A rare community pit stop
Tom Titus
The plays of George Bernard Shaw are among the classics in the
world of theater, and are often produced at professional venues such
as South Coast Repertory -- which, indeed, is opening its new season
with Shaw’s “Major Barbara†next month.
Community theater groups, however, tend to avoid the cerebral
playwright from the other side of the pond, often finding him a bit
too preachy and certainly too long winded. SCR and UC Irvine have
historically had Shaw all to themselves.
However, the Newport Theater Arts Center has no such reservations,
choosing to open its season this week with a Shavian play, “Mrs.
Warren’s Profession.†The profession in question, by the way, is
considered the world’s oldest, which makes for a bit of spice in the
production.
“They originally wanted to do ‘The Little Foxes’ by Lillian
Helman,†explains director Darlene Hunter-Chaffee, “but the rights
weren’t available. I’d done ‘Mrs. Warren’s Profession’ before, in
Long Beach, and the production was very successful, so [theater
president] Rae Cohen asked if I’d like to stage it here.â€
She would, and the theater plunged into an ambitious project
involving a costume drama and a complicated scenic arrangement of
four different set designs. On the theory that if you want a job done
well, give it to a busy person, the theater assigned Terri Miller
Schmidt to design the set. Heck, all she was doing at the time was
directing “Ladies in Retirement†for the Huntington Beach Playhouse,
which opened last weekend.
“I told my Mrs. Warren, Christy Sweeny, that I wanted her
character to be kind of bawdy, like Texas Guinian,†Chaffee stated.
“They all looked back with blank stares.â€
Probably the same sort of looks she got when she compared the
actress playing Mrs. Warren’s daughter, Rochelle Carmony, with a
young Merle Oberon. Few people under 50 have ever heard of her
either.
“Mrs. Warren’s Profession†is described as “an entertaining drama
depicting Shaw’s controversial attack on society’s hypocrisy as it
affects an emancipated young woman.†The conflict arises when the
daughter discovers the source of the wealth and privilege she’s been
enjoying all her life.
Rounding out the Newport cast are Jason Schlotter, Rowland E.
Kerr, Kenny Jagosz and Eric Nelson.
The show is running at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and at
2:30 p.m. Sundays until Oct. 13 at the theater, 2501 Cliff Drive,
Newport Beach. Tickets are $13 and reservations are being taken at
(949) 631-0288.
“Jack and Jill,†Jane Martin’s treacherous and sometimes explosive
look at modern wedlock, opens today as a production of Orange Coast
College’s Repertory Theater Company, now in its 18th season of
productions as a student-run, faculty-advised campus theater company.
The show will run Saturdays and Sundays through Sept. 22, in the
Drama Lab Studio. Curtain 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays.
Orange Coast College’s production features Angel Correa and Angela
Lopez portraying the title roles. The play addresses sexual issues
and contains mature language. Tickets, priced at $6, may be reserved
in advance by calling (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1. Tickets will be sold at
the door for $7.
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