Musicals tops for 2002 at community theaters
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Tom Titus
Saying it with music paid dividends for local community theater
groups in 2002. All three local community playhouses -- four if you
count the newborn Newport Beach Theater Company -- put their best
feet forward to a dancing beat this year, with the result that all
placed their musical entries at the top of this column’s
retrospective list.
The area’s senior theater group at 37 years, the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, occupies the top perch among local nonprofessional theater
companies with its high-stepping production of “A Chorus Line,”
directed by Damien Lorton. Close behind were Michael Ross’ staging of
“Sweet Charity” at the Newport Theater Arts Center and the Trilogy’s
“Big River,” directed, as were all the Trilogy shows, by Alicia
Butler.
Other estimable offerings from community theater groups were Costa
Mesa’s “Picasso at the Lapin Agile,” directed by Kyle Myers; “The
Sound of Music” at the Trilogy and a pair of winners from director
Jack Millis -- “Steel Magnolias” at the Civic Playhouse and a reprise
of “Driving Miss Daisy,” born at the Civic Playhouse in the previous
season and transplanted to Newport with all three of its actors.
Millis, however, has an advantage. He can call on roommate
Kristina Leach to spice up his shows -- as he did in “Magnolias” and
Newport’s “Beau Jest.” These performances earned the actress the top
spot on this column’s “best performance” list, but only by a whisker
over Kerry Vickers, who made “Sweet Charity” shine in Newport (a show
that also featured the Millis).
Other noteworthy performances on the distaff side in 2002 were
delivered by Teri Ciranna (again) in “Driving Miss Daisy”; Harriet
Whitmyer in Newport’s “Young Man From Atlanta”; Alicia Shaffner for
“The Sound of Music” and Leslie Williams for “A Little Princess,”
both at the Trilogy; Roxie Lee in Costa Mesa Civic’s “Steel
Magnolias” and Rochelle Carmony in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession” at
Newport.
Jack Messenger earns this column’s applause as the best local
community theater actor of the year for his strong performance in
“Young Man From Atlanta” at Newport. Runner-up is James Mulligan, who
shone in both “Rumors” and “Big River” at the Trilogy.
Other local actors who should be singled out were George Norment
for Newport’s “Driving Miss Daisy”; Kyle Meyers for Costa Mesa’s
“Chorus Line”; Tim Anderson in the Trilogy’s “Big River”; Mario Prado
for Costa Mesa’s “Picasso” and Ryan Mekenian in “The Wizard of Oz”
for the new Newport Beach Theater Company.
Saturday’s column will concern itself with the three undergraduate
theater programs at Orange Coast College, Vanguard University and UC
Irvine, all of which distinguished themselves during 2002. Then, as
the new year gets under way Jan. 2, we’ll unveil the Daily Pilot’s
28th annual man and woman of the year in theater.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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