A Passion for Shakespeare
Tom Titus
When Wendi de Barros was 6 years old, performing a minor role in her
first play, the kid with the biggest part dropped out. She did a “42nd
Street” fill-in and took over the lead. It would not be the last time
this would happen.
Now, 27 years later, steeped in theatrical experience and training de
Barros is preparing her third assignment as director of the Huntington
Beach Playhouse’s annual Shakespeare in the Park project. Her production
of “Henry IV, Part 1” opens Saturday in the city’s Central Park
amphitheater. For de Barros, it’s her 13th crack at a Shakespearean
play, which gives her a unique perspective on the works of the Bard of
Avon. It also helps that she was “born in a trunk” as the daughter of an
actor/director father and an actress mother, both of whom have
substantial backgrounds in local theater. De Barros father is Phil de
Barros, who’s been a playhouse fixture since 1966 when he starred as
Starbuck in “The Rainmaker” and is now president emeritus of the
playhouse. Her mother, La Donna, is a well-known actress who has stirred
local audiences in such plays as “Suddenly, Last Summer,” “Night of the
Iguana” and “Come Back, Little Sheba.”
The playhouse’s outdoor Shakespeare productions date back to 1992 when
de Barros was playing Cecily in “As You Like It” -- and was thrust into
the leading role of Rosalind when the actress in that part dropped out.
Since then, she’s been involved in seven of the playhouse’s 10 summer
Shakespeare shows in one capacity or another.
“It’s a different experience, doing Shakespeare,” she asserts. “I
start out with the text, working with the actors, and they don’t get on
their feet until they understand what all these things mean.”
The first half of the rehearsal process is spent analyzing scenes, the
second half preparing them, she says.
De Barros transition from actress to director came about in 1997 when
her father was staging “The Taming of the Shrew.” “Dad kept getting calls
for film assignments, and I was his assistant and playing Bianca,” she
recalls. “Finally, I just took over as director.”
After graduating from Fountain Valley High School, de Barros underwent
two years of extensive training at the Professional Actors Conservatory
at Rancho Santiago College, which included fencing and other physical
elements of period theater. This was followed by two summers of
performing at the Grove Shakespeare Festival.
She took a brief shot at a professional career, earning her Screen
Actors Guild card while acting in the TV series “Dr. Quinn, Medicine
Woman.” But these days, earns her living as a program preparation
technician for DirecTV.
Of the numerous Shakespearean characters she’s brought to life, she
most particularly favors the part of Viola in “Twelfth Night,” which she
performed under her father’s direction three years ago. Her Shakespearean
repertoire also includes roles in “King Lear,” “The Merry Wives of
Windsor,” “Much Ado About Nothing” and the aforementioned shows.
“I love that the Huntington Beach Playhouse allows me to do this every
summer,” she beamed. “We try to keep the flavor and spirit of Shakespeare
in an informal, outdoor setting -- the way it originally was done.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
FYI
WHAT: “Henry IV, Part 1”
WHO: Huntington Beach Playhouse
WHERE: Central Park Amphitheater, 7771 Talbert Ave., Huntington Beach
WHEN: Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. through July 28
COST: $7 - $8
PHONE: (714) 375-0696
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.