Greasepaint runs in this family
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Tom Titus
It’s always advantageous, in any marriage, for the partners to share
a common interest. In the case of Alex Golson and Harriet Whitmyer,
it’s more of a mutual addiction.
Both are knee-deep in theater, Golson, 55, is practically
neck-deep as the chairman of Orange Coast College’s theater arts
department, where he’s directed more than 100 productions in a
lengthy and varied career.
Whitmyer, 54, has a fairly voluminous resume of her own, having
performed in more than 70 plays, two of them just this year at the
Newport Theater Arts Center. She displayed her dramatic ability in
“The Little Foxes,” then followed it with a high comic turn in the
recently concluded farce “Breath of Spring.”
The theatrical couple first met in 1981 at the Laguna Playhouse,
where Golson was directing the original play “Thornhill” and Whitmyer
was working backstage. Following a two-year courtship, they were
married at that same venue with Laguna actor George Woods, an
ordained minister, officiating.
Golson isn’t quite a native Californian -- he came to Costa Mesa
from Texas at the age of 2 -- but his Golden State credentials have
been pretty solid ever since. He graduated from Estancia High School
(where he played the leading role in “The Music Man” in his
introduction to the theater) and Orange Coast College.
Golson has been associated with the college since 1978, first as a part-time teacher and later as head of the drama department. In
between, however, he spent two years in New York where he found
himself in a small operation called the Actors Repertory Theater.
“I took a job as the janitor,” he recalls, “and worked up to
managing director of the theater.”
The experience proved invaluable.
Whitmyer, on the other hand, is a native, born in Downey and
raised in Northern California. But she put in “nine or 10 years” in
New Jersey before returning to her roots. Since then, she’s served on
the boards of directors at the Laguna Playhouse and Newport Theater
Arts Center, but dropped off both because she decided that she really
preferred the stage. “
Aside from the aforementioned plays, she’s also been seen at the
Newport Theater Arts Center in “The Guys,” “Young Man From Atlanta”
and, her personal favorite, as the mother in “Quilters.” She’s played
Myrtle Mae in “Harvey” and Lucille in “Gemini” at the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse.
And, of course, she’s seen plenty of stage time at Orange Coast
College, where she ranks “Equus” and “Bleacher Bums” among her top
memories. She and Golson also shared the Orange Coast College stage
in the leading roles of “Sweeney Todd,” and she portrayed would-be
presidential killer Sara Jane Moore in the college’s production of
“Assassins.”
Golson’s directorial highlights at Orange Coast College include
“Inherit the Wind” (which I remember quite well, having played Brady
in that 1989 production), “Hamlet,” “South Pacific,” the recent
“Othello,” “1776,” “Scapino” and “Tom Sawyer” (which featured my
then-teenage daughter, Mindy, as Becky Thatcher).
He stretched his acting muscles at UC Irvine as Sky Masterson in
“Guys and Dolls,” and as Teddy in “When You Comin’ Back, Red Ryder?”
among other productions. At Cal State Fullerton, he played Tom in
“The Glass Menagerie,” Brick in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” and,
significantly, Prince Hal in “Henry IV.” Hal is the name of his and
Whitmyer’s 15-year-old son, who’s cast in his dad’s summer melodrama
opening this weekend.
“We also ran an acting school out of the Laguna Playhouse from
1982 to 1983 and ’84 to ‘86,” Whitmyer said. “It was an adult acting
class, and we had between 300 and 400 students.”
Down the road, Golson is particularly excited about a new play
he’ll direct at the Costa Mesa college in October -- “A Patch of
Earth” by Kitty Felde.
“It’s about the war in Bosnia,” he said. “Pretty heavy stuff.”
Light or heavy, big or small, it’s all theater; and for Alex
Golson and Harriet Whitmyer, it’s what they live for.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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