TOM TITUS -- Theater
Local community theater partisans who’ve been plying their craft for
some three decades undoubtedly were startled Monday morning when they
picked up their Los Angeles Times and found a familiar, but long-absent,
face staring at them in living color at the bottom of Page One.
There, at the center of a storm involving, would you believe, the
Three Stooges, was artist Gary Saderup, a former Costa Mesa resident who
is catching heat from the Stooges’ heirs for using their likenesses on
T-shirts without consent from the comics’ estates.
Now, Gary Saderup always has been a gifted artist, but back in the
early ‘70s, he was one of the most dynamic actors in local community
theater. I can testify to that firsthand, since I worked on several shows
with him.
I first heard from him late in 1970 when I announced auditions for a
show I was directing in Huntington Beach at a downtown storefront
theater, which has long since faded into history. The play was William
Inge’s “A Loss of Roses” -- you might remember it as the movie “The
Stripper” with Joanne Woodward and Richard Beymer -- and it focused on a
teenager’s crush on a visiting showgirl who, as things turned out, showed
plenty.
Gary, at that time, was about 21 and getting ready to play the stern,
moralistic Reverend Davidson in Golden West College’s production of
“Rain,” which conflicted with the audition date. So he called me and
asked if he could arrange a private audition. When I heard him read in my
kitchen, I knew I’d found the right Kenny to play opposite my then-wife,
Beth, in the Inge drama.
He was terrific, and we collaborated on several other shows for the
Irvine Community Theater, acting together in “Arsenic and Old Lace” and
resuming an actor-director relationship in “Dear Friends,” where he “aged
up” successfully to play the husband of an actress about 20 years his
senior. The then-Costa Mesa resident also impressed Irvine audiences as
the younger immigrant brother in “A View From the Bridge.”
But the show that really displayed Gary’s acting range and power was
“The Desperate Hours,” which I directed in 1973 for the Irvine Community
Theater. Gary played the Bogart role as the leader of three escaped
convicts, and virtually mesmerized his audiences. We all figured Broadway
or Hollywood soon would be beckoning.
Gary, however, had other talents, and in the end his skills as an
artist overruled his acting prowess. Nearly 30 years after he tore up the
stage in “Desperate Hours,” he made the front page of the Times -- as the
subject of a news story.
A battle for the right to depict likenesses of the Three Stooges may
even wind up in the Supreme Court. If he possesses the same dynamic force
in presenting his case that he did as an actor three decades ago, he
should emerge triumphant.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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