‘Chorus Line’ tops playhouse season
Tom Titus
Editors note: This is the first in a series of two columns
reviewing the year 2002 in Huntington Beach theater.
Having now viewed an entire year’s worth of live theater in
Huntington Beach for the first time in a decade, it’s time to look
back on the local stage scene and bring some deserving productions
and performances downstage for a year end encore.
This column will examine the season that just ended at the
Huntington Beach Playhouse, while next week’s missive will review the
highlights of the theater programs at Golden West College and the
Huntington Beach High School’s Academy for the Performing Arts.
Musical theater set the performance standard at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse in 2002, as a pair of well-crafted singing and
dancing shows forged their way to the top of the list, ranking first
and second on a list of six (the year’s closing production, “The
Foreigner,” is ineligible for consideration because of this
columnist’s directorial hand in bringing that show to the stage.)
The playhouse mounted some impressive productions during 2002, but
none was more impressive than its season opener, “A Chorus Line.” To
quote from this column’s review, “Director-choreographer Michael
Lopez, backed by musical director Bill Wolfe, gives us the best of
all three factors -- dancing, singing and acting -- in an outstanding
ensemble effort.”
No. 2 on the playhouse’s hit parade was another revival, “Fiddler
on the Roof,” directed by Marla Gam-Hudson, who, quoting again,
“employs the combined talents of a large and versatile cast to create
some memorable moments in this highly familiar musical.”
Third place honors go to the playhouse’s summer “Shakespeare in
the Park” production of “Henry IV, Part 1,” directed by Wendi de
Barros who, I wrote, “moves the often-cumbersome play through its
paces with alacrity. Inventive bits of comic business keep the
long-winded portions palatable, leading to a breath-catching skirmish
on the battlefield.”
This play also produced the standout performance by an actor for
the 2002 season in Paul Burt, who, as Falstaff, “renders a powerfully
comic character. It’s a masterful performance from an actor who seems
to be born for the assignment.”
Runners-up for individual actor honors at the Huntington Beach
Playhouse this year were Christian Morgan as Sir Thomas More in “A
Man for All Seasons” and Tim Nowicki, who played Tevye in “Fiddler on
the Roof.” Special mention also must be accorded Kurt Finney, who
stepped into a leading role on short notice and did an admirable job
in “No Sex, Please, We’re British.”
The best actress honor could have been split between two ladies in
the same production, but the winner by a nose is Sharie Nitkin as
Diana Morales in “A Chorus Line.” Nitkin, as a Puerto Rican dancer
with an attitude who hits both comic and dramatic high notes,
delivered the most memorable performance by an actress at the
playhouse in 2002.
Close behind was Leah Seminario as Cassie in the same production.
Her solo dance in “The Music and the Mirror” radiates her passion and
determination. Blossom Benedict as Hodel in “Fiddler” earned
inclusion in the top threesome.
It’s difficult to write this wrap-up of the Huntington Beach
Playhouse without mentioning “The Foreigner,” of which I am
enormously proud. Simply stated, this was one of the finest casts
I’ve worked with in 34 years as a director.
The college and high school ranks also did themselves proud in
Huntington Beach during 2002. Next week’s column will look back at
the Golden West and Academy of the Performing Arts achievements for
the year.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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