Still making a play at it
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Lolita Harper
Joe Schulein looks darn good in a pair of tights and a floral-rimmed
hat.
The actor and director of the Oasis Players said he doesn’t
usually sport women’s clothing but an actress was sick and, well, the
show must go on.
Although he was slightly uncomfortable in his womanly wears, he
delivers a humorous performance this month in the one-act play, “Will
the Ladies Please Come to Order?” that brought smiles to the
residents at Crown Cove senior living home.
The audience was one of the Players smallest but it was nice to
perform for an intimate crowd, the actors said. The play was about a
meeting at the July 1952 meeting of the Center City Ladies Cultural
League, in which the four officers’ true feelings are revealed and
they clash in a very “lady-like” way.
The Oasis Players are a group of senior citizens who meet every
week to study acting methods and have a go at various monologues or
characters. Once proficient in their character of choice, the group
takes the show on the road, entertaining fellow seniors, high school
students and, basically, anyone who will book them.
The group bills its performance as comedy entertainment and offers
witty monologue such as, “In the Money” -- about a get rich quick
scheme, “Women’s Urges” -- about a longtime wife who is left home
alone for an extended period of time for the first time in 40 years,
and “Centerfold,” -- about a senior woman’s appearance in “Playboy.”
Members of the Oasis Players must be at least 55, but the
membership ranges in age from 69 to 84, Schulein said. Acting is a
challenge for many seniors because of the memorization involved,
Schulein said.
Christa Long, 68, said she very much enjoys her role in the group.
The soft-spoken Long, who was a professional dancer in Europe and
still carries with her a German accent, performs a monologue in which
she applies for a job with Santa.
Schulein said it was funny to watch her cultivate her character as
a Swiss reindeer, especially because her monologue had a four-letter
word in the script. During weeks of practice, sweet little Long
omitted the expletive. Once on stage, however, she blurted it out,
just the way it was scripted -- much to the shock of her theatrical
colleagues.
She was so into her character, she felt she needed to stick to the
original dialogue, Schulein said. He knew all along she was capable
of a great performance and was proud.
“People usually don’t think old folks can do things like this but
we folks do,” Long said.
And although they study seriously and perform top quality
entertainment, the goal is to have a good time.
“If all they say is, ‘Boy are we having fun,’ then that’s OK,” he
said.
The Oasis Players have been booked in Costa Mesa, Tustin and
Newport Beach and are continuously looking for more gigs. The next
performance is at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Costa Mesa Senior Center.
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