Theater
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Tom Titus
She doesn’t act and doesn’t want to direct, but for the 20 years of
the Newport Theater Arts Center’s existence, Rae Cohen has been its
backbone.
Cohen got in on the ground floor of the newly reorganized theater
group back in 1980, as a 43-year-old housewife recruited by one of the
theater’s pioneers, Patty-Gene Sampson, because, in Cohen’s words, “it
seemed like so much fun.”
At the time, the Milwaukee-born Cohen was a parent volunteer at the
Newport Beach schools her three children attended, having moved west with
her family in 1964. She also gave piano lessons, heightening her
appreciation of the arts.
Cohen is currently serving one of her several terms as president of
the NTAC board, but her volunteer work covers a multitude of duties --
producing, costuming, working on sets and programs, and even joining the
production crew on just one show, “Sherlock Holmes.”
“I’m basically the board member who mainly deals with the city of
Newport Beach,” she says, noting that the city took over the former
Baptist church back in the late 1970s and earmarked it for a theater.
The current group was the third producing organization to occupy the
building. Members of the then-homeless Irvine Community Theater ripped
out the old choir loft to stage two shows in 1977, a few years before
relocating in their home town. Another company, headed by director Nancy
Ebsen, was in residence before splitting off from the current contingent
and moving to a continuation school near Upper Newport Bay for a few
seasons.
For the 1979-80 season, a producing group called the Friends of the
Newport Theater Arts Center was formed under the city’s auspices and
organized the community theater that celebrates its 20th anniversary in
the upcoming season. Cohen was aboard as recording secretary.
“I had helped paint scenery at Mariners School and when I saw how much
fun it was, I couldn’t resist,” she said. “My only acting experience was
in a fifth-grade play; I can’t remember the title.”
Cohen was a sociology major and an English minor in college, two areas
which she found came in handy in her role as mother hen to a coterie of
actors, directors and musicians of varying talents and temperaments. Her
husband had been a program director for a New Orleans television station,
which also gave her some experience on the fringes of show business.
For a lady with little practical experience, Cohen soon became a vital
cog in the NTAC wheel. When several board members left the group in the
early 1980s, Rae found herself producing four of the five plays one
season.
“We’d come so far, I just couldn’t let it fall,” she explained. “We
had made a commitment with the city to create and maintain a theater
program.”
Cohen is one of the people who reads all the scripts submitted for
board consideration, and is the person who makes certain that season
ticket holders are contacted regarding renewals. And it’s her voice on
the recording you’ll hear when you call (949) 631-0288 to make
reservations for a night at 2501 Cliff Drive.
She’s also the theater’s representative on the Newport Beach Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Commission. You might say that, for her, theater
is a full-time job.
Her personal contact with audiences has paid off for NTAC. Some years
ago, the theater group was remembered in the will of two longtime season
subscribers -- to the tune of $10,000.
Much of that money is being spent at the moment on a major remodeling
project at the theater. Backstage space and a green room area are being
added, and when the 20th season begins next month, the actors will be
able to walk from their downstairs dressing rooms to the backstage area
without getting damp if it happens to be raining.
What is her personal favorite among the many shows mounted at NTAC in
the last two decades? It’s a tough choice, but she narrows it down to two
-- the low-key drama “84 Charing Cross Road” and the pioneer musical
“Quilters.”
When you visit the Newport Theater Arts Center to see the local
premiere of the comedy “Moon Over Buffalo,” which opens a five-week run
Sept. 10, chances are you’ll run into Cohen. That theater is her second
home.
TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
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