First stop for ‘Orphan Train’ is SCR
- Share via
Tom Titus
When South Coast Repertory opened its new Julianne Argyros Theater
last November, the occasion was a world premiere, Richard Greenberg’s
new play, “The Violet Hour.”
Not to be outdone, SCR’s Nicholas Studio -- the former Second
Stage renovated and reconfigured as a 95-seat theater -- will offer
its first production this weekend, also a world premiere. And a
home-grown one, at that.
Laurie Woolery, an actress, director and the director of the
theater’s Young Conservatory program, is also a playwright and has
created a play especially for her students. It’s “Orphan Train: The
Lost Children,” the story of a group of poor, homeless and orphaned
children who were sent to the American West from the mid-19th to the
mid-20th century.
“Orphan Train,” set in the early 1920s, was inspired by stories of
children taken off the streets of New York, set on a perilous train
journey across the country and placed with homesteading families.
Young Conservatory instructor Steve DeNaut is directing.
“When I started working at SCR, I noticed that -- just like the
main theater -- the Young Conservatory sought to bring new work to
the stage,” Woolery said. “The only thing was, there wasn’t a lot of
interesting material beyond the Disney stuff or fairy tales.”
As it happened, Woolery was working on the script of “Orphan
Train,” although she originally intended it as a vehicle for adult
performers. She had gained the inspiration from her brother, a
historian, who had told her about the westward movement of young
people to complete pioneer families.
“I liked the idea of kids telling a true story about other kids,”
she said. “Especially when it’s still happening in countries like
Afghanistan. The play hopefully will educate and inform, and make
people, both youngsters and adults, to feel and to think.”
“Orphan Train” centers on a child named Clarice, who spins
fantastical stories to ease the fears of her sisters as they wait
huddled in the train station.
Others gather around, and she becomes a surrogate mother to the
frightened children, who imagine themselves as the characters in her
inventive stories. Even the young hoodlums hiding in the station
become caught up in the magical tales.
“Our goal in this production, and in the Young Conservatory, is
helping people find their inner voice,” Woolery said.
Woolery has found her particular voice as a playwright with some
15 scripts behind her in and out of Southern California. Three years
ago, she received a commission from SCR to write and direct “Bliss,”
which received its world premiere in the spring of 2000. Her
award-winning production of “Our Town” won “best scene” honors at the
2001 Kennedy Center’s American College Theater Festival.
She’s working on a modern adaptation of “Don Quixote” and is the
playwright in residence for Hollygrove Children’s Home in Los
Angeles. Recently, she performed her solo play, “Salvadorean
Moon/African Sky,” and participated in SCR’s Pacific Playwrights
Festival in last summer’s “California Scenarios.”
These days, however, her attention is on “Orphan Train,” even
though she’s not in the director’s chair on this one. The cast is
composed of “her kids,” the ones in the Young Conservatory at SCR.
Members of the conservatory’s Junior Players -- an ensemble group
of acting students selected by audition after completing two years of
Young Conservatory training -- comprise the cast of “Orphan Train.”
They include Kaylin Miller and Kaitlyn Smith of Costa Mesa, Camille
Kazempoor of Newport Beach and Brina Dokich, Alexis Gomez and Hayley
Palmer of Corona del Mar.
“Orphan Train: The Lost Children” will be presented at 1 and 4
p.m. Saturdays and Sundays beginning this week and running through
April 13. Tickets are $5 and may be purchased through the SCR box
office at (714) 708-5555.
* 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.