Q&A; -- Keeping the Center on its feet
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In May, the Los Angeles Times called the Orange County Performing Arts
Center “the primary destination for dance in Southern California.” Just
take a look at the slate for this season and next -- the Bolshoi, the
Paris Opera Ballet, American Ballet Theater -- and it’s easy to see why.
In fact, Teatro alla Scala Ballet Company will have the American premiere
of Sylvie Guillem’s “Giselle” here next month, a production that is only
slated to appear in one other place in the states, the Lincoln Center in
New York.
Some of that, if not most, is thanks to the work of Judith O’Dea Morr,
executive vice president of the Center. Morr, who came to Costa Mesa in
1985 from the Kennedy Center, is in charge of dance programming at the
Costa Mesa venue. She sat down with Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal this
week to talk about putting together one of the best dance programs
around.
What are your responsibilities at the Center?
My first title when I came here was general manager, which had been my
title at Kennedy Center, where I did similar kinds of things for 15
years. And now my title is executive vice president, but my
responsibilities are programming and theater management.
I have general responsibility for programming, which does not mean
that I am the artistic person for the opera and the symphony. But I,
specifically, do the dance programming and, of course, with Jerry Mandel
(Center president), work on the Broadway season, which is our most
popular season.
How do you choose which dance companies to invite year after year?
I have a general knowledge of the companies in the world, and what’s
important to do is keep a good eye on them so that you know where they
are and when you would want to bring them and show them to our audience.
And when you would want to bring another one, you think about what
programs you would want to have them show. You think about what artists
you would like to have dance. And then, in consultation with the
companies, you make that decision.
Is there an artist that you have not been able to bring in that you
would like to see perform at the Center?
There’s always the challenge of finding an artist that’s new. However,
I think we’ve been quite successful in bringing the artists that we want
to have here. When I look back at the range of companies and the numbers
of companies that we’ve had here, we’ve really had just an extraordinary
array. I’m happy with what we do.
What’s your favorite ballet?
The wonderful thing about dance and story ballets is that every
choreographer who decides to change it or put his or her stamp on it is
completely different. I would honestly say, I actually, even though
programming doesn’t reflect it, I’m most interested in contemporary
choreography and where it’s going. But remember when I talk about doing
things for the Center, I’m looking at what’s appropriate for Segerstrom
Hall. And Segerstrom Hall has 3,000 seats. It is truly an opera house in
all respects. We can take the biggest and the best. And my focus on
working on this series for the Center is to present the biggest and the
best.
When possible, it’s important to present the range of programming that
a company will do so that you have some of their contemporary work and
some of the traditional classical dance so you can see the full scope of
what their capabilities are.
What was your first exposure to dance?
As a child I took dance lessons, piano lessons, like most young
people. And it was after I began working at Kennedy Center that I really
began to study and learn more about dance. I worked at Kennedy Center in
Washington D.C. for 15 years. There we had five theaters . . . it was
glorious opportunity to learn and to develop my own talent.
What do you like best about your job?
The constant changing nature of every day, because we do some 360
performances every year, and that means there’s a new artist or a new
company or a new production challenge every day. Almost. So no day is
quite the same.
I have such respect for all of the colleagues that I work with --
backstage people, wardrobe people, ushers . . . . Everyone who works in
the theater is here because they really love the arts, or they wouldn’t
be here.
It seems like the dance season sometimes gets less recognition than
the Broadway season when it comes to audiences. Is that true?
Not in the world. I mean it really was our dance season that gave us
recognition in the international world of theaters. You just can talk to
anybody who has any involvement in international travel and they say “Oh,
Costa Mesa. Yes, that’s where they have that dance series,” because a
dance company comes and really has a great experience here and they go
back and say, “Come to Costa Mesa, it’s a great place.”
We’ve built a lot of support -- we’ve had wonderful board support,
we’ve had wonderful audience support. Dance is always a challenge to
present. A challenge for many reasons -- audience, expense . . . . It’s
also a challenge to find the right opportunity, the right time in our
schedule when a company is able to travel. We very often have just very
tiny windows of time that have to make a travel company’s schedule fit
within that. It makes it difficult.
How do you grow support for the dance series in terms of the local
audience?
We have preview talks before every performance so interested people
can come and listen to a person who has expertise in that area talk about
the performance they’ll see that night. We make available reading
material within the program, and most people who are interested in dance
carefully read the material. We send out our own publication, called
Revue magazine, and most often have articles about upcoming productions
which give a lot of information.
And word of mouth is always part of it. I think those who just saw
the Paris Opera Ballet will talk about the next company we have, which is
the La Scala Opera Ballet. And that’s all part of audience building.
BIO BOX
Name: Judith O’Dea Morr
Occupation: Executive vice president of the Orange County Performing
Arts Center
Education: Bachelors from Illinois College, master’s from Simmons
College in Boston, Mass.
Interesting note: Before joining the Center in 1985 as general
manager, Morr was general manager for the theaters for the Kennedy Center
Community involvement: Member of the boards of St. Joseph’s Ballet and
AIDS Services Foundation of Orange County
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