This is Serna’s first play at the Newport Theater Arts Center.
It’s the second play there for Schwartz, who plays patriarch Abe
Goldman.
Schwartz, a licensed clinical social worker by trade, said he
feels honored to work with this cast.
“I love the people in the play more and more,” he said. “You can
enjoy your work, but you flourish in this experience as a person.”
Although the play involves stereotypes of Jewish families,
translates to other cultures and religions, the cast and director
said.
“The Jewish family is everybody’s family,” Oran said. “We’re all
the same. We may say the words differently, but we’re all the same.”
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