Growing up with SCR -- an indelible experience
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Tom Titus
* EDITOR’S NOTE: South Coast Repertory will unveil its
$19-million expansion at a gala ball tonight. The new Folino Theatre
Center will feature the new Julianne Argyros Stage, a renovated
Segerstrom Stage (the former Mainstage), the Nicholas Studio (the
former Second Stage), expanded classroom space and more. Daily Pilot
theater reviewer Tom Titus has been covering the playhouse since its
earliest days.
In the 37 1/2 years that South Coast Repertory has been an
ever-evolving component in Orange County’s cultural landscape, there
are just three people who have witnessed every one of the 375 plays
the company has produced.
Two of them are David Emmes and Martin Benson, the creative
visionaries who founded the company and continue to direct its
artistic fortunes. The third is -- to borrow a line from Miss Piggy
-- moi.
It was a fortunate happenstance that I started covering local
theater for the Daily Pilot the exact month that SCR began
experiencing its birth pangs in our backyard. Well, actually, the
birthing occurred a bit south of us, at the old Laguna Playhouse,
where SCR introduced its first three shows while awaiting completion
of its first theater in Newport Beach.
I’d only reviewed a couple of shows when Emmes dropped in at the
Pilot office to spread the word about the new theater company he and
his fellow 20-somethings were putting together on our shores.
The ensuing story, published Feb. 11, 1965, began: “A new
dimension in theater is taking root on the Orange Coast. Small but
dedicated, South Coast Repertory is opening its first regular season
this month with a spring series of five plays at its first permanent
home in Newport Beach.”
The story quoted Emmes as declaring, “We want to produce a theater
of substance. We feel we have something that will aid immeasurably to
the whole cultural environment of this area.”
Did they ever.
When I journeyed to Laguna to catch the first SCR show, a farcical
commedia dell ‘arte rendition of Moliere’s “Tartuffe,” I didn’t know
any of the actors, nor did they know meImagine my surprise then, when
Don Took, playing the nearly-cuckolded husband, reacted to David
Clements’ line, “I caught this man trying to seduce your wife,” by
storming off the stage and up to my seat. He pointed his finger at me
and demanded, “How dare you try to seduce my wife.”
“No, no,” Clements protested. “That’s Tom Titus.”
“Oh,” Took muttered and resumed his place on stage.
That’s what Emmes (who had obviously set me up) meant when he
vowed that “the fourth wall will be behind the audience.” SCR’s
performers might not involve the playgoers quite that
confrontationally, but you definitely would leave a performance moved
to some degree or other.
As for the review of “Tartuffe,” it began, “Orange County theater
took on a fourth dimension last weekend with the birth of an
unbelievably talented group soon to move permanently into Newport
Beach. Wild, raucous and overflowing with talent, the South Coast
Repertory version of ‘Tartuffe’ burst with incandescent brilliance
onto the Laguna Playhouse stage, leaving its audiences literally
gasping with laughter and clamoring for more at the final curtain
call.”
It would be too much to say that the next 374 SCR productions stir
the emotions so brilliantly, but many of them did. Of course, there
were a few turkeys along the way -- “Big Soft Nellie,” “Saved,”
“Subject to Fits” and “La Turista” come to mind -- but the company’s
track record overall has remained exemplary.
For every misstep noted above, there were a dozen plays like
“Othello,” “The Birthday Party,” “The Caretaker,” “Macbeth,” “A
Streetcar Named Desire,” “That Championship Season,” “One Flew Over
the Cuckoo’s Nest,” etc., that elevated South Coast Rep another notch
in the playgoers’ estimation. And all of these were produced before
SCR ever took up residence on Town Center Drive in 1978.
SCR rarely tried to mount a musical, but two shows in that genre
were highly instrumental in establishing the momentum for the move
from the Third Step Theater in downtown Costa Mesa (where the company
had relocated in 1967) to its present complex.
In the late 1960s, SCR had absorbed an acting company in Long
Beach known as the Actors’ Circle Theater. One of the members of that
troupe, Ron Thronson, teamed up with a local actress with a musical
theater background named Toni Shearer to create a rock musical with
an ecological theme.
“Mother Earth” burst upon the scene in early 1971, creating the
same brand of excitement as “Tartuffe” had six years earlier. Public
response was so fervent that the show was brought back for the
1971-72 season. It even spawned a brief production on Broadway. Then
its creators set out on different paths, Thronson to a teaching
position at Chapman University and Shearer to a professional singing
career under her maiden name -- Tennille.
If ecology can succeed as a musical theme, why not the Bible? Sure
enough, “Godspell” arrived at the end of the 1973-74 season and was
also encored the next year. That show marked the SCR debut of
director John-David Keller, who’s been an actor and director with the
company ever since. He is now best known for helming the annual
holiday classic “A Christmas Carol,” which began in 1980 and is still
going strong.Propelled by the success of these shows, and other
sterling nonmusical productions (“The Hot L Baltimore,” “Equus,” “A
Doll’s House,” “Private Lives,” etc.), SCR gathered the financial
ammunition for its biggest transition -- moving to its present
location near South Coast Plaza in 1978. The Second Stage -- now a
rehearsal hall with the upcoming opening of the Julianne Argyros
Stage -- began operations in 1979.
With the opening of the Fourth Step Theater, SCR had more elbow
room artistically and technically. Bigger, splashier productions
followed, while works of questionable merit such as “Aunt Dan and
Lemon” and “The Gigli Concert” became fewer and further between.
Actors who would go on to movie and TV glory performed at SCR. The
Second Stage was home to Ed Harris in “True West” and Dennis Franz in
“Brothers.” Franz’s old precinct-mate Joe Spano dropped by for a few
shows. Jean Stapleton played Madame Arcati in “Blithe Spirit” and
Tony Roberts, Woody Allen’s sidekick in so many movies, starred in
“Sidney Bechet Killed a Man.” Andrew Robinson, who made Clint
Eastwood’s day in “Dirty Harry,” directed “The Beauty Queen of
Lenanne.”
But SCR’s most significant contribution to the art of theater has
been behind the scenes. Its Collaboration Laboratory, established in
1990, has supported scores of playwrights such as Richard Greenberg,
who has seen several of his scripts born at SCR and will offer his
latest, “The Violet Hour,” as the leadoff production on the new
Julianne Argyros Stage in November.
Thanks to the laboratory, SCR’s audiences have had the first look
at superb dramas such as Donald Marguilies’ “Collected Stories” and
Margaret Edson’s “Wit,” which earned the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for
drama. Other notable firsts at SCR have been Greenberg’s “Three Days
of Rain,” David Henry Hwang’s “The Golden Child” and Beth Henley’s
“The Debutante Ball.”
It’s been an incredible journey, these last 37 1/2 years, and
being able to chronicle it every step of the way has been the
journalistic experience of a lifetime. Hopefully, David, Martin and I
are up for another 37 years.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot.
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