Playhouse leaders rework ‘Godspell’
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Tom Titus
They’re not exactly the new kids in town -- Kyle Myers and Megan
Endicott have long lists of performing credits at the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse -- but they’re relatively green at the art of putting
shows together.
Myers cut his directorial teeth a few months ago on the
playhouse’s production of “Picasso at the Lapin Agile.” Now he’s
staging “Godspell,” which will open Feb. 6. Endicott, who has been
appointed the theater’s artistic director, is choreographing the
show, a first for her.
“Godspell” is hardly a new property -- veteran theatergoers might
recall the smash hit production of the biblical musical mounted back
in the mid-1970s by South Coast Repertory when SCR still performed in
a converted dime store in downtown Costa Mesa. Orange Coast College
also took a crack at it about a dozen years ago.
It’s a property that can be formed and molded to fit the talents
of its cast, which is what Myers and Endicott find so intriguing
about the show.
“This is an amazing cast,” Myers declared. “We’ve got people from
all over Southern California -- Whittier, Redondo Beach, Torrance.
The theater needed new blood, and we’ve got it with this show.”
Unlike most directors, Myers didn’t choose “Godspell.” The
playhouse’s season was set up by last season’s board of directors,
with the stage honchos to be penciled in later. Myers volunteered to
helm “Picasso,” which was well received, and then stepped in to
direct “Godspell,” which he thought would be a fairly easy
assignment. It wasn’t.
“We had to find things for all these actors to do during the
show,” Endicott said. “And we’ve expanded the cast, so it’s not all
that simple. But it’s been lots of fun -- definitely an interesting
show to cut your teeth on.”
One of the changes Myers made was casting a female Judas. “Olivia
Braza simply was the best candidate at auditions -- and we weren’t
short of men. There’s more men than women in the show,” he said. “It
sets up a great relationship, which I think really works.”
Myers, a grade school teacher who’s preparing a kiddie version of
“Into the Woods” by day, recruited fellow instructor Joyce Maxson as
his musical director for “Godspell.” Maxson has such shows as “The
Wizard of Oz,” “The Sound of Music” and “Fiddler on the Roof” to her
credit.
Before turning director for “Picasso,” Myers appeared in many
local stage productions, including “A Chorus Line,” “Into the Woods,”
“Bye Bye Birdie” and “Anything Goes” at the Civic Playhouse. He took
key supporting roles in “Bells Are Ringing” and “The Pajama Game” at
the Newport Theater Arts Center.
Endicott is a familiar face at the Costa Mesa theater for “Chorus
Line,” “Into the Woods,” “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat,” “Gypsy,” “Bye Bye Birdie” and “Fiddler on the Roof.” She
trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena and took
her first nonmusical role in Costa Mesa’s “Picasso.”
Their “Godspell,” the directors noted, will center on the
homeless. The actors portray street people who become involved in the
New Testament story of Jesus’ crucifixion set to a rock beat.
“We take a grungy, beaten-up street, and during the course of the
show it becomes colorful,” Myers said. “The show should offer hope to
the community.”
“Godspell” will be presented Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m., with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m., until March 2 at the Civic
Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. Tickets may be reserved by
calling the box office at (949) 650-5269.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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