A Center to be most proud of
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This month, the spotlight turned ever more away from Los Angeles and
onto Costa Mesa with the groundbreaking of the Renee and Henry
Segerstrom Concert Hall, the top-billed part of the $200-million
expansion of the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
For years, the Center has slowly worked hard to go from Southern
California understudy (to Los Angeles) to a star in its own right.
Its breakthrough certainly seems to be here.
When the expansion is completed in 2006, the new 2,000-seat
concert hall and 500-seat music theater will cover 260,000 square
feet and feature a multilevel grand lobby space, a private donor
lounge, rehearsal rooms, dressing rooms, a music library, a
restaurant, an adjustable acoustical canopy and adjustable
reverberation chambers.
It all will be enclosed within a glass-curtain exterior.
With the Center, as well as South Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa now
is home to a dazzling mixture of performance space that regularly
brings in top-tier shows and, perhaps most famously, was the location
for the premiere of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Wit.”
It is a mixture that offers a rich artistic wellspring that is
rare outside of urban centers such as New York and London.
But the importance of this artistic convergence goes beyond
catering to theatergoers. Some 500,000 children are expected to pass
through the Center’s doors each year for an education in the arts
that now, sadly, is missing from most schools. Because of the Center,
those students will learn how art enriches our lives and helps us
expand our understanding of who we are.
Costa Mesa, and Orange County, as well, are most fortunate to be
home to such a surprisingly grand center for the arts.
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