Getting the ‘woid’ out on a show
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JOSEPH N. BELL
For the past four weekends, Drama Room 11 in one of the temporary
structures at Newport Harbor High School has been infested with young
men in snap brim felt hats and young women in garish dresses that
hide their knees, long stockings and sensible shoes. These
apparitions overflow frequently into the walkways outside, making the
area more closely resemble the back lot at Universal Studios than an
academic institution.
Inside, a man wearing a New York City police sweatshirt and a
patiently stressed look is directing traffic in and around a battery
of powerful lights and three cardboard flats that frame what appears
to be a night club bar. He is holding a camera. Periodically, he
assembles his cast in the night club and explains, cajoles,
improvises and applauds a performance that he films.
The setting is Chicago, the time, the Roaring 1920s, the director,
Newport Harbor history teacher Joe Robinson, the occasion his version
of the Judy Garland-Mickey Rooney invitation to “put on a show.” He’s
been putting this one on for nine years so his students could kick
off their shoes at the end of the academic year. But 2004 is
different. He’s making a movie instead of putting his show on a
stage.
He promised me a felt hat and a part if I came to watch, but I
arrived late and hit the cutting room floor even before I had a
chance to tell him my best profile. It’s OK because there probably
would have been an issue about my insistence on putting my name above
the title as befits a Mafia godfather. Instead, I just hung out,
watched the filming, talked to the actors and picked up snippets of
history from Joe Robinson and Kevin Weed, who is in charge of the
music. I’ve spent a lot of time on Hollywood sound stages, and I
promise you that this one was a lot more fun.
The show dates back to the introduction to Harbor High nine years
ago of educational programs designed to develop projects that
integrate science, math, history and English among small groups of
students who form a kind of academic family. Joe Robinson was
assigned to teach the history segment of the Da Vinci Academy
freshmen who had selected math and science as their special focus.
“It was a tough program,” he recalls, “and as we approached the
end of the school year, I thought these kids should have some fun.”
So he said, “Let’s put on a show.” And they have, every year
since. Until this year, it was performed on a stage outside the Fine
Arts Building at Harbor High. But this facility is now being torn
down as unsafe and won’t be replaced for several years. So the kids
are doing a movie, instead.
Robinson likes to integrate history in whatever he is teaching, so
I ran a small test with a group of girls who had just delivered a
song called “Women Power.” I asked them where and when this show is
taking place, and they knew it was Chicago in the 1920s. So then I asked if the characters they played were allowed to vote. Most of
them knew the answer to that, too. They were a little hazy on the
precise date, but they knew they had been recently enfranchised. When
I told them I was born a year after they got the vote, they didn’t
know what to do with that information and drifted off, looking back
over their shoulders.
I could also have told them some living history about the years
that the Al Capone mob ran Chicago that may have been historically
accurate but assuredly not in sync with “Bonnie’s Cappuccino and
Low-Fat Yogurt Bar,” where a group of felt hats were singing:
“Bein’ a crook looks like a breeze,
“Everyone jumps whenever you sneeze,
“You get respect, it’s really absoid
“How people hang on your every woid.”
The words are pure Robinson. He wrote the script and all of the
lyrics to tunes by Kevin Weed, a professional musician, organist and
teacher who handles a multiplicity of musical chores around the high
school and is directing the singers in this play.
All of the music is original and singable for a group of math and
science types unlikely to be headed for show biz. The story has to do
with the fight between the Devil and a sweet country girl for the
soul and body of a gangster who wants to reform. If you’ve seen that
plot done before, you haven’t seen the Robinson version.
All of the kids who participate in the show are freshmen. Unlike
the real world, everyone who auditions is in. Robinson finds a place
for them. “The extroverted kids take the big parts,” he says, “but
the shy kids who take the small roles are what it’s all about. It
gives the shy kids confidence, and I don’t know how many have come
before a performance to tell me their whole extended family is in the
audience.”
The size and fluidity and volunteer nature of the cast and other
school demands make it hard to schedule rehearsals. Robinson says the
opening night of a performance is always the first time he knows the
whole cast is present. So he has learned to improvise. When an actor
was missing in a scene I watched being filmed, Robinson surveyed the
room like a football coach looking down the bench, spotted a cop
costume and said, “Get in there.” The script was changed accordingly.
Everything about this show is volunteered -- time, effort, energy,
creativity, support from parents who help pay for props and
equipment, and, of course, Joe Robinson’s dedication at all of these
levels. Anyone who doubts the importance of funding and protecting
the arts in our public schools should check this out.
Actually, that can be easy. A group of parents have rented the
Lido Theater in Newport Beach to showcase the movie. It will screen
at 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 1, and will be preceded by a Hollywood
premiere with actors arriving in style and greeting guests in front
of the theater. It’s all free, but renting those lights for next year
is going to be expensive so donations of any size at all won’t be
discouraged. But get there early.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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