Play festival set this weekend
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Tom Titus
Local theatergoers attending productions of unfamiliar plays might
ask themselves, “Where did these plays come from and how did they get
on stage originally?”
Chances are, they were born right here in Costa Mesa. Certainly
South Coast Repertory has made significant contributions to original
scripts over the years, and this weekend the birthing pains begin
again.
Tonight through Sunday, SCR will stage its seventh annual National
Playwrights’ Festival. This is the project that brought plays like
Amy Freed’s “The Beard of Avon” and Richard Greenberg’s “The Violet
Hour” to life -- and eventually to full production on the SCR stage.
The theater’s current productions of Freed’s “Safe in Hell” on the
Segerstrom Stage and Noah Haidle’s “Mr. Marmalade” on the Julianne
Argyros Stage are part of the festival, sharing the spotlight with
four staged readings sandwiched into the odd, dark moments, with a
couple of familiar names (Greenberg and Craig Lucas) involved in the
process.
The festival begins today with “Vesuvius” by Lucinda Coxon,
offered at a 1 p.m. matinee on the Argyros Stage. This story is set
in Naples, in the shadow of that fearsome volcano, as a man and woman
arrive separately, expecting peaceful holidays. SCR co-founder David
Emmes is directing -- and also will stage the play in its world
premiere at SCR next April.
Meanwhile, on the Segerstrom Stage, Sarah Ruhl’s “The Clean House”
will be given a staged reading at 3:30 p.m. It centers around a
Brazilian cleaning woman with a contagious sense of humor. Bill Rauch
is directing the reading, and Kate Whoriskey (“Antigone”) will stage
the world premiere at SCR next January.
Lucas, once a mainstay at the Costa Mesa theater (“Blue Windows,”
“Prelude to a Kiss”), returns with “The Singing Forest,” to be
previewed Saturday at 10:30 a.m. on the Segerstrom Stage. This story
revolves around the second-richest man in the world and the Oprah
Winfrey show. Bartlett Sher directs.
Finally, Greenberg, who has had six of his plays born on at SCR,
will unveil another -- a substantial revision of “Safe as Houses,” a
play he premiered in 1988, but felt was unfinished. Greenberg
dissects social and family mores and finds them equally fascinating
and wanting. This play will be staged Sunday at 11 a.m. on the
Segerstrom Stage, to be directed by Ethan McSweeny.
The 2004 festival brings to 55 the number of plays that have
received readings, workshop productions and full productions since
its launch in 1998. And 36 of these plays have gone on to productions
at SCR and around the country.
Tickets to the productions are $19 through $55 (previews $19 to
$38; regular run $27 to $55), with discounts for students, seniors
and groups of 15 or more. Tickets to the festival readings are $10.
They may be reserved by calling the SCR box office at (714) 708-5555.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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