Chamber awards four business leaders
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Alicia Robinson
Four people being honored Tuesday have given more than a century of
service to the community.
The 2004 Hall of Fame awards given by the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce and South Coast Metro Alliance honor leadership, personal
achievement and community spirit. Awards will go to South Coast
Repertory founders David Emmes and Martin Benson, Werner Escher of
South Coast Plaza, and Orange County Market Place founder Bob Teller.
“We try to mix it up so that there’s a spectrum of representation
in the city, because in Costa Mesa you can look in any direction and
find businesses that are extraordinarily successful, you can find
individuals whose achievements are head and shoulders above average
individuals,” said Ed Fawcett, president of the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce.
The organizations giving the awards have a business focus, but
they look for the best examples of all kinds of community service,
Fawcett said.
This year’s award winners have given to the community in a variety
of ways.
South Coast Repertory, which will be honored for leadership in the
arts, has contributed to the arts since it was founded 40 years ago
and recently completed a major expansion of its theater, said Dan
Pittman, spokesman for the South Coast Metro Alliance.
“That’s good for everybody because it’s more opportunities for
everybody to experience the magic of live theater,” he said.
Emmes and Benson are the longest-serving repertory theater company
founders in the U.S. and the company has won numerous awards over the
years, Pittman said.
“We just know that [South Coast Repertory has] become a cultural
magnet for Costa Mesa,” he said.
For 37 years, Escher has been an ambassador for not only South
Coast Plaza but also the surrounding community, said Debra Gunn
Downing, marketing director for South Coast Plaza. Escher will be
given the personal achievement award.
As the shopping center’s executive director of domestic and
international markets, Escher often travels to Japan, Europe and
South America to draw business to the area, and people who come to
shop spill over into restaurants, hotels and other businesses, she
said.
“Werner’s efforts over the last 30 years have literally made South
Coast Plaza not only a Southern California shopping destination but
have really put us on the international shopping map,” Downing said.
Escher is known coast to coast in the tourism industry for his
outgoing and gracious personality and business knowledge, she said.
The community spirit award will be presented to Bob Teller, who
started the upscale swap meet known as the Orange County Market Place
35 years ago.
Teller and the Market Place have helped launch many businesses,
including one started by Michael Arnell, who owns a wallpaper store
in Westminster called the Border Store.
Arnell said he didn’t have the money to open a store initially,
but he took his concept to the swap meet, and within four years he
was successful enough there to open his own free-standing business.
“None of this would have happened if I hadn’t had that opportunity
out there, so he’s been a milestone in my life,” Arnell said of
Teller.
“A lot of people that have started in business have started out
there and gone on to be successful,” he said.
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