TOM TITUS -- Theater
The year 1965 was quite significant for theater in Costa Mesa. It was
the nativity year for both South Coast Repertory -- born in Newport Beach
but soon to relocate to Costa Mesa -- and the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse.
SCR -- with professional aspirations it eventually fulfilled, thus
moving north to a two-theater complex in South Coast Town Center -- was a
tremendous success. Its story has been chronicled and re-crhonicled many
times in these pages.
The Civic Playhouse, a community theater operation, has enjoyed
success on a more modest scale. Born in a World War II era building on
the Orange County Fairgrounds, it was relocated in 1981 to its present quarters at 611 Hamilton St., on the grounds of Rea Elementary School.
There, it operates on a comparatively shoestring budget.
Founding director Pati Tambellini often referred to the operation as
the “pinchpenny playhouse.” The theater, originally a city-sponsored
activity, now functions under the auspices of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District, which is mulling plans to construct a two-story adult
education facility on the site now occupied by the Civic Playhouse.
Playhouse director Damien Lorton, along with theater president Lynn
Reinert, is mounting a campaign to save the 36-year-old program.
“During the summer, both SOY and the Boys & Girls Club close, but the
playhouse opens its doors to the children of the area for a youth summer
camp,” Lorton said. “No tuition is charged. The children are taught about
theater and production, they paint the sets, help make the costumes and
perform in a fully staged show.
“We not only have them four to five hours a day, but we feed them at
least once a day,” Lorton adds. “This program is not sponsored by anyone,
and no funding is given by the city. The playhouse absorbs the cost,
which runs between $3,000 and $6,000.”
Lorton -- whose current production of “The Sound of Music” is the
third of five consecutive musicals he’s directing for the playhouse --
works during the day as an instructor at Newport Harbor High School. This
gave him an opportunity to open a doorway to local teenagers interested
in the theater.
“Not only do they perform at our theater, they run thetechnical aspect
as well,” he notes. “With this, they are taught responsibility and
discipline. It also gives the teens a place to feel accepted and needed,
keeping them off the streets and involved in an activity that allows them
to expand and explore themselves at such an important time in their
lives.”
Lorton has been appealing to theater patrons to make their feelings
known to the district.
“With your help and persistence, we may be able to stay in our home,
or even be reestablished in a new location,” he writes in a letter to
patrons in the current “Sound of Music” program.
It wasn’t long ago that Lorton and Reinert were striving to take the
playhouse out of the red. Now that the theater is self-sustaining, “we
have a new beast to conquer,” Lorton said.
What is required this time is not money but support -- vocal and
written. Lorton is urging patrons and theatergoers in general to make
their opinions known to the school district and the city of Costa Mesa.
“We need phone calls and letters,” he declares, “telling why the doors
should, and must, stay open.”
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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