Music and passion
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Tom Titus
The youthful energy at the Huntington Beach Academy for the Performing
Arts spills over into a kaleidoscope of color, light and sound in the
musical “Once on This Island.”
Superb voices and robust, intricate choreography elevate this musical
adventure, told as a folk legend on a Caribbean island. These student
performers create a theatrical experience as enjoyable as any touring
professional production.
Director Tim Nelson -- who also serves as vocal director and plays
flute and clarinet in the pit orchestra -- has fashioned a beautifully
involving presentation of Lynn Ahrens’ adaptation of Rosa Guy’s novel “My
Love, My Love.” Love, indeed, is the centerpiece of this story, which
traces a young island girl’s determined pursuit of her dream, a handsome
Frenchman whom she nurses back to health following an auto accident.
Katherine McLaughlin inhabits the central role of the girl, Ti Moune,
with passion and determination in a most praiseworthy performance. Her
singing voice is outstanding and she draws sustained applause for her
vigorous dancing in a second-act number set at a French society ball.
Her upper-class lover, Daniel, is well played by Brandon Durringer,
torn between his love for Ti Moune and his duty to the girl he’s been
promised to since childhood (a snippy performance by Ashley Luth). Jesse
Gonzales strongly enacts Daniel’s unbending father.
Ti Moune’s concerned parents, skillfully interpreted by Kelly Nitkin
and “D” Pull, project their emotional pain over their daughter’s decision
to pursue Daniel skillfully. Melissa Mitchell, a talented fifth-grader,
wonderfully assumes the role of Ti Moune as a little girl trapped in a
tree by a hurricane.
Superior performances are delivered by the four gods who watch over Ti
Moune on her quest -- Michelle DeHoop, Brian Chapman, Beekki Reichert and
Jonathon Hoover. Especially impressive are Reichert as the earth mother
in a spirited dance and a malevolent Hoover as the demon of deathpressing
his contract with Ti Moune.
The show’s brilliant choreography, by Diane Makas-Colwell, is far
superior to anything displayed at this age level and reflects a
professional glow. The islanders’ spirited dance numbers are rich in
imaginative interpretation.
Greg Gilboe directs the orchestra with an enthusiastic flair, and Joe
Batte’s scenic designs are excellent, enriched by Brit Masterson’s
brightly hued lighting effects. The native costumes, by Katie Timm, are
equally well done.
“Once on This Island” is a mightily ambitious project by many
dedicated students and adults, delivered with a crescendo of color, music
and dance in a thoroughly entertaining production, which also manages to
enlighten on such themes as prejudice and class distinction.It deserves a
wide audience.
CUTLINE: Katherine McLaughlin (right) vows to pursue her romantic
dream despite the misgivings of her parents (Kelly Nitkin and “D” Pull)
in the Huntington Beach Academy of Performing Arts’ musical “Once on This
Island.”
CUTLINE: Brandon Durringer and Katherine McLaughlin rediscover each
other in “Once on This Island,” presented by the Huntington Beach Academy
of Performing Arts.
F.Y.I.WHAT: “Once on This Island”WHERE: Huntington Beach High School
Auditorium, 1905 Main St.
WHEN: Closing performances Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m.
COST: $10 & $8
PHONE: (714) 536-2514, Ext. 302* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for
the Independent.
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