The Crowd -- B.W. Cook
“Oh, what the heck. I’ll be 70 in December,” Rita Moreno said,
addressing the crowd that had gathered in support of the Big
Canyon/Spyglass Hill Philharmonic Committee of Orange County. The event,
held in the ballroom of the Irvine Marriott Hotel, raised funds to
support music education programs for youth in Orange County schools.
The “West Side Story” star rushed in from Los Angeles, where she is
taping a comedy pilot for potential pickup during the 2002-03 television
season. Moreno shared with the crowd that she was playing a Greek mother
in the sitcom. Moreno’s career has spanned five decades, earning her the
highest of honors in film, television and theater.
It is hard to believe that Moreno is turning 70. Of course, we are all
getting older. Many of us identify the stages of our lives with landmark
entertainment vehicles.
Therefore, it is no surprise that the nearly 500 guests who had come
to meet her, enjoyed Moreno’s words and shared experiences as if she were
a longtime friend. Moreno shared personal stories about her Puerto Rican
birth and her arrival in America as a young girl.
“I came into New York Harbor on a boat,” she said. “I have a vivid
memory of seeing the Statue of Liberty for the first time as a very young
girl. You know what I thought? I thought how fantastic it was that a lady
runs America.”
Moreno added that she knew from a young age that dreams were possible
in her new country. This in spite of “a overwhelming sense of sadness and
hardship,” she said.
Moreno told the audience that she and her mother, who worked
relentlessly to support them in their new land, were overpowered by the
sadness of the cold and gray environment of New York as compared with the
tropical climate of Puerto Rico. No matter how poor they were, there were
still palm trees in Puerto Pico.
“I kept asking my mother where were the flowers?” said Moreno with a
poignant tone in her voice.
She went on to say they also had a great deal of difficulty with the
English language. Moreno confessed that there were times when she would
“die of embarrassment” over her mother’s malapropisms and
mispronunciations.
“I loved my mother so much. However, there were times when I prayed,
‘Oh God, could you please open up the earth and just swallow her for just
one minute,”’ Moreno recalled.
In a lighthearted moment, Moreno shared an anecdote concerning the
first meeting of her Puerto Rican Catholic mother with her New York
Jewish fiance. One of the language difficulties that her mother never
overcame was the pronunciation of the letter “y” as a “j.” The first
words out of Moreno’s mother’s mouth to her fiance were, “So, jou are the
Jew?”
The audience howled, and Moreno told them she was celebrating her 35th
wedding anniversary despite her mother’s language difficulties.
“I am a prisoner of hope,” said the co-star of the HBO prison drama
“Oz.”
Moreno’s hope could be felt throughout the ballroom of the hotel.
Lovely JoAnne Mix, president of the Big Canyon/Spyglass Hill
Philharmonic, told the crowd about the life-changing opportunity the
committee’s work affords young people who are taken to the Orange County
Performing Arts Center to experience a live production. Mix told the
audience about her own experience as a young girl in Chicago seeing live
ballet for the first time, relating her own emotional connection to that
of contemporary children in Orange County today.
The event was underwritten by Chairwoman Kim Grubman and her prominent
businessman husband, Seymour. Additional major support came from Mary Kay
VanderMolen, John and Donna Crean, Joyce Reaume, Joy Owens, Mix, Gloria
Duthie and Flo Anhood.
Corporate sponsorship came from Fletcher Jones Motor Cars, Martin
Lawrence Galleries, Thomas Printers and Bodega Chocolates at South Coast
Plaza. A host of additional businesses generously donated to the silent
auction, ensuring a successful event.
Spotted in the crowd were the glamorous Jacque Heebner, Patricia
Cranford, Julie Maxwell, Carol and Don Julian, Deborah Mars, Ann Stern,
Nancy Burnett, MaryAnn Miller, Ollie Hill, Martha Green and Mary
Osterhout.
Moreno closed the event with an impressive reading from “Death of a
Salesman.” The room applauded with sincerity, impressed by the actress’
ability to transition into character delivering an emotional moment.
It’s all about the magic of performance. Which is also what the Big
Canyon/Spyglass Hill Philharmonic Committee is all about.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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