THEATRE PREVIEW
PAULA
KALUSTIAN
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine February
1993
It's like
marrying someone with a checkered past; you hope not to inherit the baggage. But Paula Kalustian has done everything
possible to unburden herself. When she
became artistic director of The Theatre in Old
Town last March, the organization
was $100,000 in debt; it had proved an excessive challenge to public and
private groups and a university theater program (USIU).
But Kalustian
was indomitable. In January 1991, she
directed “Beehive”, the sixties, teased-hair, all-woman musical revue that
became the Theater's biggest hit ever, with a nine month run and 171
performances. The Frances
Parker School,
a private institution that currently leases the building from the State, was
sold on Kalustian. By December, the
Theatre was out of debt and breaking even.
Kalustian
brought in her own creative team. Jill
and Steve Anthony, fresh from Kansas City,
did a smashing job on “The All Night Strut” last December, as co-choreographers
and, in Steve's case, show-stopper. Two
actress-singers who came for “Beehive” and “Strut” -- Laura Lamun and Tajma
Soleil -- stayed in San Diego to
continue their work with Kalustian.
"It sounds corny," says the petite, energetic, 41 year-old
director, "but it's really like a family.
This is what I've wanted all my life.
I'm weary, and have a lot more gray hair. But I know we're putting our energies in a good place."
Being artistic
director of a new theater company is a full-time job, but it's only one of
Kalustian's two. She's also an
Associate Professor in the Drama Department of San Diego State University and
head of its Master of Fine Arts program in Musical Theatre. Sometimes, she intertwines her two
roles. Several of her SDSU students
have appeared in Old Town
shows, and she wants Frances Parker interns involved, too. Twenty-one year-old Rachel Lynn has been in
six Kalustian productions, including “Beehive” at Old
Town (she did a dynamite Janis
Joplin) and “Assassins” and “Into the Woods” at SDSU, where she's a senior in
the Drama department.
"I met
Paula my first week of school," Lynn
recalls. "If she thinks someone's
talented, she'll cast them even if they're young or inexperienced. She's amazingly supportive, constructive and
intelligent. There's no difference in
how she works at school or professionally.
She always has a good attitude, always has a smile on her face. I haven't met anyone who doesn't like
working with her. I imagine if you're
an actor who doesn't like to do your homework, you might not like her. She doesn't have time to spoon-feed actors. She's probably one of the busiest people
I've ever met, but she's got more energy than a 20 year old."
Kalustian's
schedule is a nightmare. "I have
absolutely no time for a private life," she admits. "When your life's dream is dropped into
your lap, you have to give it all your energy.
I've given up my personal life.
A couple of times I came close to marrying, but I chose my career
instead. Sometimes I'm lonely, but so
are other people. We all have our own
path to march along... From the moment
I came out of the womb, I was meant to be in theater. I started dancing at four years old. I started choreographing professionally at sixteen. I'd choreograph every moment of a musical;
it was a natural progression to directing."
Born and raised
in Los Angeles, Kalustian spent the
eighties in New York, working on
and off Broadway. As a freelance
director, she traveled six months a year.
"By nature, I'm a solo kind of person, a traveler," Kalustian
explains. "But the idea of staying
put for awhile and making something happen was very intriguing." Before moving to San
Diego in 1989, she had taught at three colleges in the
midwest, always trying to mesh education with professional theater. "It's a very good marriage," says
Kalustian. The Old Town/Frances Parker
arrangement is perfect. "There's a
place here for the school and for a professional venue. We're investigating a pilot theater
education program... I want to create a
professional theater space that's comfortable, has good talent, does good
shows. Primarily contemporary,
high-energy, small musicals. Family
fare that spans the ages."
Next up at Old
Town is "Song of
Singapore" (opening February 6), a madcap, big band, musical mystery that
ran for 13 months off-Broadway in 1990-91.
This will be the premiere regional theater production. "It's zany, funny kitsch," says Kalustian. "We want people to feel like they're
walking into a Singapore
bar in the 1940s."
Almost at the
same time, Kalustian is directing “Birds of Paradise” at SDSU (opening February
26 in the Experimental Theatre).
"I'm used to the hectic pace," she says. "One freelance year, I did 12 shows;
you gotta keep working." The new
musical is about an amateur theater group doing a musical version of “The
Seagull”. All the group relationships
directly mirror those in Chekhov's play.
Of course,
Kalustian would love another “Beehive” phenom.
But she's realistic. "A hit
like “Beehive” comes once in a lifetime," she says. "It was the first time in my twenty
years of theater. I'm glad it happened
to me before I died... In the middle of
my life, I feel like everything up to now has been preparation... My work and my friends have come
together."
©1993
Patté Productions Inc.