THEATER REVIEW
Tom Titus
Relationships, moral choices and societal anguish all come in for
their 10 minutes of fame (or infamy) in Orange Coast College’s fall “10
or Less Festival” of one-act plays staged by the school’s Student
Repertory Company.
Eight stories unfold during the two-hour program, half of which
feature the ubiquitous and highly talented Angel Correa, who assumes
several different character disguises. Correa runs the gamut from a
romantic loser to a confused Mexican American to a nerdy dreamer plotting
a pornographic franchise.
In the opener, “Love in Just 10 Minutes,” Correa is paired with Katie
McGuire in a short saga of instant romance and its eventual heartbreak.
Both serve as narrators from their particular viewpoints, and the playlet
-- written and directed by Jason Mutz -- illustrates the pitfalls
inherent in such sudden relationships.
“Downtown” by Jeffrey Hatcher is a quirky comedy with a twist at the
end involving two women and an obviously gay guy, ostensibly writers,
casting aspersions about a restaurant’s successful author clientele right
and left. Miracle Laurie shines in this piece, aided and abetted nicely
by Chris Meditz and Heather Layton.
Correa returns for “Nerd Porn Auteur” by Regan Fox, a one-man piece
imaginatively directed by Angela Lopez. Here, Correa envisions a porno
empire established for losers like himself in a deliciously funny
presentation.
“Little Things” also involves Correa, but was written and directed by
Sean Hesketh, who also takes the second of the play’s two roles. Their
characters are goofy couch potatoes who make mountains out of
philosophical molehills and generally take up space for 10 minutes.
The seedier side of life is examined in “Seraphim,” written and
directed by Lori Heston, who makes a Hitchcockian cameo appearance. The
setting is the street outside a church where a cute young panhandler (Kim
Butcher) hits up the churchgoers for donations to her own cause. Veteran
street person Uzi Ben Avraham offers her a step up in life. This play,
although one of the most ambitious, is rather weak, draining to a climax
rather than ascending as “Downtown” does.
Correa’s final appearance comes in Manuel Paul Lopez’s “Canto,”
another one-man show, this time about a young man of Mexican heritage who
really doesn’t “comprende.” It’s a poignant piece that lacks the
requisite punch.
In “4 a.m.: Open All Night” by Bob Krakower, various denizens of the
night take up space in an all-night diner, where Ryan Gray is looking to
score with fellow patron Heather Layton, if he only can work up the
courage to approach her. Maile Walker as a waitress and Jason Mutz as an
aggravating patron complete the clever scenario. Andrew Vonderschmitt
directs.
The finale is the evening’s most elaborate work, Nancy Beverly’s
“Attack of the Moral Fuzzies,” directed by Sean F. Gray. Here game show
contestant Katie McGuire (who alternates with Lauren Kushin) must make a
series of moral decisions, all of which carry a Catch-22 clause, as host
Frank Miyashiro and OCC’s version of Vanna White, Chanel Panagiotopolous,
turn the emotional screws. Fine performances by Justin Ross, Emily Rued,
Maile Walker, Manuel Cisnerous, Raine Hambly, Rachel Langhans and Jason
Mutz (whose character is billed as “Spineless Idiot”; that’ll look good
on his resume) enrich this rather didactic nightmare.
The “10 or Less Festival” is a valuable instructional tool for OCC’s
budding actors, writers and directors, which also casts an occasional
zinger. The college’s creative talents keep the shows humming.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* WHAT: “10 or Less Festival”
* WHERE: Orange Coast College, Drama Lab Studio Theater, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa
* WHEN: Closing performances at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 7 p.m.
Sunday
* COST: $6
* PHONE: (714) 432-5640
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