THEATER -- Tom Titus
If two local theaters were presenting plays by Neil Simon
simultaneously -- which often happens -- no one would think much about
it. There are a number of playwrights whose works have overlapped
locally.
But Horton Foote? When was the last time you saw one Horton Foote play
at a local theater? And now we’re getting two of them in the space of
three weeks.
The first one, “The Young Man From Atlanta,” opened last weekend at
the Newport Theater Arts Center, but I was busy playing father of the
bride (for real, not the show) and won’t get to check it out until this
weekend. Then next weekend, Foote’s “Getting Frankie Married -- and
Afterwards” arrives in its world premiere on the Mainstage at South Coast
Repertory.
Newport’s “Young Man,” which won Foote the Pulitzer Prize and a Tony
award, involves parents struggling in different ways to deal with the
suicide of their son. The father, Will Kidder, throws himself into his
work while the mother, Lily Dale, takes refuge in religion and the
comfort of Randy (the young man from Atlanta), who assures her that her
son died possessing her faith.
“Both parents face their own mortality and realize their life’s core
has been only an illusion,” explains theater publicist Jack Millis, who’s
taking his own crack at Southern comfort with “Steel Magnolias,” the play
he’s directing at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Phyllis Gitlin is
staging the Newport drama.
Jack Messenger and Harriet Whitmyer are playing the leading roles of
Will and Lily in the Newport show, with Brian Burns, Valerie Harness,
Becky Hughes, Darren Nash, Patricia Newman, Simon Panczyk and Seymour
“Sy” Schwartz completing the cast.
Foote’s most recent play, “Getting Frankie Married,” sees its first
light of day at SCR under the direction of Martin Benson. It’ll mark the
return to the SCR stage of Nan Martin, who’s been featured in a
half-dozen shows at the theater, most notably “Once in Arden” and “The
Road to Mecca.”
Martin plays a woman on her deathbed who’s not about to cross over
until she orchestrates the long-overdue marriage of her son Fred (Joel
Anderson) to his longtime girlfriend Frankie (Juliana Donald). Unlike the
grimly serious “Young Man” at Newport Theater Arts Center, “Frankie” is a
warmhearted comedy from the same Texas territory that’s been the
inspiration for so many of Foote’s stories.
Others in the SCR cast will be Linda Gehringer, Jason Guess, Annie La
Russa, Hal Landon Jr., Kristen Lowman, Randy Oglesby, Jennifer Parsons,
Sarah Rafferty and Barbara Roberts.
The playwright -- who has also won two Academy Awards for his adapted
screenplay of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and his original screenplay “Tender
Mercies” -- has had a plethora of plays produced on and off Broadway and
at regional theaters such as SCR. But for some reason, local theaters
haven’t taken an interest in them until now.
“Young Man From Atlanta” will play 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays
and 2:30 p.m. Sundays until April 21 at the Newport Theater Arts Center,
2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Reservations are being taken at (949)
631-0288.
“Getting Frankie Married” occupies the Mainstage at SCR, 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa, through May 5 with performances 8 p.m. Tuesdays
through Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 230 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays.
Call (714) 708-5555 for ticket information.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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