SCR reveals most of 2005-06 season
TOM TITUS
South Coast Repertory, which traditionally announces its new season
in bits and pieces, has come up with definite titles for seven of the
nine productions that eventually will grace its two main stages in
2005-06.
Four plays each are confirmed for the theater’s Segerstrom Stage
and three others for the Julianne Argyros Stage for what will be
South Coast Repertory’s 41st season in Orange County. So far, there
are two American premieres, one West Coast premiere and one world
premiere, with at least one other world premiere yet to be announced.
Scheduled for production on the Segerstrom Stage next season are
Bertolt Brecht’s “The Caucasian Chalk Circle,” a revival of Garson
Kanin’s “Born Yesterday,” the American premiere of Terry Johnson’s
“Hitchcock Blonde” and a return visit from Tom Stoppard’s “The Real
Thing.”
The Argyros Stage will be offering the West Coast premiere of “Man
from Nebraska” by Tracy Letts, Joe Penhall’s “Dumb Show” in its
American premiere and the world premiere of “Bossa Nova” by Kirsten
Greenidge.
Themes of morality, justice and the effects of war on individuals
pervade Brecht’s “Caucasian Chalk Circle,” which focuses on a maid
caught holding a baby in the middle of a revolution. It’s a return
for the theater to one of its favorite playwrights in the company’s
formative years of the 1960s.
“Born Yesterday” will be familiar to both theatergoers and movie
buffs as the comedy about a brusque wheeler-dealer out to “smarten
up” his vacuous girlfriend while twisting a few high-level arms in
Washington. Judy Holliday’s performance in the 1950 movie earned her
an Oscar.
“Hitchcock Blonde” focuses on the master of suspense, Alfred
Hitchcock, and his obsession with casting blond heroines in his
movies (Grace Kelly, Doris Day, Tippi Hedren, Janet Leigh, Eva Marie
Saint, etc.). This cinematic mystery cuts back and forth from a 1919
London sound stage to the celebrated shower scene in “Psycho” from
1960.
Stoppard’s “The Real Thing” is a comedy about marital maneuvering
and real or imagined infidelity. The prolific British playwright
examines these themes in a play within his play. It’s South Coast
Repertory’s only repeat production of the new season.
A TV host whose show is on the skids is the central figure of
“Dumb Show.” He’s recruited for the banquet circuit by the promise of
an impressive fee, and the resultant overkill is the stuff of this
new comedy.
“Man From Nebraska” is the story of a family man who wakes up one
morning to find he has lost his faith, with no explanation for this
crisis of conscience. When he departs for London on an odyssey of
self-discovery, his wife and grown daughters are afraid he’s gone
around the bend.
“Bossa Nova,” which will be featured at this year’s Pacific
Playwrights Festival, focuses on an African-American woman striving
to escape her upper middle-class existence. She encounters some
quirky characters all too eager to lend a hand.
A number of subscription offers are available for the 2005-06
season, including price breaks for students and senior citizens. More
information on the schedule may be obtained by calling the theater’s
subscriber hotline at (714) 708-5599.
*
The Irvine Barclay Theater will be lighting up next week with
three full productions of international origin geared for young
audiences and their families. Two will be new to local audiences,
while the third is a condensed version of a classic tragedy.
That latter play would be Shakespeare’s “Hamlet,” created by a
troupe from -- where else? -- Denmark, boiled down to an 80-minute
modern adaptation. The production involves only four performers --
two actors and two double bassists -- playing all of the characters,
male and female, while preserving the seriousness and depth of the
original. “Hamlet” will be presented Monday through Wednesday at
7:30, with the opening performance already sold out.
Next Thursday and Friday will feature a visit from “Frog and His
Friends,” a musical by a group from the Netherlands geared for ages 4
to 8. Performances will be given Thursday at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Closing the program May 7 and 8 will be “Typo,” a Canadian import
focusing on a bumbling writer creating a show about himself. The
comedy is described at Chaplinesque and is recommended for all ages.
Curtain times are 3 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday.
The Barclay Theater is located on the UC Irvine campus, and
tickets may be reserved by calling the box office at (949) 854-4646.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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