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Beau Bridges to portray his former UCLA basketball coach, John Wooden

UCLA basketball coach John Wooden, left, will be played by Beau Bridges in an upcoming play.
(Christine Cotter / Los Angeles Times; Danny Moloshok / AP)
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The legacy of John Wooden, the UCLA basketball coach who guided the Bruins to an unprecedented 10 national championships in the 1960s and ‘70s, is coming to the stage.

“Coach: An Evening With John Wooden” will debut this fall at Colorado’s Hurst Theatre, as part of Theatre Aspen’s inaugural one-person show festival, Solo Flights. Written by John Wilder — the seasoned writer-producer of the NBC miniseries “Centennial,” among others — the play will open the fest on Sept. 18, with an encore performance Sept. 21.

Beau Bridges, the actor and longtime friend of Wooden, will portray the American sports icon, who, in 40 years of coaching high school and college, had only one losing season — his first. He finished with 885 wins and 203 losses, and his UCLA teams — which included future legends Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton — broke NCAA records for winning 88 consecutive games from 1971 through 1974.

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During his retirement, Wooden remained in the spotlight with his “Pyramid of Success” motivational program, a teaching system based on such traditional values as cooperation and personal responsibility. He died in 2010.

John Wooden’s pyramid stands test of time »

The play about the UCLA legend hails from alumni. Wilder graduated from the school, as did Bridges, who attended for a year and was coached by Wooden himself. Though he played for only one season, Bridges stayed close to Wooden throughout his life, and even narrated the audiobook version of Wooden’s “A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections on and off the Court.”

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“For me just to be on the floor with him was a great gift — I was so excited,” said Bridges upon Wooden’s death. “I sat on the bench for one season, that was my experience as a coach, but he meant so much to me beyond that.”

In fact, Wooden’s “Pyramid of Success” has inspired Bridges throughout his career. “For Coach [Wooden], success had nothing to do with winning. It had to do with leaving the task knowing you’ve done your very best,” the actor explained in 2014. “Coach said anybody can come to the task with hard work in mind, but when you bring hard work and joy together, that’s when fantastic things happen.”

In addition to an alma mater, Bridges and Wilder share another tie: Joe Torrenueva, who has been cutting both of their hair for years. Torrenueva connected Wilder with Bridges, who signed on to the project immediately after reading the script.

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“It kind of feels like family,” Wilder told The Times on Monday. “I feel good about it because Beau has sat with Coach and really knows him. He sat in the locker room when Coach taught the team to tie their shoes, as he did on the first day of every year.”

Wilder came to write “Coach” at the request of Michael Warren, the actor who captained two NCAA championship teams for Wooden. Originally, Warren envisioned a film that “protects the treasure” of both his basketball legacy and his philosophies about life.

But in 2015, it became clear that Wooden’s wisdom was better suited by a one-character play.

“I had the rare privilege of sitting in his sanctuary in the den he’s had for years, and I thought, what if I put the audience in Coach’s den, and he tells them the stories he told to me?” said Wilder, who will make his playwriting debut with the piece.

The stories Bridges will share as Wooden will reflect the coach’s signature virtues. “We’re in a ‘me first’ age, but Coach was all about teamwork, hard work and humility,” Wilder explained. “The player who scores the dunk and thumps his chest and roars like a lion — if you did that with Coach, he’d put you on a nice seat on the bench right next to him!

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“He always said: pass the ball, pass the ball, and when you make the basket, point to the guy who gave you the assist,” he continued. “Coach shared all of this with his players and through his books and speaking engagements. These are values that really come right from the foundation of this country, and they’ve gone by the wayside today.”

Though the play is premiering in Colorado, Wilder said it’d be “absolutely wonderful” if the play were to be mounted at UCLA’s own Geffen Theatre, as well as in theaters nationwide. “I believe all across the country, there are coaches, teachers, parents and so many others who would love to spend an evening with John Wooden. I know how much it meant to me.”

Sports-related plays are few and far between, but “Coach” will debut as the subject has been taking center stage. Lauren Yee’s “The Great Leap,” based on the televised exhibition basketball games between the U.S. and China in the 1980s, played at San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theatre this past spring, and Lydia Diamond’s “Toni Stone” — about the first female baseball player to go pro in the Negro Leagues and the first woman ever to play professionally in a men’s baseball league — will play there in March.

“Coach: An Evening With John Wooden” joins the previously announced Solo Flights lineup: Jeffrey Hatcher’s play “Dr. Glas,” Jenny Giering and Sean Barry’s musical “What We Leave Behind” and Courtney Baron’s play “When It’s You.”

ashley.lee@latimes.com

Twitter: @cashleelee

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