Playhouse still looking spry at 40
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Tom Titus
About this time next year, the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse will be
celebrating its 40th birthday. I know because I was present at the
creation.
Back in the spring of 1965, I’d just started reviewing local plays
and writing about the theater for the Daily Pilot, when it occurred
to me that my columns might be more informed if I had some practical
experience in the field. Besides, it looked like a lot of fun.
As it happened, both assumptions were correct. In May of that
year, the Civic Playhouse, under its founding director, the late Pati
Tambellini, announced plans for its first adult project, having put a
children’s play and a youth show on the boards. The maiden production
was the comedy “Send Me No Flowers.”
I auditioned, won the cameo role of the cemetery lot salesman
(played by Paul Lynde in the movie version) and got my feet wet in
community theater. And I experienced my first and last taste of
entrance applause.
I’d been a reporter, covering the city of Costa Mesa, for about a
year and a half, and many of the local city officials were in
attendance on opening night. When they responded to my first
appearance on stage, it nearly erased all 40 or so lines I’d
painstakingly committed to memory.
As the years went on, I appeared in several other shows for the
playhouse, the most memorable assignment being Ensign Pulver in “Mr.
Roberts,” as well as other local theater groups, before starting
directing in 1968.
For 31 years, I held down the position of artistic director of the
Irvine Community Theater, from which I finally retired last summer.
But the Civic Playhouse always held a warm spot for me as my first
theater home.
In 1985, Pati announced “Father of the Bride” as the theater’s
20th anniversary show. Feeling nostalgic, I auditioned and wound up
with the title role. By that time, the playhouse had relocated from
its vintage auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds to its
present location in the Rea School complex on Hamilton Avenue.
Now, 20 more than years have passed, and the playhouse is making
plans for its 40th anniversary season in 2004-05. And, in a sense,
it’s starting right where it left off.
When last visited, the playhouse was presenting the musical
“Cabaret,” which takes place in the early 1930s, prior to Adolf
Hitler’s rise to power. Leading off the new season will be “The Diary
of Anne Frank,” based on the 14-year-old girl’s true story of events
that transpired in Holland during the reign of the Nazi regime. That
show will open Sept. 9 and run through Oct. 3.
Another young girl is the focal point for “The Secret Garden,” a
musical version of a story that has captivated readers for decades.
The local production arrives Feb. 10 and plays through March 13. This
show won a 1991 Tony award for “best book of a musical” and was
nominated for a half-dozen other Tonys.
What would a special season be without Neil Simon? Especially a
Simon play that doesn’t come around that often. From April 7 through
May 1, the playhouse will present “Biloxi Blues,” the middle play in
the “BB” trilogy (between “Brighton Beach Memoirs” and “Broadway
Bound”) and focusing on Eugene Jerome -- a thinly disguised portrait
of Simon himself -- when he enlists in the Army during World War II.
Finally, another musical will close out the anniversary season and
offer a local premiere in the process. “Falsettos” involves members
of a “typical modern American nuclear family” which turns out to be
not so normal after all. The show won Tonys in 1992 for “best book of
a musical” and “best score.”
The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse is looking pretty young and
strapping for a 40-year-old, judging by its current, edgy production
of “Cabaret.”
For those who have yet to discover it, the address is 661 Hamilton
St., Costa Mesa, and information on the new season is available at
(949) 650-5269.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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