Theater has ‘Something to Hide’
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Tom Titus
It seems strange that a play written in 1959 would be making its
local premiere this weekend, but that’s the case at the Newport
Theater Arts Center.
“Something to Hide,” by the late British playwright Leslie Sands,
opens tonight, and director Terri Miller Schmidt is promising a
suspense-filled evening.
“It’s a classic thriller with infidelity, avarice, deception,
intrigue and, of course, murder,” she said. “It’s set in a renovated
country house in Essex with many twists and unexpected turns,
surprises around every dark corner.”
The plot involves a writer, a wife, a mistress and inquisitive
residents of the village. But the biggest mystery seems to be why
“Something to Hide” has been hidden from local audiences for the past
45 years.
Robert Kokol, Christi Sweeney and Ken LaSalle head the Newport
cast, which also includes Anne Rudd, Claire Averill, Stephanie
Schulz, Michelle Calhoun-Fitts and Robert Purcell.
“Something to Hide” will play weekends through April 25, with
curtain at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. Sundays at the
arts center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Call (949) 631-0288 for
reservations and additional information.
‘SAFE IN HELL’ TO OPEN
South Coast Repertory, which has the world premiere of Amy Freed’s
“Safe in Hell” in the wings for an April 2 opening on the Segerstrom
Stage (more on that subject next week), has another in the hopper as
the just-announced season finale on the Julianne Argyros Stage.
“The Studio,” described as a “play with dance,” was written by
Christopher d’Amboise, who will both direct and choreograph the
production. The show opens April 30 and will play through May 16.
The playwright focuses on a world he knows intimately -- behind
the scenes of dance in New York -- for this story of a choreographer
with a public image larger than life, but a life carefully hidden
from the public. In a bare, mirrored studio, his main character,
Emil, creates a new ballet for two dancers -- a veteran who has seen
it all and a newcomer who wants it all -- driving them to achieve
greatness.
Both “The Studio” and “Safe in Hell” will be part of SCR’s seventh
annual Pacific Playwrights Festival, which also will include readings
and workshops of five other plays yet to be announced. More
information may be gleaned by calling the Costa Mesa theater at (714)
708-5555.
THE DRAW OF DICK VAN DYKE
This year’s eighth annual CHOC Follies -- the annual variety show
that raises funds for Children’s Hospital of Orange County -- will
have a bona fide headliner when it ignites its “Blast Through the
Past” this weekend. It’s none other than TV legend Dick Van Dyke.
Van Dyke is joining the volunteer entertainers, who’ll participate
in the show tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. with a matinee Saturday at
2 p.m. at the Grove of Anaheim, 2200 E. Katella Ave.
Saturday’s performance already is sold out, but tickets for the
matinee may be ordered by calling Lois Augustine at (714) 532-8690.
The annual charity event is the brainchild of Newport Beach
publicist Gloria Zigner, who reports that interest in the show is at
an all-time high, due primarily to Van Dyke’s presence.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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