THEATRE PREVIEW
GASLAMP QUARTER THEATRE COMPANY
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine February
1995
The Gaslamp Quarter has undergone numerous transformations over
the past fifteen years, and so has the theater that bears its name. Evolving from the Women's Theatre Ensemble,
the Gaslamp Quarter Theatre Company made its mark on the local theater scene,
then kept growing and expanding until it burst, acquiring Equity status, two
theater spaces and a mountain of debt.
The company suspended operations in 1992, intending to regroup and
recoup. Now the optimism is high again;
there's one theater less, a new woman at the helm, and a fifteenth anniversary
season in the offing.
Last fall, Rosina Reynolds was named new artistic director. A native of London, Reynolds first appeared
onstage in San Diego fifteen years ago, acting with GQTC co-founder Kit
Goldman. After time spent in Panama,
L.A. and Wisconsin, she and her husband and daughter Katie returned to San
Diego, and Reynolds gave several memorable performances at the Hahn
Cosmopolitan Theatre (the 250-seat house that the GQTC acquired in 1984 and has
retained; they lost the smaller Elizabeth North Theatre). In her new role, she's committed to
presenting "an off-Broadway sense of immediate, important, contemporary
theater."
The first production of the anniversary season is the San Diego
premiere of “Marvin's Room” (Jan. 26-Feb. 19), Scott McPherson's black comedy
about two sisters, reconciliation, and taking care of someone with a terminal
disease. Reynolds calls it "a
heartening, humorous, poignant comedy-drama." Next up is Mame Hunter's “Unquestioned Integrity” (March 9-April
2), based on the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill Senate hearings. "It's startling," says
Reynolds. "Very provocative. Very persuasive. Every time I read it, I take a different side."
The third offering is the world premiere production of “The
Legacy” (April 27-May 21) by actor/writer Mark Harelik, a San Diego
favorite. Another character with a
terminal illness, but the focus here is on "trying to give to the next
generation some sense of belonging, some spiritual support." Reynolds is not concerned about the
controversy generated by the piece when it received a staged reading at the
GQTC's annual Streisand Festival of New Jewish Plays (this year, May
1-23). "It made some people angry,
fearful. But that's the point of
theater. We don't always give the
answers."
The Gaslamp Quarter Theatre Company may not have all the answers
to its own survival, but it's ready to pose creative theatrical questions
again. As Reynolds puts it, "we're
back with a vengeance and we're back to stay."
©1995 Patté Productions Inc.