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Tom Titus
If you enjoyed “Gypsy” at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse last month
(I liked it so much I saw it twice), and you wish community theaters
would do more musicals more often--well, your prayers have just been
answered.
Building on the success of “Gypsy,” but actually set into motion long
before that show opened, the Civic Playhouse’s 2000-01 season will be nothing but musicals.
Usually, the theater puts on five shows during the season, with the
finale in the musical genre. Costa Mesa will cut back one show, but all
four remaining slots will be filled with singing and dancing.
Leading off the “musical season” will be a long-absent old favorite,
“Bye Bye Birdie,” first hatched more than 40 years ago and inspired by
Elvis Presley receiving his draft notice.
“Birdie” centers around a songwriter aiming to gain recognition by
having the Elvis type, Conrad Birdie, warble his tune on his last night
as a civilian and plant a kiss on a Middle America teen queen.
Movie fans will remember Dick Van Dyke and Janet Leigh in the leading
roles and a cute young actress named Ann-Margret as the beneficiary of
Birdie’s buss. “Bye Bye Birdie” will play from Sept. 7 through Oct. 8.
Next up, arriving Nov. 16 and running until Dec. 17, is Rodgers and
Hammerstein’s last collaboration, “The Sound of Music,” also from the
early 1960s. Those who missed Richard Chamberlain climbing every mountain
at the Orange County Performing Arts Center a few months ago will have a
chance to catch the show at a much more reasonable tariff.
“Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” was a big hit at the
Newport Theater Arts Center a decade and a half ago. It’s the biblical
epic set to music and, like “Birdie,” there’s an Elvis link here as well.
The show -- which demands a large, predominantly male cast and
features some potentially killer choreography--will open Feb. 22 and run
through March 25 at the Civic Playhouse.
Finally, the playhouse will take its audiences “Into the Woods” to
meet Cinderella, Jack of Beanstalk fame, Little Red Riding Hood and some
characters from the fertile mind of Stephen Sondheim, intermingling in
one of the king of all composers’ biggest hits in a 40-year career.
Those who caught the abbreviated rendition earlier this year at the
Trilogy Playhouse can see how it all comes out when the Civic Playhouse
stages the full-length version May 10 through June 10.
Playhouse president Lynn Reinert said, “Our audiences want to see
musicals, so that’s what we’re giving them--a whole season of them.”
If they’re all as well done as “Gypsy,” the Civic Playhouse is in for
a banner season.
Meanwhile, the Newport Theater Arts Center also has announced its
lineup for 2000-01, bookending Neil Simon’s farcical “Rumors” with some
certified senior citizens. The first oldie of the Newport season will be
Paul Osborn’s “Mornings at Seven,” a warmhearted comedy set in Middle
America 80 years ago. The show plays from Sept. 15 to Oct. 15.
“Rumors” may seem like an old-timer because of the mileage it’s been
getting locally, but it’s actually one of Simon’s more recent endeavors.
It’s also one of his best, intertwining verbal sparring with pure
physical farce. It runs Nov. 17 to Dec. 17.
Up next, from Jan. 26 to Feb. 25, is a rare commodity, a play that
hasn’t been done locally--at least not in the 35 years I’ve been sitting
on the aisles.
“The Winslow Boy” by Terence Rattigan centers on an English lad
wrongly accused of theft and culminates in the boy’s family suing the
Crown in open court.
I must admit a certain fondness for Moss Hart’s “Light Up the Sky.”
I’ve been involved in four productions of this showbiz comedy (and hope
to make it five when my own theater does it in October). This 1948 gem
still tickles the funny bone as it traces a new show’s traumatic tryout
in Boston.
It’s ticketed from March 30 to April 29.
The sounds of music will be represented in Newport’s closing
production, “Sweet and Hot: The Songs of Harold Arlen.” Arlen penned a
lot more hit numbers than “Over the Rainbow,” and this show promises to
offer most of them from June 1 through July 1.
Those seeking to get in on the ground floor of the Costa Mesa and
Newport seasons can call (949) 650-5269 for Civic Playhouse tickets and
(949) 631-0288 for NTAC.TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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