21st century plays take spotlight at SCR
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Tom Titus
It’s only a few years into the 21st century, but South Coast
Repertory will be devoting its upcoming schedule to plays written
primarily in this millennium.
For its 2004-05 season, SCR will mount nine productions on its two
stages -- and six of them will have been written in a year beginning
with a 2. Four of these six will be world premieres, something that’s
become a familiar occurrence at the Costa Mesa theater complex.
“We’re tremendously excited about the composition of our upcoming
season,” said David Emmes, SCR’s producing artistic director who
founded the company with Martin Benson in 1964 (moving it to Newport
Beach in 1965 when it officially became South Coast Repertory). “It’s
the third season in our expanded Folino Theater Center, and we have a
particularly strong slate of new works by top-rank, mid-career
writers.”
Three of the world premieres, all commissioned by SCR, are David
Margulies’ “Brooklyn Boy,” which kicks off the new season in
September on the Segerstrom Stage; Christopher Shinn’s “On the
Mountain” and Lucinda Coxon’s “Vesuvius,” both ticketed for the
Julianne Argyros Stage. The fourth premiere is, as yet, unannounced.
In “Brooklyn Boy,” opening Sept. 3, a writer’s career takes off
when his autobiographical novel becomes a bestseller and Hollywood
beckons. Will success spoil Eric Weiss? Tune in and find out. It
should be fun. Margulies, you may recall, created “Sight Unseen” and
“Collected Stories,” both of which premiered at SCR.
Up second on the Segerstrom Stage will be Alan Bennett’s “Habeas
Corpus,” set in the swinging England of the 1960s and ‘70s. In this
risque comedy, a doctor lusts after a patient who, in turn, prefers
the doctor’s son. It arrives Oct. 15.
“The Clean House” by Sarah Ruhl, part of last weekend’s Pacific
Playwrights Festival as a staged reading, comes to full bloom Jan. 21
on the Segerstrom Stage. This one centers around a Brazilian cleaning
lady who straightens up her clients’ lives as well as their homes.
Arthur Miller is a national treasure -- hands down our greatest
living playwright -- and his “Death of a Salesman,” “The Crucible”
and “All My Sons” have been given the full treatment at SCR. Next
season, “A View From the Bridge” will be Miller’s latest drama on the
Segerstrom Stage, opening May 20.
On the Julianne Argyros Stage, the season opens Sept. 26 with “The
Retreat From Moscow” by William Nicholson, author of “Shadowlands.”
It centers around a bombshell about to be dropped by a quiet-living
fellow on his 35th anniversary.
“On the Mountain” by Christopher Shinn will receive its premiere
production, opening Jan. 2. It’s the story of a rebellious
16-year-old girl with a gift for writing and her mother, who once had
a turbulent affair with a suicidal rock star.
Another festival entry, Lucinda Coxon’s “Vesuvius,” arrives April
24 for its world premiere. This one involves a man and woman who
share a villa near Naples, in the shadow of that infamous mountain
that laid waste to Pompeii so many centuries ago.
The silver anniversary of SCR’s annual production of “A Christmas
Carol” arrives this year, and the holiday favorite opens Dec. 3 on
the Segerstrom Stage. A week later, “La Posada Magica” mounts the
Argyros Stage for its 11th annual presentation.
SCR’s Theater for Young Audiences on the Argyros Stage will
feature three productions -- “The Hoboken Chicken Emergency,” opening
Nov. 5; “Pinocchio,” arriving Feb. 4, and a children’s play yet to be
selected, coming June 3.
With “A View From the Bridge” the only familiar entry of the
season (except for the Christmas favorites), the 2004-05 season at
South Coast Repertory should be an interesting one indeed. Theater
for our century.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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