THEATRE PREVIEW
GREGORY
ALLEN HIRSCH AT SAN DIEGO
MUSIC THEATRE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine October
1994
Something old, something new, something borrowed or a re-do. That's the projected formula for success for
the new San Diego Music Theatre.
Managing director Gregory Allen Hirsch plans for an annual three-play
season at the Civic Theatre: one
classic musical, one modern musical and one dramatically-revised old musical or
a foreign import.
Starting this month, Hirsch and company make good on their
promise. First, the modern
musical: “A Little Night Music”
(October 21-30), in its first professional San Diego production. Wry, witty and waltz-time, the music and
lyrics were written in 1973 by Stephen Sondheim with book by Hugh Wheeler. The show tackles sex, love, age and social
position, and includes Sondheim's best-known, most easily-sung melody,
"Send in the Clowns."
Production headliners are Joan Diener (the original Aldonza in “Man of
La Mancha” and wife of Albert Marre, director of that original and these three
new productions) and Jon Cypher (aka Chief Daniels on "Hill Street
Blues" and the original Carrasco in “Man of La Mancha”).
This year's classic offering is “South Pacific” (November 18-27),
the 1949 Rodgers and Hammerstein Pulitzer Prize winner, based on James
Michener's stories of World War II sailors and 'dames.' It stars veteran singer-actor Jack Jones and
Bonnie Franklin, of TV's "One Day at a Time."
After a six-month hiatus that allows the San Diego Opera to do its
thing at the Civic, San Diego Music Theatre completes its first season with a
retooling of the 1954 Harold Rome/S.N. Behrman/Joshua Logan hit, “Fanny”, whose source was a French film
trilogy by Marcel Pagnol.
According to Hirsch, artistic director Marre has
"dramatically changed the script," a heavily-plotted tale with an
intensely emotional score. He's even
included some additional Harold Rome songs.
The Broadway edition featured former Metropolitan Opera star Ezio
Pinza. The new version sports the
vocally-robust Richard Kiley, the original Man of La Mancha.
The through-line seems to be “La Mancha”, and that's even true for
the managing partners. When Hirsch
first saw the show in Minneapolis in 1965, he was 18 years old. "I was in awe," he said. " I'd never seen anything as clever,
stunning or brilliant in my life. I
said, 'I would love just to shake hands with the people involved in
that.'"
Seven years later, he was stage manager for director Albert Marre,
and the two have worked together, on and off, ever since. "It's the fulfillment of some kind of
destiny," Hirsch marvels.
"These people are now my friends.
It just evolved in my career."
Hirsch's career began when he opened a theater just after
graduating high school. "I was a
young, impetuous, crazy, stupid nineteen year old," he explains. He started with $200 and a low-budget
melodrama. Six years later, he sold out
his 200 seats with plays by Tennessee Williams and Oscar Wilde, and paid actors
and staff from box office receipts. All
the while, he refused to take donations ("No old fart with money was gonna
tell us what to do").
Ultimately, Hirsch moved to New York, where he spent thirteen
years as a stage manager and lighting designer. Then he became production manager for the Tulsa Opera, the Dallas
Opera and in 1987, the San Diego Opera.
He still designs lighting, but he missed "the ability to create
jobs for people and people for jobs."
So Hirsch is back in administration. He's more willing to accept contributions now. He needs to raise about a quarter-million
dollars "to make ends meet" (the season budget is around $2 1/2
million), but he still plans to get most of his money from ticket sales. "The competition is high," he
admits.
The competition used to be a lot higher. There was Starlight Musical Theatre, with its summer at the Bowl
and an indoor Broadway season. There
was the Pasadena-based TCA (Theatre Corp. of America), which was exporting
shows to the Spreckels Theatre and to the Poway Center for the Performing
Arts. Suddenly, with the near-demise of
Starlight (which did manage to cobble together a three-show collaborative
summer season), and the end of the Poway-Pasadena and Spreckels link (TCA
scaled back dramatically), San Diego Music Theatre is sitting pretty, in a much
less crowded playing field.
The company is shooting for high quality, big names and good
value. At $600 thousand dollars per
production, the quality should be high.
Some of the advertised "stars" are no longer A-list names, but
all remain professionally active. And
the ticket prices are very reasonable:
the subscription rate ranges from $30.00 to $120 for three shows.
This venture may be yet another way to keep San Diego's star on
the national theatrical map. Hirsch
plans to tour “South Pacific”, and “Fanny” "has potential to go to
Broadway, but a tour is also possible...
San Diego is a terrific place," he says. "We can mount a $600 thousand Broadway-caliber show here
that would cost $6 million in New York...
But a tour would bring out of town money into San Diego to help support
us and keep ticket prices down. That's
the greatest goal we can achieve."
©1994 Patté Productions Inc.