The seven-minute pitch
Elia Powers
A man dressed as Thomas Jefferson switched from a historically angled
monologue to a sales pitch about his one-person performance without
skipping a beat.
Two men, sporting the letters M and S as part of their wardrobe,
explained the power of poetry and the importance of metaphors and
similes to a crowd of more than 100 PTA members and community
leaders.
Each year since 1988, a group of local artists on the Orange
County Performing Arts Center’s roster take the stage there to give
guests seven-minute previews of their acts.
What started as a quaint gathering of about five artists has
blossomed into a showcase for 65 traveling groups and individuals who
are booked to perform at schools and special events based on their
abbreviated shows.
“Teachers and administrators don’t always have a familiarity with
the different types of performance options,” said Jason Siebert,
manager of community programs at the center. “These workshops give
schools an easy way to bring arts into the classroom.”
The traveling arts program, recently renamed Arts Teach, reaches
more than 400,000 children in seven counties, according to Siebert.
During Thursday’s six-hour showcase, guests wandered into
Segerstrom Hall and Founders Hall to watch the artists, who sat
behind booths to conduct business when they weren’t performing.
During the year, the artists perform at school assemblies, conduct
workshops for smaller groups and lead seminars that educate teachers
about the arts.
Irvine-based performer Ramya Harishankar, who introduces audiences
to India’s music and dance traditions, has been part of the artist
showcase from its first year.
“We have such a multicultural society; it’s critical for children
to have an understanding of one another,” she said.
She said she has taken her show to more than 50 Southern
California schools, and she credits much of her business to contacts
made at the event.
Nancy Warzer-Brady, the center’s director of education, said
matching artists with schools is becoming increasingly important.
“Arts programming is being cut left and right from schools,” she
said. “Funding continues to drop, and there is more of a need for
educational arts events.”
Fairmont Private Schools PTA member Nancy Schwartz came to the
center to scout out potential performances.
Musical-comedy duo Razzle Bam Boom played at one of her Anaheim
schools last year, and Schwartz said she is looking to book more
shows for the coming year.
“We aren’t going to be caught sitting at a school performance
saying, ‘I hope this is age-appropriate,’” Schwartz said.
“Shakespeare won’t work for our preschoolers. I’m here to make sure
we make the right match.”
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