TOM TITUS -- Theater
Sometimes life has a way of telling you to slow down. But if youâre
someone like Terri Miller Schmidt, that just means you do four shows a
year instead of five.
The gregarious director, who has staged productions at a fever pitch
for the last two decades, had taken a rare acting assignment earlier this
year as one of the two seasoned actresses in âLegendsâ at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse. Halfway through rehearsal, however, on her first visit
to New York City with friends, she found herself starring in her own
version of âERâ after passing out on a subway.
âThey said it was high blood pressure, but Iâve never had that trouble
before,â she said. âI think it was just fatigue, nervous exhaustion. That
and the strange environment. Iâd never been to New York before.â
Whatever it was, it put Schmidt out of âLegendsâ on doctorâs orders.
That was in April, and Schmidt has âslowed downâ to the extent that
sheâs directed two other shows -- âThe Cemetery Clubâ at Costa Mesaâs
Jewish Community Center and âMy Emperorâs New Clothesâ at the Newport
Theater Arts Center -- since then, and is preparing to put âMornings at
Sevenâ on the boards at Newport on Sept. 15.
The six weeks of rest the doctor ordered were whittled to two, and
there wonât be too much kicking back for Schmidt during the next few
months, either.
After âMornings,â sheâll direct âO Henryâs Christmasâ in San Clemente,
âWind in the Willowsâ in La Habra, then itâs back to Newport to stage the
June musical âSweet and Hot.â
Theater seems to be a tonic for Schmidt. Now in her mid-50s, she got
her start as Wendy in a grade school production of âPeter Panâ back in
her hometown of Compton. She is, she declares proudly, a
fourth-generation Californian, which may explain the New York culture
shock.
She was a theater major in college, but opted for marriage over a
degree -- she and husband Dick have been wed for 35 years.
When her two children were born, she gave up the greasepaint for a
career in motherhood, then connected with the Fountain Valley Community
Theater in 1981 as a backstage parent. The theater specialized in
childrenâs shows, and later became the Orange County Childrenâs Theater.
Terri Miller Schmidt arrived at Newport in 1990 for a supporting role
in âCome Back, Little Shebaâ and joined the theaterâs board of directors
the following year. Sheâs been a Newport regular ever since, directing
such shows as âThe Price,â âBells Are Ringingâ and âThe Pajama Game.â
She, her husband and son-in-law Chris started their own set-design
company, 16th Street Design, and have built more than 15 sets in the last
four years for productions in Newport and elsewhere. Dick Schmidt is
building the set for âMornings.â
âDick decided that if he wanted to spend more time with me, this would
be a good way, and swinging a hammer is a good stress reliever too,â she
said.
Earlier this year, her set-designing talents were tested when she
directed âCoastal Disturbancesâ at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse -- and
wound up transporting several tons of sand into the theater for the beach
setting.
âThe set strike was really interesting,â she quipped. Like many
directors, Schmidt is fascinated with the rehearsal process, the âputting
it all togetherâ and watching actors grow in character. Then watching on
performance nights, gleefully, as the audience responds to the work sheâs
done.
And, little setbacks like the one in New York notwithstanding, sheâs
planning to keep on doing it for a long time to come.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.