THEATER REVIEW
Tom Titus
Life for America’s pioneer women wasn’t all “Little House on the
Prairie.” Those who forged west and helped to settle the heartland
endured enormous hardships, relieved only by the bonding experience known
as quilting.
Playwright Molly Newman and composer Barbara Damashek paid tribute to
these brave and determined souls in their musical “Quilters,” which has
become a hardy perennial on the local musical theater scene. It’s now
enjoying a sprightly and sparkling revival at Costa Mesa’s Vanguard
University.
The characters forming the core of the story are an aging mother and
her six daughters, but that’s only a starting point. In true ensemble
fashion, each actress embodies a number of other personalities -- male
and female alike -- during the course of the show.
Director Susan K. Berkompas delivers a “Quilters” that captures the
heart early on and tightens its grip with each succeeding segment. Her
splendid cast performs as a well-drilled unit, while allowing ample
opportunity for individual excellence.
These moments come when the show focuses on a particular highlight
from a character’s life, and in the Vanguard production, two actresses
shine particularly brightly in this regard.
Heaven Joy Peabody is especially impressive as a teenage girl
undergoing full-immersion baptism in a wordless exercise of underwater
interpretation, and later excels in her solo “Quiltin’ and Dreamin’.”
Emily Maier breaks up the house with her malicious tribute to the
“Sunbonnet Sue” quilt, then renders a gripping scene as a young girl
learning of her adoption.
Holly Richardson, who also serves as vocal music director, impresses
as the matriarch of the clan, whose three solos punctuate the second act,
while Mary House lightens the proceedings with the “Cornelia Song,” about
a young girl’s homemade rag doll.
Amy Maier and Urissa Ross headline the “Windmill” number, a
beautifully choreographed (by Berkompas and Toni Bosch) piece paying
tribute to a prairie lifeline. Louise Rawson completes the cast in a
variety of roles, most significantly the mother of a young man who’s
captured a number of feminine hearts.
Backed by a fine six-piece combo, the quilters of “Quilters” play out
their lives with flourish and determination, confronting the hard times
and unimaginable privation while reveling in the joy of family and
community.
The relatively small thrust stage of the college’s Lyceum Theater has
been expanded for “Quilters,” offering set designer Tim Mueller and
technical director Adam Genzink a broader canvas on which to work. Dan
Volonte’s lighting effects, particularly in the imaginatively staged fire
segment, are impressive, and Lia Hansen’s pioneer-era costumes are
meticulously fashioned.
“Quilters” is a collection of stories -- many taken from actual
pioneer diaries -- that mesh beautifully into a tribute to the women who
helped pave the road west. It’s an emotionally uplifting experience at
Vanguard University.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* WHAT: “Quilters”
* WHERE: Vanguard University’s Lyceum Theater, 55 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa
* WHEN: Closing performances 8 p.m. today through Saturday and 2 p.m.
Sunday
* COST: $15
* PHONE: (714) 668-6145
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