Archive for the ‘Find Cate Archer’ Category

Chance Theater’s star-studded fundraiser adds a name

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Time is running out to buy your tickets to Saturday’s The benefit concert for Anaheim Hills’ Chance Theater includes a stellar list of stars, including O.C.’s Eden Espinosa, who recently starred in “Wicked” at the Pantages Theatre. As of this morning only 80 of 460 tickets were left.

I just heard from Chance spokesman Casey Long that Lea Michele, who was a lead in the popular Broadway production of “Spring Awakening,” will replace Kerry Butler.

That’s Lea, left.

Here’s Chance’s announcement:

BROADWAY Chance Style:
Up Close & Personal

A Special Benefit Concert For The Chance Theater
Saturday, September 27, 2008
at The OC Pavilion

Starring Tony Award Nominee Laura Bell Bundy (Legally Blonde The Musical),
Lea Michele (Spring Awakening), Eden Espinosa (Wicked),          Bart Shatto (Les Miserables), Stephen Tewksbury (The Phantom of the Opera)
and Kristoffer Cusick (Wicked)

Special Host: Paul Canaan
(judge of MTV’s hit reality series “Legally Blonde: The Search for the Next Elle Woods”)

To read more about these performers, visit

 

Call (714) 777-3033
or reserve online at

 

Get the full VIP Treatment!
Five-star dinner at Ambrosia Restaurant!
VIP After-party with the stars!
Valet Parking!

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Gloria Cheng on Telarc: Salonen, Stucky and Lutoslawski

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Pianist (her third from Telarc) features the music of Esa-Pekka Salonen, Steven Stucky and Witold Lutoslawski, all of whom she has worked with. The composers share more than just a working relationship with Cheng in common though; they are (or were in Lutoslawski’s case; he passed away in 1994) friends, colleagues, aesthetic like minds. Lutoslawski is a kind of musical father to the younger two, and a recognizable presence in their music.

Cheng, long familiar to audiences in L.A. and O.C., on faculty at UCLA, a veteran of the film studios, is a different kind of pianist. I’ve never heard her play a note of Chopin or Beethoven or, for that matter, any 19th-century composer, but she’s always around when anything by a living composer needs to be performed. She once received a fax in the wee hours from Pierre Boulez – a new piece written for her. Never one to underline her own feats, she plays the music on her new album with her usual grace and nonchalant virtuosity. 

Several of the works here are world premiere recordings, including, surprisingly, Lutoslawski’s 1934 Sonata for Piano, an attractive, dappled and often busy student work in the mold of Ravel and Szymanowski, and almost not at all like the composer’s later music. All in all, it’s not, perhaps, a major work, but it is well made and holds interest.

Several of the pieces here are on the inconsequential side (the composers would say the same). Salonen sketched his Three Preludes (2005) “on airplanes, at airports, in hotel rooms,” anywhere but in his studio. Stucky’s “Four Album Leaves” (2002) and “Three Little Variations for David” (2001) are little more than elegant doodles, but gratifying all the same. Each of these shorter pieces takes a couple of ideas, throws them in the air, turns them over a time or two and signs off. At their best, they’re aphoristic. Stucky’s “Little Variations” are especially fun, each one a variation on the “Happy Birthday” tune, but you might not know it if you aren’t paying close attention.

Salonen’s six-minute “YTA II” is more ambitious, a work from 1985 in his early, European phase. It’s filled with quick bursts of nervous gestures separated by rests, and moves about as erratically as a cricket in the living room. It’s playful as well. We hear the same music from several angles and Salonen somehow gets your ears there. At one point, he leads us on a little chase: We follow a scampering line up and down, then right when we think we’ve caught it, it splits in two, making an escape.

The most impressive work is Salonen’s two-part “Dichotomie,” composed for and dedicated to Cheng. According to the composer, it began as an idea for a short piece, but the potential of his materials soon turned it into something else – namely, a 17-minute dazzler. The first movement, “Mécanisme,” is Prokofiev-like, driven by ostinatos and repeated notes, an energetic rhythmic game with lots of fizz. “Organisme,” the second movement, builds steam more slowly and continuously. One can picture a willowy tree in a gentle breeze gradually overcome by a gale. “Dichotomie” deserves to be taken up by pianists widely.

Cheng opens recital series at Zipper Hall in Los Angeles with a program that includes four of these pieces, “Dichotomie” among them, on Sept. 30. The concert will also provide a good opportunity, no doubt, to pick up this CD.

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Laguna Art Museum hires curator

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

The has appointed Grace Kook-Anderson as its new curator of exhibitions, effective Oct. 6.

Kook-Anderson comes to Laguna Beach from San Francisco, where she has been a freelance curator. She was assistant curator of the “Amateurs” exhibit at the California College of the Art’s .

“I am thrilled with my appointment as curator of exhibitions at Laguna Art Museum,” she said in a statement. “The museum has a rich history with a strong dedication to California art.”

Kook-Anderson fills a spot vacated by Tyler Stallings in December 2006. Stallings is now director of the at UC Riverside.

The new curator is relatively young for the position. She received her B.A. in art history in 2000 and art practice in 2001 from UC Berkeley, and received her M.A. in curatorial practice in 2007 from the California College of the Arts, San Francisco.

Welcome aboard, Grace. We’ll keep you Arts Blog readers posted once we hear more about this new appointment in the O.C. art scene.

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Bowers offers free admission on first Sundays

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Starting Sunday, Oct. 5, the is offering free admission on the first Sunday of every month, thanks to a major sponsorship from Target.

On the inaugural free Sunday (Oct. 5), the Bowers will provide free access to all exhibitions, as well as lectures, a cultural festival and a scavenger hunt for families. Admission to  and the special exhibit “Terra Cotta Warriors: Guardians of China’s First Emperor” are also free.

“Terra Cotta Warriors” runs through Oct. 16. Incidentally, you can also view that exhibit without charge on Fridays at the top of each hour from 4-7 p.m.

The museum is planning other special events during its Target Free Sundays. For more information, visit the , or call 714-567-3600.

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Note to SCR: how to make better musicals

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

I’ve been pondering one of my beat’s great mysteries ever since I saw that underwhelming production of “An Italian Straw Hat” at last week: why does the venerable Costa Mesa theater company have such trouble with musicals?

Mediocre musical theater is the only blemish on South Coast Rep’s otherwise admirable track record. SCR hasn’t done many of them over the years, so the comfort level clearly isn’t there. Some old-timers tell me its production of “Sunday in the Park with George” was first-rate. That might well be, but the musicals I’ve seen just don’t measure up to SCR’s usual standards.

In the spirit of friendly advice, here are a few suggestions (notice I’m not mentioning any names — no need to get personal here).

1. Hire triple-threat performers. Musicals have vastly different demands than spoken-word plays. Casting actors who’ve done well in non-musical SCR productions for singing and dancing roles is risky. Musical-theater acting is a specialty, and those skill sets need to be respected. In “Straw Hat,” there’s a Grand Canyon-sized chasm between the performers who have extensive musical-theater training and experience and those who don’t.

2. Hire directors who are experienced with musical theater. See reasons above.

3. Don’t cheap out on the band. Even in an era of skimpy orchestras, Broadway shows still provide a respectably large color palette (though they often use a couple of synthesizers to sub for real instruments). Fans of musical theater are used to hearing sumptuous-sounding pit bands. Cutting corners in that department makes a big difference in the overall perceived quality of the experience. (This piece of advice is coming from an old pit rat who spent too many years slaving away in the bowels of the stage. I know exactly how many violins on a microphone it takes to sound like a section.)

4. Hire a musical-theater choreographer. It’s a tricky specialty. Even in shows with very little dancing, the choreographer can make a world of difference, transforming a big production number from stodgy and static to dynamic and show-stopping.

5. Take more time to rehearse, especially if the show is new. There are so many more elements to wrestle with in a musical than a play. I can remember spending weeks at the rehearsal piano on a single number, working with director, choreographer and actors to perfect the intricate relationships between singing, blocking, dancing and acting. I’m aware of the draconian scheduling demands of a busy repertory theater, but I’ve also known other theater companies that customarily build a lot more time into their rehearsal schedules for musicals.

Can anyone think of other suggestions?

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Andrea Harris leaving Grand Central

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Andrea Harris, left, pictured with her son Alex. Photo by Amy Caterina.

Andrea Harris, gallery director at the in Santa Ana for 10 years, is leaving that post on Nov. 15.

Starting Nov. 17, she’ll be joining . She’ll curate art shows and get a chance to teach book publishing at OCC.

During her decade at Grand Central, she helped organized some excellent and influential exhibitions, including shows on Robert Williams, Andy Warhol, Jeffrey Vallance and a host of “lowbrow” artists. She also directed the publication of many impressive catalogs, and oversaw maintenance of the facility, which includes three galleries, a theater and housing for arts students upstairs.

“I put my whole life into that place,” she said Friday. “I just put my whole heart and soul into it. After 10 years, you start to re-evaluate your life and the time you have. I want to have my own life. It’s time to go out with my family.”

OCC, which recently completed a state-of-the-art, multi-million-dollar Art Center, will be gaining an experienced administrator and curator.

On the other hand, Grand Central will be losing a dedicated and invaluable gallery director, and though it will be conducting a nationwide search for a new director, things don’t look too promising with budget cuts at , which is in charge of the facility.

We’ll keep you posted on the comings and goings at OCC and Grand Central. Meanwhile, congratulations to Andrea Harris!

To read a story about Andrea Harris and her husband Mike McGee, a CSUF professor and kidney donor, .

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SoCal is a hotbed of new musicals! Who knew? Duh.

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Seems like they’re finally taking notice on the East Coast of a phenom that every local theater fan has known for years: Southern California is breeding new musicals.

This — but the trend been building for years, especially in San Diego county.  The Old Globe and the La Jolla Playhouse have been responsible for some of Broadway’s more successful musicals of the last decade or so: the revival of “How to Succeed in Buseinss Without Really Trying,” “Jersey Boys,” Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” and “The Full Monty,” to name but a few.

Articles like this remind me just how parochial and insular the Northeast can be.

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O.C. high school theater talent will compete in a new national contest

Friday, September 19th, 2008

has announced that it will host a new high school theater competition, judging the best musical performances of the 2008-09 academic year in schools that choose to participate. The winners will travel to New York City for the “Jimmys,” a contest that pits actors from around the country against each other in a “best of the best” uber-contest.

Here are the details from Fullerton Civic Light Opera:


The FCLO Music Theater will join the Nederlander organization and other regional professional Music Theatres to bring local high school winners of best actor and actress in a musical to New York to compete for the national title.

Patterned after the Tony awards, this program will be called the “Jimmys”  named after Jimmy Nederlander, 86 year old chairman of the Nederlander organization, which operates nine Broadway theatres and other major theatres across America, including the Pantages in Los Angeles.  The event will occur on June 1, 2009,  and plans to televise it nationally are in the works.

The FCLO Music Theatre , with its “John Raitt Awards for Youth”, (named after John Raitt, who made his first stage appearance  in Fullerton’s Plummer Auditorium while a student at Fullerton High School) will join other established awards program such as the “Gene Kellys” in Pittsburgh and the ‘Tommy Tunes” in Houston to send two youngsters to the Palace Theatre (a Nederlander house) on Broadway where they will  spend several days auditioning, interviewing and performing.  There will also be tangible awards still to be announced, such as college and conservatory scholarships.

“The commercial theatre rarely reaches out to what might be the future,” said Nederlander executive vice-president Nick Scandalios. “Broadway is this monolith, a dream, up on a hill, and it doesn’t reach out very often.”

He and Nederlander’s chief marketing officer, Susan Lee, envision the NHS Awards as a way to both mentor young performers and develop audiences. The winners might never complete the professional climb to Broadway, but they and their schoolmates and families represent the theatre audience of the future.

According to Van Kaplan, CEO of the Pittsburgh CLO and architect of the national program with the Nederlanders, there will be about nine hundred high schools competing nationally. He further stated that the chief aim of going national is to get added visibility and “celebrate high school musical theatre on a grand scale”.

Griff Duncan, producer of FCLO Music theatre, says” there is excellent work being done locally in these schools.  Hopefully, this will make the public more aware of their efforts and encourage school districts to invest more in the arts”.

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UCI appoints new arts dean

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

UC Irvine has named Alan Terricciano as its new acting dean of the Claire Trevor School of the Arts.

Terricciano, a noted composer and pianist, was former chair of the dance department. He replaces Nohema Fernández, who stepped down after serving five years as dean and two years as associate dean.

Terricianno accepted the post on July 16. Lisa Naugle is now the chair of the dance department.

Educated at Yale University and the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., Tericciano has been employed at UCI for 15 years. He has served as associate dean and will be acting dean for one year, while a nationwide search for a fulltime dean is underway.

“Working on an articulated vision for the school is a big goal for me,” Terricciano said during an interview on Wednesday. “I hope to carry forward all the initiatives that had already been put in place by my predecessor. The university is also setting out on a capital campaign. We’ll be devising a target of the campaign as it relates to the school of the arts.” The 47-year-old composer and pianist has won many commissions and awards, including 2005 Outstanding Individual Artist of the Year from Arts Orange County, and UCI’s Distinguished Mid-Career Faculty Award for Service in 2006-07.

In 2000, he won the grand prize in Quebec’s Festival des Arts de Saint-Sauveur international competition for an original composition of choreography. His work was titled “Blue Motions for String Quartet.”

“The role of the artist in our culture is going to be a central part of what we talk about this year,” he said. “The arts help define us as human. They help define our character, our national identity. The arts are part of our heritage. Engagement with our heritage is a fundamental right.”

Congratulations to Alan Terricciano!

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Vengeance aria

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Oration is a kind of music. It rises and falls, builds, persuades, moves, climaxes. In films, great speeches are like arias inserted into the drama. Here’s one.

To set up the scene, from William Wyler’s “The Big Country”: Rufus Hannassey arrives at Major Terrill’s party the night after the major’s men have shot up Hannassey’s ranch and roughed up his men. The Hannasseys and the Terrills have long been feuding. Hannassey is played by none other than Burl Ives, who, not coincidentally, was a great singer in his day. Listen to him build his speech, listen for the tremble in his voice — it’s an aria by other means.

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