Theater
Tom Titus
WANTED: Building to rent in Costa Mesa, suitable for theatrical
productions, approximately 2,300 square feet, well-insulated with raised
ceiling for rental of between $1,000 and $1,200 per month. Contact Mario
or Joan Lescot at (714) 435-4043.
This ad, or something similar, may well be appearing soon on these pages.
Otherwise Costa Mesa may lose one of its finer theater groups.
The Theater District is looking for new -- and less-expensive --
quarters. The five and a half year old performing group is running out of
time at its present location, 2930 Bristol St. in the Lab Anti-Mall.
“We just can’t handle the rent anymore, not for this facility,” explained
Joan Lescot, who with her husband, Mario, started the Theater District in
May 1994.
Small wonder. Currently, the Lescots must ante up $3,000 per month, plus
$750 in utilities, for the lease of the building. Two fund-raisers have
netted the company several thousand dollars, but this hasn’t been enough
to keep the proverbial wolf from the door.
“We don’t want to leave Costa Mesa,” Joan Lescot insisted, “but we may
not have a choice. We’ve looked at facilities in Santa Ana and Fullerton,
but we’d rather stay here, near the base of our audience.”
The Theater District initially was born in an office complex on Superior
Avenue, taking the space once occupied by the Backstage Theater. After
five productions, the group changed its venue to the more spacious
Bristol Street location, which seemed like a good idea at the time --
until the first rainy season when the elements went pitter-patter on the
cold tin roof during performances.
Nevertheless, the group pressed on, and mounted some memorable shows in
the process: “Picnic,” “The Boys in the Band,” “Cabaret,” “Bus Stop” and
“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” among them. The Theater District also
gave local audiences their first glimpses of less-familiar works such as
“The Sum of Us,” “Catfish Moon” and the hardy perennial “Light
Sensitive.”
The company presently has a richly comical version of A.R. Gurney’s
“Sylvia” on the boards. In December, “Light Sensitive” returns for its
fourth staging before the doors finally close for good at the end of the
millennium.
One factor that has distinguished the Theater District is its de facto
repertory company of skilled performers, returning repeatedly to tackle
new characterizations. These include David Rousseve, P.J. Agnew, Alice
Ensor, Jessica Learned, Deborah Conroy, Steve McCammon, Karen Mangano,
Christi Sweeney and Shannon Hunt, the latter pair currently sizzling in
“Sylvia.”
They keep coming back because of one primary factor -- Mario Lescot, who
directs virtually all the shows and imbues them with a strong sense of
emotional involvement. Lescot has created a rich family atmosphere at the
Theater District, akin to that spawned in the mid-1960s at the emerging
South Coast Repertory.
Now, however, the doors at the Bristol Street showplace will close, and
the Lescots are in the market for a new home for their growing family --
preferably in Costa Mesa. An industrial building would be ideal for
theatrical presentations.
Hopefully, some local property owner will respond to the phone number at
the beginning of this story. It would be a shame to see Costa Mesa lose
this estimable company.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
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