Behind what’s behind the scenes is lots of hard work
BARBARA DIAMOND
The Pageant of the Masters opened to the public June 7, but financial
supporters and special guests previewed the show one day earlier.
“This is truly a show for all ages,” said Karen Philippsen,
president of the Laguna Beach Visitors & Conference Bureau, who
attended the early performanceThe show includes a circus parade that
wends its way through the audience and it brings back the popular
“Builder” tableau that shows just how the models fit into the sets
and how the magic of light transforms life into art.
“As a theater person, I loved the live elements that DeeDee
[Director Diane Challis Davy] has added,” said Arts Commission
Chairwoman Pat Kollenda a founder of LagunaTunes and director of
Hooked-on Harmony.
“I loved the parade. I loved the singer and the theme was great
fun.”
Kollenda has seen her fair share of pageants.
“My three sons were in it for the first five years we lived in
town,” Kollenda said. “But I go ever year now because I know DeeDee
will do something innovative.”
Martha Lydick, president of the Friends of the Laguna Beach
Library and of the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association, who owns a
Shelby Cobra and a Cadillac that does everything but cook her dinner,
especially liked the section on hood ornaments for a Rolls Royce
Silver Ghost, a Buick, a Packard and a Pierce-Arrow.
The first act also included travel posters and a stunning painted
ceramic piece from the Dunhuang Cave in China -- an example of art to
be found on the legendary Silk Road of commerce out of China.
The brochure for “On the Road, A Crash Course in Art and Popular
Culture” calls the show “An Interstate-of-the-Art Experience.”
However, no matter what comes before, the pageant always ends with
the depiction of Leonardo’s “Last Supper.”
Dan Brown’s “The DaVinci Code” inspired new interest in the
painting -- is that just a pretty boy or is the figure stage right of
Jesus really Mary Magdalene? And did you know that for years, the
pageant’s Jesus was portrayed by a woman -- a closely guarded secret.
More than 115 volunteers researched art for the pageant this year.
Volunteers included actress and Design Review Board member Eve Plumb,
John Hoover, and festival board member Ann Webster. Sometimes whole
families got into the act, such as Jaci, Katie, Megan, Pete and
Rhonda Talpash.
Plumb and Rhonda Talpash are also among the 104 volunteers who
plaster the cast with makeup every night. Another 23 help the cast
get into costumes, capped off by 22 volunteers in the headdress
department. Thirty volunteers service the cast area.
But that is still considerably fewer than the two complete
volunteer casts of 180 each that give up their summer nights on
alternate weeks to go through the back-stage rigmarole in order to
stand absolutely still for at least 90 seconds while narrator Skip
Conover explains the background of the “living picture” and Richard
Henn conducts a score.
The pose is held even longer by the folks covered in silver to
reproduce circus figures.
“I don’t know how the strongmen hold their poses so long,” said
Challis Davy.
Try it if you think it’s easy. No sneezing, barely any breathing,
particularly if you are in a tableau close to the audience, such as
the recreation of Luis Jimenez’s “Fiesta.”
“There are as many people in the first act this year as were in
the whole show in 2004,” said Marketing Director Sharbie Higuchi,
whose daughter, Sophie, was among the 15 children in “The Old Stage
Coach” tableau.
Challis Davy said the scale of the tableaux, glowingly painted by
veteran scenic artists Sharon Lamberg and David Rymer, was increased
this year to accommodate works that required a larger cast.
“The show would not be possible without the volunteers,” Challis
Davy said. “I am really pleased with the [audience] reaction to the
show this year, but as important, I think the cast is having fun
backstage.”
The second act was a paean to Route 66, including a live -- really
live -- singer, Robbie Banner. The act begins in Chicago, where Route
66 begins, and ends in Los Angeles.
Get your kicks. The pageant runs through Sept. 1.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature in the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcome. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to Suite 222 in the
Lumberyard, 384 Forest Ave.; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949)
494-8979.
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