Students honored at MACY ceremony
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Tom Titus
Broadway gave out its Tony awards last week, and some potential
future Tony winners also were honored the preceding Sunday, courtesy
of a Laguna Beach couple who have been spearheading achievement
recognition for young performers and musicians for more than three
decades.
Two dozen high school performing arts groups competed for the MACY
prizes in the ceremony, organized in 1971 by Lagunans Lee and John
Childress, who were accorded a standing ovation at the recent event.
Laguna Beach High School’s production of “Footloose” picked up a
baker’s dozen awards at the 33rd annual MACY (Music and Arts
Commendation for Youth) ceremony.
“Footloose,” directed by Mark Dressler, was Laguna High’s annual
musical production and one of 19 musicals to be excerpted at the MACY
awards show, which packed Fullerton’s Plummer Auditorium.
Highest achievement accolades went to the school’s orchestra,
ensemble and actor Nathan Greene. Honored for outstanding achievement
were Rachel Alcone, Alex Bodrero and Isiah Powell.
Rounding out the award winners were Becky Johnson and Marisa
Reisman for achievement, David Bennett, Laura Fryer, Alex Murrel and
Elizabeth Retzlaff for special recognition and Danielle Hooser,
winner of a “bright spot” award.
The MACY awards show is “a celebration of the talent, hard work,
dedication, energy and boundless enthusiasm of everyone who has
participated in the wonderful musical theater productions of our
schools,” the Childresses stated.
Lee and John Childress actually founded the MACY awards in Los
Angeles to honor students from LA high schools. When they moved to
Laguna a few years later, they continued their efforts on behalf of
Orange County young people.
Participating schools, in addition to Laguna High, were the
Academy for the Performing Arts programs in Huntington Beach and
Fullerton, along with high school musical theater students from Aliso
Niguel, Canyon, Capistrano Valley, Corona del Mar, Dana Hills,
Diamond Bar, El Dorado, El Toro, Esperanza, Estancia, Irvine, Mater
Dei, Mission Viejo, Newport Harbor, Rancho Buena Vista, San Clemente,
Tri-School, University, Valley, Vista and Woodbridge.
In a rare occurrence, the ceremony’s top award, the MACY, was
captured in a tie by two schools producing the same musical, “Les
Miserables.” Both Dana Hills High School and Aliso Niguel High School
hit the jackpot with their productions in the first year in which
“Les Miz” was available to non-professional groups.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot.
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