Arts leadership trading places
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Barbara Diamond
Festival of Arts President Bob Henry switched offices Sunday with
Vice President Anita Mangels.
“I am doubly honored because I also am liaison to the membership,”
Mangels said. “The board serves at the pleasure of the membership and
I hope we never let [them] down.”
Mangles, a Laguna Beach publicist and resident for 14 years, was
elected to the board in November, running under the banner hoisted by
David Young to keep the festival local.
Incumbent Young and newcomer Carolyn Reynolds also were elected in
a landslide repudiation of the notions to license the Pageant of the
Masters to other sites and to hire a pricey executive director to do
the job that had previously been done for nothing by the board.
“It has been said that our theme last year was ’70 Years and Still
Standing Still,’” Mangels said.
Henry informed the festival board of his decision at a private
meeting prior to the luncheon. Festival bylaws automatically move the
vice president into the top spot if the president resigns. Officers
are elected by the board.
“There were tears in some eyes -- I don’t know if they were for or
against,” said Henry.
The 84-year-old Emmy-winning producer-director said business
commitments forced him to step aside. He will concentrate his energy
on the preparation of “Flip Wilson Show” episodes for cable
syndication.
Board members John Campbell, Bob Dietrich, Ann Webster, treasurer
Young, secretary Reynolds attended the meeting. Kathleen Blackburn
and Diane Reardon had other commitments.
Being a festival board member is not a sinecure.
In 2000, a board decision to move the festival and pageant to San
Clemente led Young to resign from the board on which he had served
for more than 45 years at the time. A dramatic recall swept the
sitting board from office and installed Young, along with Scott Moore
and Bruce Rasner, who led the recall effort.
Those three appointed Robin Hall, Reardon, Dietrich and Campbell.
When Hall resigned, Blackburn was invited to sit on the board.
Henry and Webster were elected in 2001 and will be up for
re-election this year. Webster said Sunday she probably will run
again.
Rasner was elected board president in 2002, but his championship
of unpopular proposals by the festival’s first-ever executive
director cost him the membership’s favor, putting him at odds with
Young and board members and board candidates in the 2003 election who
agreed with the festival’s elder statesman.
“Thank goodness, David was re-elected,” Webster said.
Pageant Director Dee Challis Davy said the Orange County Arts
Cultural Legacy Award for Community Visionary to be presented later
this month to Young by Arts Orange County affirms his view of the
festival and the pageant.
“He has remained loyal to the Laguna Beach arts community
throughout the 50 years he has been associated with the festival,”
Challis Davy said.
The November election gave Young’s supporters a majority on the
board.
Executive Director Steve Brezzo resigned prior to the election. He
subsequently filed suit against the festival, three board members and
one former board member. Brezzo claimed working conditions were made
too intolerable for him to continue.
Mangels, 51, has been active in politics and community affairs.
Locally, she served as treasurer for the Laguna Canyon Conservancy.
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